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Wikipedia

San Francisco

San Francisco,[24] officially the City and County of San Francisco, is a commercial, financial, and cultural center in Northern California. With a population of 808,437 residents as of 2022,[25] San Francisco is the fourth most populous city in the U.S. state of California. The city covers a land area of 46.9 square miles (121 square kilometers)[26] at the end of the San Francisco Peninsula, making it the second-most densely populated large U.S. city after New York City and the fifth-most densely populated U.S. county, behind only four New York City boroughs. Among the 92 U.S. cities proper with over 250,000 residents, San Francisco is ranked first by per capita income and sixth by aggregate income as of 2022.[27]

San Francisco
City and County of San Francisco
Nicknames: 
Motto(s): 
Oro en Paz, Fierro en Guerra
(Spanish for 'Gold in Peace, Iron in War')
Anthem: Official song: Theme from San Francisco ("open your Golden Gate")
Official ballad:"I Left My Heart in San Francisco"[2][3]
Interactive map outlining San Francisco
San Francisco highlighted in California.
San Francisco
Location within California
San Francisco
Location within the United States
Coordinates: 37°46′39″N 122°24′59″W / 37.77750°N 122.41639°W / 37.77750; -122.41639
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountySan Francisco
MetroSan Francisco–Oakland–Hayward
CSASan Jose–San Francisco–Oakland
MissionJune 29, 1776 (247 years ago) (June 29, 1776)[4]
IncorporatedApril 15, 1850 (174 years ago) (April 15, 1850)[5]
Founded byJuan Bautista de Anza
José Joaquín Moraga
Francisco Palóu
Named forSt. Francis of Assisi
Government
 • TypeStrong mayor–council
 • BodyBoard of Supervisors
 • MayorLondon Breed (D)[6]
 • Supervisors[10]
 • Assembly members[11][12]Matt Haney (D)
Phil Ting (D)
 • State senatorScott Wiener (D)[7]
 • United States RepresentativesNancy Pelosi (D)[8]
Kevin Mullin (D)[9]
Area
 • City and county231.89 sq mi (600.59 km2)
 • Land46.9 sq mi (121.48 km2)
 • Water184.99 sq mi (479.11 km2)  80.00%
 • Metro
3,524.4 sq mi (9,128 km2)
Elevation52 ft (16 m)
Highest elevation934 ft (285 m)
Lowest elevation
[15] (Pacific Ocean)
0 ft (0 m)
Population
 • City and county873,965
 • Estimate 
(2022)[16]
808,437
 • Rank39th in North America
17th in the United States
4th in California
 • Density18,634.65/sq mi (7,194.88/km2)
 • Urban3,515,933 (US: 14th)
 • Urban density6,843.0/sq mi (2,642.1/km2)
 • Metro4,566,961 (US: 13th)
 • CSA9,225,160 (US: 5th)
DemonymSan Franciscan[20]
Time zoneUTC–08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC–07:00 (PDT)
ZIP Codes[21]
List
  • 94102–94105
  • 94107–94112
  • 94114–94134
  • 94137
  • 94139–94147
  • 94151
  • 94158–94161
  • 94163–94164
  • 94172
  • 94177
  • 94188
Area codes415/628[22]
FIPS code06-67000
GNIS feature IDs277593, 2411786
GDP (2022)[23]City—$252.2 billion

MSA—$729.1 billion (4th)

CSA—$1.318 trillion (3rd)
Websitesf.gov
  1. ^ Urban area population/density are for the San Francisco–Oakland, CA urban area as of the 2020 Census.

Prior to European settlement, the modern city proper was inhabited by the Yelamu, who spoke a language now referred to as Ramaytush Ohlone. On June 29, 1776, settlers from New Spain established the Presidio of San Francisco at the Golden Gate, and the Mission San Francisco de Asís a few miles away, both named for Francis of Assisi.[4] The California gold rush of 1849 brought rapid growth, transforming an unimportant hamlet into a busy port, making it the largest city on the West Coast at the time; between 1870 and 1900, approximately one quarter of California's population resided in the city proper.[27] In 1856, San Francisco became a consolidated city-county.[28] After three-quarters of the city was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire,[29] it was quickly rebuilt, hosting the Panama–Pacific International Exposition nine years later. In World War II, it was a major port of embarkation for naval service members shipping out to the Pacific Theater.[30] In 1945, the United Nations Charter was signed in San Francisco, establishing the United Nations and in 1951, the Treaty of San Francisco re-established peaceful relations between Japan and the Allied Powers.[31][32][33] After the war, the confluence of returning servicemen, significant immigration, liberalizing attitudes, the rise of the beatnik and hippie countercultures, the sexual revolution, the peace movement growing from opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War, and other factors led to the Summer of Love and the gay rights movement, cementing San Francisco as a center of liberal activism in the United States.

