San Francisco is divided
into six zones: Downtown, Midtown, Northeast,
Northwest, and Southwest.
Many of San Francisco's famous attractions,
including North Beach, Chinatown, Fisherman's Wharf,
and Union Square, are in its northeast quadrant.
Golden Gate Park is in the city's northwestern section.
Bus:
If you do not want to wait in line for
a cable car, you may wish to consider taking a Muni
bus. You may board lines 15-Third or 30-Stockton
at the corner of Kearny and Market Streets. Lines
15 and 30 travel through Chinatown and North Beach,
two of San Francisco's most colorful neighborhoods.
Line 15 terminates at Bay and Kearny Streets near
PIER 39; line 30 operates on North Point Street from
Columbus Avenue west to Van Ness Avenue and serves
The Anchorage, The Cannery and Ghirardelli Square.
Alcatraz Island (Northeast)
the notorious former federal prison in
the middle of the San Francisco Bay, is accessible
to the public through the Golden Gate National Recreation
Area and Blue and Gold Fleet.
To reach Alcatraz Island, you travel
by ferry from Pier 41 at Fisherman's Wharf. The ferry
ride will take you approximately 20 to 25 minutes.
The ferry is easily reached from the Union Square
by bus lines 15-Third or 30-Stockton or by cable
car Powell-Mason line.
Once you arrive at Alcatraz Island you
must walk up a steep hill. There are no elevators.
There is an accessible, interactive computer program
of the island's history available for those unable
to make the walk uphill.
415-705-5555 or visit the ticket booth
at Pier 41, Fisherman's Wharf. The ticket booth is
open Monday through Sunday, 8:30 am to 5 pm. Call
415-705-5555 for an update on extended summer hours.
Golden Gate Park. (Southwest)
John F. Kennedy Dr. west of Stanyan St.
415-263-0991
for walking tour info. Open 24 hours. Free guided tours: Sat.
at 11 and Sun. at 11 and 2.
Muni
Buses 5-Fulton and 21-Hayes; N-Judah light-rail car.
Bordered by the Great Highway on the
west, Lincoln Way on the south, Stanyan Street on
the east, Fulton St. on the north.
The
1, 017 acre park contains a dozen artificial lakes;
a world renowned collection of trees and other plants;
miles of roads, bridle paths and foot trails. The
park extends three miles from Fell and Stanyan Streets
to the ocean.
In
addition to the Asian Art museum, there
is a bison paddock, a restored Dutch style windmill, an
equestrian center, a trotting track, tennis courts,
archery fields, golf course, a polo field stadium, and
an outdoor music concourse which offers concerts
all year.
The
Visitor Center is located in a Beach Chalet on Great
Highway and features murals with scenes of the city
during the Great Depression, as well as mosaics and
wood carvings. (Daily: 10-dusk).
Palace Of Fine Arts (Northwest)
3601 Lyon Street (Adjacent to the Exploratorium)
415-567-6642
San Francisco's rococo Palace of Fine
Arts is at the western end of the Marina. The palace
is the sole survivor of the many tinted plaster,
lath and chicken wire buildings built for the 1915
Panama-Pacific International Exposition, the world's
fair that celebrated San Francisco's recovery from
the 1906 earthquake and fire. The Palace of Fine
Arts was recast in concrete and reopened in 1967.
The massive columns, great rotunda dedicated to the
glory of Greek culture, and swan-filled lagoon have
been used in countless fashion layouts and films.
Exploratorium (Northwest)
Inside the Palace of Fine Arts is the
city's science museum.
Baker and Beach Sts.
415-561-0364 for palace tours; 415-561-0360
for Exploratorium info.
The Exploratorium has
a camera on top of their roof that brings live images
from the Marina, Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz, Palace
of Fine Arts and many more attractions. Viewers have
the ability to control the camera in order to view
particular attractions.
For information on upcoming exhibits,
call 415 EXP-LORE.
San Francisco Museum Of Modern Art (
Southeast)
151 3rd St.
415-357-4000.
Admission
charged, but free 1st
Tues. of each month and 1⁄2-price entry
Thurs. 6-9. Memorial Day-Labor Day, Fri.-Tues. 10-6,
Thurs. 10-9; Labor Day-Memorial Day, Fri.-Tues. 11-6,
Thurs. 11-9
The
architect Mario Botta designed the striking facility,
completed in early 1995, which consists of a sienna
brick facade and a central tower of alternating bands
of black and white stone. Inside, natural light from
the tower floods the central atrium and some of the
museum's galleries. Works by Matisse, Picasso, O'Keeffe,
Kahlo, Pollock, Warhol, and other 20th-century artists
form the heart of the diverse permanent collection.
Programming includes traveling exhibits and multimedia
installations.
