How many streets are in san francisco




















The city, therefore, has no responsibility for maintaining those stretches. According to the city itself, of course. So who is responsible for maintaining unaccepted streets? The property owners who live alongside them — whether they want the job or not. Hopefully when people buy property and move in, they do due diligence to find out what their responsibilities are.

Neighbors alongside Tompkins found out about this quirky bit of city bureaucracy once the unaccepted block turned into a steep stretch of despair, growing intolerable in the early s.

Trees were uncared for and overgrown, making it dark and sketchy, even during the daytime. Homeless people set up camp. Drug dealers peddled their wares. Thieves dumped empty Amazon boxes, briefcases and backpacks after swiping their contents. The concrete staircase became broken and unsafe. The Area. Max Occupancy 2 3 4. Bed Type Queen Double. His grave can be found at the Mission itself. A post shared by heidi holland heidijholland on Jul 15, at pm PDT. A post shared by aniu85 on Sep 10, at am PDT.

General Jose Castro was several-times governor of various parts of California. Other than having his name conferred on many locales, he seems rarely to have caught a break in life.

The onetime lawmaker was often arrested and deposed before falling prey to assassination in A post shared by chiehyunliao on May 6, at pm PDT. Horner named Elizabeth Street after his wife, but no street in SF bears his name. Until , the street now named for labor leader Cesar Chavez was dubbed Army Street, and some of the signs still bear this moniker beneath the Chavez name. Named for Martin Ron , land surveyor, immigrant, and Holocaust survivor, whose widow spent 13 years pressing the city on the name change.

Sigismundo Taraval was a Jesuit missionary who traveled through the Baja region in the early 18th century. A post shared by h2suyoung on Dec 7, at pm PST. San Francisco technically has two streets named for Gaspar de Portola , who founded both San Diego and Monterey during his 18th century expedition through California. No points for guessing that the Mission Street name stems from Mission Dolores. A native of New York, Inness had no particular relationship with San Francisco or California, but his popularity carried him to local honoraries.

Jimenez de Quesada was not the luckiest of conquistadors. His disastrous expedition searching for the fabled lost City of Gold killed all but 80 of his original retinue of 1, Quesada himself later died of leprosy. Originally named Phelan Avenue , after the family of a racist 19th century mayor and senator, a citizen committee recommended changing the name to honor 20th century artist Frida Kahlo in A post shared by kittyboots kittyboots on Nov 22, at pm PST.

Northern-lying Spear Street is named for enterprising Yerba Buena merchant Nathan Spear, who set up business in the Bay Area in the s and then missed out on the Gold Rush on account of his untimely death in Whether Spear Avenue is also named for the same Spear is less clear, but several other SF luminaries have multiple streets to their name. Harding, widely considered one of, if not the worst presidents in U. Excelsior neighborhood streets are named for foreign nations and cities, such as Moscow, London, and Persia.

Excelsior Avenue was once China Avenue , but during the height of anti-Asian xenophobia in the 19th century the city scrubbed the name, along with Japan and India Avenues. A post shared by Nanu Wolstenholme n. Most likely named for the almost excessive concentration of churches and other houses of worship on this stretch. Cookie banner We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, show personalized content and targeted ads, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audiences come from.

By choosing I Accept , you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies. Its streets, architecture and landscape are reminiscent of the Presidio. It offers terrific views of the bridge, the city and the East Bay. Right now, the east end of the island is a series of detours as construction crews overhead work on the "S" curve. The alleys of San Francisco are intriguing but present some unique challenges, too.

Left until last, they were inefficient to walk. Scattered mostly around Chinatown, North Beach, Russian Hill, South of Market and the Mission, these short, often dead-end streets resemble alleyways, despite their official names. They are a throwback to old San Francisco. These narrow corridors offer intimate views of living rooms, kitchens and backyards They're places where cats loiter.

Where wires stretch like cobwebs from pole to house. At times I felt like a ghost walking these streets. I imagined myself gone and others following my footsteps. I saw some of the same windows that Jack Kerouac saw in "On the Road" - "the really crazy windows that made faces at me" and "the ones with shades drawn that winked at me.

And from some of those windows, like Kerouac, I smelled the savory side of San Francisco. I was reminded of the Beat writer a few times. There are 5, blocks in the city. The two biggest are the Presidio block No. All within the city limits. Environmental poet Wendell Berry put his finger on it when he wrote: "If you don't know where you are, you don't know who you are.

Some are born in their place, some find it, some realize after long searching that the place they left is the one they have been searching for. I started this project at age I'm 62 now. I retired from my full-time job and became a grandfather along the way. I've walked by every house, school, church, synagogue, mosque, corner grocery, department store, apartment building, condo, high-rise, warehouse, firehouse, police station, park, lake and playground I've passed the majority of the city's landmarks, mostly in ignorant bliss.

I've watched people paint and remodel their homes. Tunnel under a Victorian to build a garage. Build new homes and tear down old ones. I watched the dismantling of the Emporium and its transformation into Bloomingdale's. I watched the Embarcadero Freeway which my grandfather helped build come down, and witnessed the relandscaping of the area.

Eliot wrote, "and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time. Nothing is forever, though.



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