San Francisco and the surrounding San Francisco Bay Area are a global center of economic activity and the arts and sciences,[34][35] spurred by leading universities,[36] high-tech, healthcare, finance, insurance, real estate, and professional services sectors.[37] As of 2020, the metropolitan area, with 6.7 million residents, ranked 5th by GDP ($874 billion) and 2nd by GDP per capita ($131,082) across the OECD countries, ahead of global cities like Paris, London, and Singapore.[38][39][40] San Francisco anchors the 13th most populous metropolitan statistical area in the United States with 4.6 million residents, and the fourth-largest by aggregate income and economic output, with a GDP of $729 billion in 2022.[41] The wider San Jose–San Francisco–Oakland Combined Statistical Area is the nation's fifth-most populous, with around nine million residents, and the third-largest by economic output, with a GDP of $1.32 trillion in 2022. In the same year, San Francisco proper had a GDP of $252.2 billion, and a GDP per capita of $312,000.[41] San Francisco was ranked fifth in the world and second in the United States on the Global Financial Centres Index as of September 2023.[42] The city is home to numerous companies inside and outside of technology, including Salesforce, Uber, Airbnb, X Corp., Levi's, Gap, Dropbox, and Lyft.

In 2022, San Francisco had more than 1.7 million international visitors – the fifth-most visited city from abroad in the United States after New York City, Miami, Orlando, and Los Angeles – and approximately 20 million domestic visitors for a total of 21.9 million visitors.[43][44] The city is known for its steep rolling hills and eclectic mix of architecture across varied neighborhoods, as well as its cool summers, fog, and landmarks, including the Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, and Alcatraz, along with the Chinatown and Mission districts.[45] The city is home to a number of educational and cultural institutions, such as the University of California, San Francisco, the University of San Francisco, San Francisco State University, the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the de Young Museum, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the San Francisco Symphony, the San Francisco Ballet, the San Francisco Opera, the SFJAZZ Center, and the California Academy of Sciences. Two major league sports teams, the San Francisco Giants and the Golden State Warriors, play their home games within San Francisco proper. San Francisco's main international airport offers flights to over 125 destinations while a light rail and bus network, in tandem with the BART and Caltrain systems, connects nearly every part of San Francisco with the wider region.[46][47]

Etymology edit

San Francisco, which is Spanish for "Saint Francis," takes its name from Mission San Francisco de Asís, which in turn was named after Saint Francis of Assisi. The mission received its name in 1776, when it was founded by the Spanish under the leadership of Padre Francisco Palóu. The city has officially been known as San Francisco since 1847, when Washington Allon Bartlett, then serving as the city's alcalde, renamed it from Yerba Buena (Spanish for "Good Herb"), which had been name used throughout the Spanish and Mexican eras since approximately 1776. The name Yerba Buena continues to be used in locations in the city, such as on Yerba Buena Island and in the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts and Yerba Buena Gardens.

While residents outside the San Francisco Bay Area use nicknames including Frisco, San Fran, and SF, local residents in the Bay Area sometimes refer to San Francisco as "the City";[1] for residents of San Francisco living in the more suburban parts of the city, "the City" generally refers to the more densely populated downtown areas around Market Street. Its use, or lack thereof, is a common way for locals to distinguish long-time residents from tourists and recent arrivals. "San Fran" and "Frisco" are sometimes considered controversial as nicknames among San Francisco residents.[48][49][50]

History edit

Indigenous history edit

The earliest archeological evidence of human habitation of the territory of San Francisco dates to 3000 BCE.[51] The Yelamu group of the Ramaytush people resided in a few small villages when an overland Spanish exploration party arrived on November 2, 1769, the first documented European visit to San Francisco Bay.[52] The Ohlone name for San Francisco was Ahwaste, meaning, "place at the bay."[53] The arrival of Spanish colonists, and the implementation of their Mission system, marked the beginning of the genocide of the Ramaytush people, and the deprivation of language and culture.[54][55][56]

Spanish era edit

 
Juan Bautista de Anza established the Presidio of San Francisco for the Spanish Empire in 1776.
 