Yerba Buena Gardens (Southeast)
Between 3rd, 4th, Mission, and Folsom
Sts
Sunrise-10 PM.
The two block heart of the South of Market
Street redevelopment area includes the Yerba Buena
Center for the Arts, the Sony Metreon entertainment
complex, and the Moscone Center convention
facilities.
Rooftop at Yerba Buena Gardens contains
a Looff carousel, a high-tech, interactive arts and
technology center for children, gardens, a playground,
an ice-skating rink, and a bowling alley.
The waterfall memorial to Martin Luther
King, Jr. is the focal point of the East Garden in
the block between Mission and Howard streets. Water
surges over large, jagged stone columns, mirroring
the force of King's words that are carved on the
stone walls and on glass blocks behind the waterfall.
Above the memorial are two restaurants and an overhead
walkway to the rooftop area.
Asian Art Museum (Southwest)
Tea Garden Dr. off John F. Kennedy Dr.,
near 10th Ave. and Fulton St.,
415-668-8921 or 415-379-8801.
$s
off with Muni transfer, good also for same-day admission
to the M. H. de Young
Museum and the Legion of Honor Museum in Lincoln
Park; free 1st Wed. of month. Tues.-Sun. 9:30-4:45,
1st Wed. of month until 8:45.
The museum's collection includes more
than 12,000 sculptures, paintings, and ceramics from
40 countries, illustrating major periods of Asian
art. On the first floor are special exhibitions as
well as galleries dedicated to works from Korea and
China. On the second floor are treasures from Iran,
Turkey, Syria, India, Tibet, Nepal, Pakistan, India,
Japan, Afghanistan, and Southeast Asia.
California Palace Of The Legion Of Honor
(Northwest)
34th
Ave. at Clement St.
415-863-3330 for 24-hr information.
$s
off with Muni transfer, good also for same-day admission
to Asian Art and M. H.
de Young museums. Free 2nd Wed. of month.
Tues.-Sun. 9:30-5.
Spectacularly
situated on cliffs overlooking the ocean and the Marin
Headlands, this landmark building is a fine repository
of European art. The lower-level galleries exhibit
prints and drawings, English and European porcelain,
and ancient Assyrian, Greek, Roman, and Egyptian art.
The 20-plus galleries on the upper level are devoted
to European art from the 14th century to the present.
Two galleries are devoted to the Rodin collection,
and a third with works by him and other 19th-century
sculptors. An original cast of Rodin's The Thinker welcomes
the visitor in the courtyard.
Chinatown (covers about 16 square blocks)
Delicious smells waft out of restaurants,
fish markets, and produce stands. Good-luck banners
of crimson and gold hang beside dragon-entwined lampposts,
pagoda roofs, and street signs with Chinese calligraphy.
Grant
Avenue and Stockton Street are the main thoroughfares
and are lined with tearooms, shops and temples, Christian
missions, Chinese schools, theaters, and grocery stores.
Be sure to visit the
district's narrow side streets also. At No.
56 Ross Alley west of and parallel to Grant Avenue
between Washington and Jackson Streets visitors are
welcome to watch fortune-cookie bakers in action.
Three flights of stairs lead up to Tin How Temple,
at No. 125 Waverly Place, where elderly ladies can
often be seen preparing "money" to be burned as offerings
to various Buddhist gods or as funds for ancestors
to use in the afterlife. Visit Chinatown as
you would like people to visit your home neighborhood. Be
open to learning from those who welcome your presence,
and leave an impression of warmth and good
will behind.
Chinese
Historical Society of America (Midtown)
644 Broadway, Suite 401
415-391-1188
Mon
1-4 Tues-Fri 10:30-4 Sat
hours vary.
Donations.
Documents the role of the Chinese in
the settlement of San Francisco and the West through
a series of exhibits.
Cannery (Northeast)
415-771-3112
East side of the block bordered by Jefferson,
Leavenworth, Beach and Hyde Streets
Formerly a Del Monte fruit cannery; it
houses specialty shops, art galleries and restaurants,
linked by arcades, bridges and balconies.
Ghiardelli Square (Northeast)
415-775-5500
Between
Beach, Polk, Northpoint and Larkin Streets within walking
distance of the Cannery and Fisherman’s Wharf, this 2.5 acre site houses
the former Ghiardelli Chocolate factory, a woolen
mill, apartments, and other buildings that have been
refurbished to house specialty shops, bakeries and
international restaurants. Many mimes and “human
statues” perform next to the square.
The Metreon
( Southeast)
415-369-6000
Daily
10-10
SONY
entertainment center at Fourth and Mission Streets
in Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. The
center features an interactive play space called: “Where
the Wild Things Are”; an Adventure zone called
Airtight Garage; and “The
Way things Work in Mammoth 3-D”.
Coit Tower (Northeast)
Telegraph Hill Blvd., at Greenwich St.
or Lombard St.,
415-362-0808.