Mission San Francisco de Asís was founded by Padre Francisco Palóu on October 9, 1776.

The Spanish Empire claimed San Francisco as part of Las Californias, a province of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. The Spanish first arrived in what is now San Francisco on November 2, 1769, when the Portolá expedition led by Don Gaspar de Portolá and Juan Crespí arrived at San Francisco Bay. Having noted the strategic benefits of the area due to its large natural harbor, the Spanish dispatched Pedro Fages in 1770 to find a more direct route to the San Francisco Peninsula from Monterey, which would become part of the El Camino Real route. By 1774, Juan Bautista de Anza had arrived to the area to select the sites for a mission and presidio. The first European maritime presence in San Francisco Bay occurred on August 5, 1775, when the Spanish ship San Carlos, commanded by Juan Manuel de Ayala, became the first ship to anchor in the bay.[57]

Soon after, on March 28, 1776, Anza established the Presidio of San Francisco. On October 9, Mission San Francisco de Asís, also known as Mission Dolores, was founded by Padre Francisco Palóu.[4] In 1794, the Presidio established the Castillo de San Joaquín, a fortification on the southern side of the Golden Gate, which later came to be known as Fort Point.

In 1804, the province of Alta California was created, which included Yerba Buena – the former name of San Francisco. At its peak in 1810–1820, the average population at the Mission Dolores settlement was about 1,100 people.[58]

Mexican era edit

 
Juana Briones de Miranda, known as the "Founding Mother of San Francisco"[59]

In 1821, the Californias were ceded to Mexico by Spain. The extensive California mission system gradually lost its influence during the period of Mexican rule. Agricultural land became largely privatized as ranchos, as was occurring in other parts of California. Coastal trade increased, including a half-dozen barques from various Atlantic ports which regularly sailed in California waters.[60][61]

Yerba Buena (after a native herb), a trading post with settlements between the Presidio and Mission grew up around the Plaza de Yerba Buena. The plaza was later renamed Portsmouth Square (now located in the city's Chinatown and Financial District). The Presidio was commanded in 1833 by Captain Mariano G. Vallejo.[60]

In 1833, Juana Briones de Miranda built her rancho near El Polín Spring, founding the first civilian household in San Francisco, which had previously only been comprised by the military settlement at the Presidio and the religious settlement at Mission Dolores.[59]

In 1834, Francisco de Haro became the first Alcalde of Yerba Buena. De Haro was a native of Mexico, from that nation's west coast city of Compostela, Nayarit. A land survey of Yerba Buena was made by the Swiss immigrant Jean Jacques Vioget as prelude to the city plan. The second Alcalde José Joaquín Estudillo was a Californio from a prominent Monterey family. In 1835, while in office, he approved the first land grant in Yerba Buena: to William Richardson, a naturalized Mexican citizen of English birth. Richardson had arrived in San Francisco aboard a whaling ship in 1822. In 1825, he married Maria Antonia Martinez, eldest daughter of the Californio Ygnacio Martínez.[62][a]

 
The 1846 Battle of Yerba Buena was an early U.S. victory in the American conquest of California.

Yerba Buena began to attract American and European settlers; an 1842 census listed 21 residents (11%) born in the United States or Europe, as well as one Filipino merchant.[63] Following the Bear Flag Revolt in Sonoma and the beginning of the U.S. Conquest of California, American forces under the command of John B. Montgomery captured Yerba Buena on July 9, 1846, with little resistance from the local Californio population. At the end of the month, the Brooklyn arrived with a group of Mormon settlers, who had departed New York City six months earlier. Following the capture, U.S. forces appointed both José de Jesús Noé and Washington Allon Bartlett to serve as co-alcaldes (mayors), while the conquest continued on in the rest of California. Following the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, Alta California was ceded from Mexico to the United States.

Post-Conquest era edit

 
San Francisco in 1849, during the beginning of the California gold rush
 
Port of San Francisco in 1851

Despite its attractive location as a port and naval base, post-Conquest San Francisco was still a small settlement with inhospitable geography.[64] Its 1847 population was said to be 459.[60]

The California gold rush brought a flood of treasure seekers (known as "forty-niners," as in "1849"). With their sourdough bread in tow,[65] prospectors accumulated in San Francisco over rival Benicia,[66] raising the population from 1,000 in 1848 to 25,000 by December 1849.[67] The promise of wealth was so strong that crews on arriving vessels deserted and rushed off to the gold fields, leaving behind a forest of masts in San Francisco harbor.[68] Some of these approximately 500 abandoned ships were used at times as storeships, saloons, and hotels; many were left to rot, and some were sunk to establish title to the underwater lot. By 1851, the harbor was extended out into the bay by wharves while buildings were erected on piles among the ships. By 1870, Yerba Buena Cove had been filled to create new land. Buried ships are occasionally exposed when foundations are dug for new buildings.[69]

California was quickly granted statehood in 1850, and the U.S. military built Fort Point at the Golden Gate and a fort on Alcatraz Island to secure the San Francisco Bay. San Francisco County was one of the state's 18 original counties established at California statehood in 1850.[70] Until 1856, San Francisco's city limits extended west to Divisadero Street and Castro Street, and south to 20th Street. In 1856, the California state government divided the county. A straight line was then drawn across the tip of the San Francisco Peninsula just north of San Bruno Mountain. Everything south of the line became the new San Mateo County while everything north of the line became the new consolidated City and County of San Francisco.[71]

 
The Bank of California, established in 1863, was the first commercial bank in Western United States.[72]

Entrepreneurs sought to capitalize on the wealth generated by the gold rush. Silver discoveries, including the Comstock Lode in Nevada in 1859, further drove rapid population growth.[73] With hordes of fortune seekers streaming through the city, lawlessness was common, and the Barbary Coast section of town gained notoriety as a haven for criminals, prostitution, bootlegging, and gambling.[74] Early winners were the banking industry, with the founding of Wells Fargo in 1852 and the Bank of California in 1864.

Development of the Port of San Francisco and the establishment in 1869 of overland access to the eastern U.S. rail system via the newly completed Pacific Railroad (the construction of which the city only reluctantly helped support[75]) helped make the Bay Area a center for trade. Catering to the needs and tastes of the growing population, Levi Strauss opened a dry goods business and Domingo Ghirardelli began manufacturing chocolate. Chinese immigrants made the city a polyglot culture, drawn to "Old Gold Mountain," creating the city's Chinatown quarter. By 1880, Chinese made up 9.3% of the population.[76]

 
View of the city in 1878

The first cable cars carried San Franciscans up Clay Street in 1873. The city's sea of Victorian houses began to take shape, and civic leaders campaigned for a spacious public park, resulting in plans for Golden Gate Park. San Franciscans built schools, churches, theaters, and all the hallmarks of civic life. The Presidio developed into the most important American military installation on the Pacific coast.[77] By 1890, San Francisco's population approached 300,000, making it the eighth-largest city in the United States at the time. Around 1901, San Francisco was a major city known for its flamboyant style, stately hotels, ostentatious mansions on Nob Hill, and a thriving arts scene.[78] The first North American plague epidemic was the San Francisco plague of 1900–1904.[79]

1906 earthquake and interwar era edit

 
The 1906 San Francisco earthquake was the deadliest earthquake in U.S. history.

At 5:12 am on April 18, 1906, a major earthquake struck San Francisco and northern California. As buildings collapsed from the shaking, ruptured gas lines ignited fires that spread across the city and burned out of control for several days. With water mains out of service, the Presidio Artillery Corps attempted to contain the inferno by dynamiting blocks of buildings to create firebreaks.[80] More than three-quarters of the city lay in ruins, including almost all of the downtown core.[29] Contemporary accounts reported that 498 people died, though modern estimates put the number in the several thousands.[81] More than half of the city's population of 400,000 was left homeless.[82] Refugees settled temporarily in makeshift tent villages in Golden Gate Park, the Presidio, on the beaches, and elsewhere. Many fled permanently to the East Bay. Jack London is remembered for having famously eulogized the earthquake: "Not in history has a modern imperial city been so completely destroyed. San Francisco is gone."[83]