Admission
charged. Daily 10-6:30.
Among San Francisco's most distinctive
skyline sights, the 210-ft-tall Coit Tower stands
as a monument to the city's volunteer firefighters.
From the Tower there is a spectacular view of the
Golden Gate Bridge, the East Bay, and surrounding
areas.
Inside
the tower, Depression era murals depict economic and
political life in California. The
government commissioned the murals and paid 25 artists
$38 a week each to paint them. The radical
Mexican painter, Diego Rivera inspired the theme
of the murals: the exploitation of workers. At
the time they were painted, there was widespread
friction between management and labor along the waterfront
and elsewhere in San Francisco.
Golden
Gate Bridge (Northwest)
Lincoln
Blvd. near Doyle Dr. and Fort Point
415-921-5858.
Daily, 24 hrs for cars and bikes, 5 AM-9
PM for pedestrians.
Muni Buses 28 and 29 to San Francisco
side.
The
suspension bridge that connects San Francisco with
Marin County impresses visitors and locals alike with
its 750-ft towers, and simple
but powerful Art Deco design. Nearly 2 mi, long, the
Golden Gate was completed in 1937 after four years
of construction, and was built to withstand winds
of more than 100 mph.
This landmark is a symbol of San Francisco
and the Bay Area. The Bridge is an architectural
marvel, and is one of the longest suspension bridges
in the world. The two towers are purposely out of
alignment in order to compensate for the curvature
of the earth.
Because
it is frequently gusty and misty , walkers should wear
warm clothing. The
bridge offers unparalleled views of the Bay Area.
Bay Area Discovery Museum (Northwest)
Off US101 at 557 McReynolds Road
(In Golden
Gate National Recreation Area at the north end of Golden
Gate bridge.)
415-487-4398
Tues-Sun.
10-5 (6/15-9/15) Tues-Thurs
9-4; Fri-Sun 110-5, (rest of the year) Call for holiday
schedule.
Admission
charged. Children must
be accompanied by an adult.
This
museum features hands-on exhibits for children. Children
can climb on a fishing boat and fish; learn to ride a unicycle; create
clay animation movies; crawl through an underwater
tunnel; decorate a doll house, to name a few
of the choices. There is a Tot Spot storybook
environment for children 1-3.
Cable
Car Barn & Museum (Downtown)
1201 Mason St. at Washington St.
415 474-1887
Daily
10-6 Apr-Sept. 10-5 rest
of year
Donations.
Contains
models, photographs and memorabilia chronicling the history of San Francisco’s
early transit system, including the first cable car
built in 1873.
Underground viewing room shows mechanics
of the system.
California Academy of Sciences (Southeast)
in Golden Gate Park
415-750-7145
Daily
9-6 (Memorial Day weekend
- Labor Day) 10-5 rest of the year.
Admission
charged. Free to all
first Wed. of the month.
Consists of:
1) Morrison
Planetarium
415 750-7141
Admission charged.
Houses
a 5,000 pound star projector, built specially for the
planetarium. Under
a 65 foot dome star shows are given Sat, Sun. first
Wed. of the month and holidays on the hour 11-4. Mon-Fri.
at 2:00. Call for program titles and to confirm
hours. The Planetarium also features Laserium, a
laser light and music show.
2) Natural
History Museum
Includes
Wild California Hall; Simson African Hall; Hall of
Gems and Minerals. There
are also Far Side of Science Gallery and Earth
and Space Hall in which visitors can safely
experience a simulated California earthquake on a “shake
table.” Life Through Time and the Age
of the Dinosaurs are also popular exhibits.
3) Steinhart
Aquarium
Houses
some 14,000 aquatic animals including octopuses, alligators,
turtles, reptiles, sharks, sea anemones and sea horses. Sharks of the
Tropics are housed in a re-created tropical reef
habitat. Sharks are fed daily every two hours
10:30-4:30. Penguins are fed at 11:30 and 4:00.
Embarcadero Center (Downtown)
between
Clay & Sacramento Sts. on
Drum Street
800-733-6318
The
Embarcadero Center is one of the most vital urban centers
in San Francisco. It is a city in itself with five high rise towers
and the Old Federal Reserve Bank building connected
by elevated walks, escalators and stairways. More
than 140 shops and restaurants are available
to residents and office workers and to the numerous
visitors. A five screen movie theater, luxury
hotels, and the observation SkyDeck complete
the picture. Live music and festivals are frequently
found at the Center. In late November, 17,000 white
lights are turned on to outline the towers.