 
The reconstruction of San Francisco City Hall on Civic Center Plaza, c. 1913–16

Rebuilding was rapid and performed on a grand scale. Rejecting calls to completely remake the street grid, San Franciscans opted for speed.[84] Amadeo Giannini's Bank of Italy, later to become Bank of America, provided loans for many of those whose livelihoods had been devastated. The influential San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association or SPUR was founded in 1910 to address the quality of housing after the earthquake.[85] The earthquake hastened development of western neighborhoods that survived the fire, including Pacific Heights, where many of the city's wealthy rebuilt their homes.[86] In turn, the destroyed mansions of Nob Hill became grand hotels. City Hall rose again in the Beaux Arts style, and the city celebrated its rebirth at the Panama–Pacific International Exposition in 1915.[87]

 
The Panama–Pacific Exposition, a major world's fair held in 1915, was seen as a chance to showcase the city's recovery from the earthquake.

During this period, San Francisco built some of its most important infrastructure. Civil Engineer Michael O'Shaughnessy was hired by San Francisco Mayor James Rolph as chief engineer for the city in September 1912 to supervise the construction of the Twin Peaks Reservoir, the Stockton Street Tunnel, the Twin Peaks Tunnel, the San Francisco Municipal Railway, the Auxiliary Water Supply System, and new sewers. San Francisco's streetcar system, of which the J, K, L, M, and N lines survive today, was pushed to completion by O'Shaughnessy between 1915 and 1927. It was the O'Shaughnessy Dam, Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, and Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct that would have the largest effect on San Francisco.[88] An abundant water supply enabled San Francisco to develop into the city it has become today.

 
The Bay Bridge under construction on Yerba Buena Island in 1935

In ensuing years, the city solidified its standing as a financial capital; in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, not a single San Francisco-based bank failed.[89] Indeed, it was at the height of the Great Depression that San Francisco undertook two great civil engineering projects, simultaneously constructing the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge, completing them in 1936 and 1937, respectively. It was in this period that the island of Alcatraz, a former military stockade, began its service as a federal maximum security prison, housing notorious inmates such as Al Capone, and Robert Franklin Stroud, the Birdman of Alcatraz. San Francisco later celebrated its regained grandeur with a World's fair, the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939–40, creating Treasure Island in the middle of the bay to house it.[90]

Contemporary era edit

 
The United Nations was created in San Francisco in 1945, when the United Nations Charter was signed at the San Francisco Conference.

During World War II, the city-owned Sharp Park in Pacifica was used as an internment camp to detain Japanese Americans.[91] Hunters Point Naval Shipyard became a hub of activity, and Fort Mason became the primary port of embarkation for service members shipping out to the Pacific Theater of Operations.[30] The explosion of jobs drew many people, especially African Americans from the South, to the area. After the end of the war, many military personnel returning from service abroad and civilians who had originally come to work decided to stay. The United Nations Charter creating the United Nations was drafted and signed in San Francisco in 1945 and, in 1951, the Treaty of San Francisco re-established peaceful relations between Japan and the Allied Powers.[92]

Urban planning projects in the 1950s and 1960s involved widespread destruction and redevelopment of west-side neighborhoods and the construction of new freeways, of which only a series of short segments were built before being halted by citizen-led opposition.[93] The onset of containerization made San Francisco's small piers obsolete, and cargo activity moved to the larger Port of Oakland.[94] The city began to lose industrial jobs and turned to tourism as the most important segment of its economy.[95] The suburbs experienced rapid growth, and San Francisco underwent significant demographic change, as large segments of the white population left the city, supplanted by an increasing wave of immigration from Asia and Latin America.[96][97] From 1950 to 1980, the city lost over 10 percent of its population.

 
The Summer of Love in 1967 was an influential counterculture phenomenon with as many as 100,000 people converging in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury neighborhood.