Nob
Hill (Downtown)
between Clay, California, Jones and Powell
Streets
415-391-2000
A
century ago the railroad erected mansions, and today
the wealthy live there in penthouses. Among
the famous landmarks are the Fairmont and Mark Hopkins
Hotels and the newer Renaissance Stanford Court: three
of the most luxurious hotels in the world. Nearby
Grace Cathedral is modeled after Notre Dame in Paris
and Huntington Park contains a replica of the Tartarughe
Fountain in Rome. Classical and art nouveau
apartment buildings line the downtown side of the
steep hill.
Pier
39 (Northeast)
The Embarcadero at Jefferson Street
415 981-7437
Cable car transport to Union Square every
20 minutes.
San
Francisco's version of the old-fashioned boardwalk,
this two level marketplace designed to look like a
village by the sea, features over
100 specialty shops and restaurants.
Children enjoy the Venetian Carousel. Teens
hang out at the Cyber Station Family Games Arcade. The
Bungee Trampoline and the big screen multimedia Turbo
Ride in hydraulic seats are other prime attractions. A
giant screen with surround sound shows two films: The
Great San Francisco Adventure and the Living
Sea. The famous California 1000 pound sea
lions perform on K Dock. Musicians, mimes,
actors, and jugglers entertain on outdoor stages.
Underwater World ( Northeast)
Pier
39 at the Embacadero and Beach
Street.
415
623-5300. Daily 9-8.
Admission charged. Discount for public
transit riders.
Clear
acrylic tunnels give visitors the
same close look a diver would have at such marine
life as sharks, jellyfish, rays and eels. Guided
tours last an hour.
USS
Pampanito (Northeast)
at the end of Taylor Street and Pier
45
415-775-1943
Daily
9-8 (mid-May-mid Oct.) Sun-Thurs
9-6 rest of the year). Admission charged.
A
World War II submarine that saw action in the Pacific
theater. Self guided tours. Stooping
through low bulkheads is required to tour the sub.
San
Francisco Maritime Park (Northeast)
Hyde Street Pier
415 556-3002
America's
only floating national park features the world's largest
collection of historic ships from the annals of San
Francisco's history. Programs, exhibits and events
focus on living history at this floating museum. For
more information, call 561-6662.
Fisherman's
Wharf (Northeast)
At the end of Taylor Street
Ripley’s Believe it or Not; and
the Wax Museum are two attractions in this
area.
Millions
visit this part of San Francisco each year to gaze
across the piers, take in the local scene, and enjoy
the numerous fine restaurants.
San
Francisco Zoo (Southeast)
Sloat-Great Hwy.
415 753-7080
This
world-renowned zoo is home to over 1,000 exotic, wild
and domestic animals housed on dozens of acres. Be
sure to visit the primate center, penguin island and
the children's petting zoo.
Golden Gate Railroad Museum (Southwest)
Hunters Point Shipyard
822-8728
has
one of the most extensive collections of historic,
operating, railroad equipment in the west. Famous trains
such as the Daylights, Overland Limited, Cascade, Sunset,
Lark, Del Monte, California Zephyr and City of San
Francisco are on display, as well as the museum's "star," steam
engine SP 2472. The GGRM now offers Rent-A-Locomotive
and special events programs allowing guests to actually
operate a full sized locomotive.
Japan’s
Center (Southwest)
Boundaries
are: Post, Fillmore,
Geary and Laguna Streets
415-922-6776
Underground parking is available.
A
five acre complex containing Miyako Hotel; the offices
of the Japanese consulate; and the Peace Pagoda which
stands in the central plaza. Music,
dance, tea ceremonies, and martial arts presentations
are given on many weekends. Call for schedule
of events and times. The area has restaurants,
shops, art galleries, movie theaters, and Japanese
baths.
Japanese Tea Garden (Southwest)
8th Avenue and Kennedy Drive
415-752-1171
Daily
9-6:30 (Mar-Sept) 9-5
(rest of the year).
Admission
charged.
Landscaped
with bridges, walks, ponds, miniature waterfalls, statues,
and pagodas. The
garden is spectacular when the cherry blossoms bloom
in the Spring.
Strybing Arboretum (Southwest)
9th Avenue and Lincoln Way
415-661-1316
Mon-Fri.
8:30-4:30 Sat, Sun 10-5 Free
guided tours daily at 1:30 Sat, Sun. 10:30.
Donations
More
than 7,000 species of plants from around the world
are displayed. Within
the 70 acres are demonstration gardens, a Mediterranean
collection, a New World cloud forest collection,
the Garden of Fragrance for the visually impaired,
and the Moonviewing Pavilion and waterfall.
Mount
Tamalpais State Park
Mill Valley, California
415-388-2070
Daily
dawn-dusk. Parking fee.
The
park covers 6,300 acres of picturesque coastal hill
country. Triple peaked Mount Tamalpais
rises above it. Hiking and bicycling trails
and a winding road lead to the summit. The
view is unparalleled. There is a visitor center
at the summit. |