Over this period, San Francisco became a magnet for America's counterculture movement. Beat Generation writers fueled the San Francisco Renaissance and centered on the North Beach neighborhood in the 1950s.[98] Hippies flocked to Haight-Ashbury in the 1960s, reaching a peak with the 1967 Summer of Love.[99] In 1974, the Zebra murders left at least 16 people dead.[100] In the 1970s, the city became a center of the gay rights movement, with the emergence of The Castro as an urban gay village, the election of Harvey Milk to the Board of Supervisors, and his assassination, along with that of Mayor George Moscone, in 1978.[101]

Bank of America, now based in Charlotte, North Carolina, was founded in San Francisco; the bank completed 555 California Street in 1969. The Transamerica Pyramid was completed in 1972,[102] igniting a wave of "Manhattanization" that lasted until the late 1980s, a period of extensive high-rise development downtown.[103] The 1980s also saw a dramatic increase in the number of homeless people in the city, an issue that remains today, despite many attempts to address it.[104]

 
Transamerica Pyramid, built in 1972, characterized the Manhattanization of the city's skyline in the 1970–80's.

The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake caused destruction and loss of life throughout the Bay Area. In San Francisco, the quake severely damaged structures in the Marina and South of Market districts and precipitated the demolition of the damaged Embarcadero Freeway and much of the damaged Central Freeway, allowing the city to reclaim The Embarcadero as its historic downtown waterfront and revitalizing the Hayes Valley neighborhood.[105]

The two recent decades have seen booms driven by the internet industry. During the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, startup companies invigorated the San Francisco economy. Large numbers of entrepreneurs and computer application developers moved into the city, followed by marketing, design, and sales professionals, changing the social landscape as once poorer neighborhoods became increasingly gentrified.[106] Demand for new housing and office space ignited a second wave of high-rise development, this time in the South of Market district.[107] By 2000, the city's population reached new highs, surpassing the previous record set in 1950. When the bubble burst in 2001 and again in 2023, many of these companies folded and their employees were laid off. Yet high technology and entrepreneurship remain mainstays of the San Francisco economy. By the mid-2000s (decade), the social media boom had begun, with San Francisco becoming a popular location for tech offices and a common place to live for people employed in Silicon Valley companies such as Apple and Google.[108]

The early 2020s featured an exodus of tech companies from Downtown San Francisco in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and struggles with homelessness and public drug use. Although some observers have raised the possibility that office vacancies and declining tax revenues could cause San Francisco to enter an economic doom loop,[109][110] other sources have refuted this broad-based characterization of the city as a whole, asserting that the issues of concern are restricted primarily to the urban core of San Francisco.[111][112]

The Ferry Station Post Office Building, Armour & Co. Building, Atherton House, and YMCA Hotel are historic buildings among dozens of historical landmarks in the city, according to the National Register of Historic Places listings in San Francisco.[113]

Geography edit

 
Satellite view of San Francisco

San Francisco is located on the West Coast of the United States, at the north end of the San Francisco Peninsula and includes significant stretches of the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay within its boundaries. Several picturesque islandsAlcatraz, Treasure Island and the adjacent Yerba Buena Island, and small portions of Alameda Island, Red Rock Island, and Angel Island—are part of the city. Also included are the uninhabited Farallon Islands, 27 miles (43 km) offshore in the Pacific Ocean. The mainland within the city limits roughly forms a "seven-by-seven-mile square," a common local colloquialism referring to the city's shape, though its total area, including water, is nearly 232 square miles (600 km2).

There are more than 50 hills within the city limits.[114] Some neighborhoods are named after the hill on which they are situated, including Nob Hill, Potrero Hill, and Russian Hill. Near the geographic center of the city, southwest of the downtown area, are a series of less densely populated hills. Twin Peaks, a pair of hills forming one of the city's highest points, forms an overlook spot. San Francisco's tallest hill, Mount Davidson, is 928 feet (283 m) high and is capped with a 103-foot (31 m) tall cross built in 1934.[115] Dominating this area is Sutro Tower, a large red and white radio and television transmission tower reaching 1,811 ft (552 m) above sea level.

 
Lake Merced, located in southwestern San Francisco

The nearby San Andreas and Hayward Faults are responsible for much earthquake activity, although neither physically passes through the city itself. The San Andreas Fault caused the earthquakes in 1906 and 1989. Minor earthquakes occur on a regular basis. The threat of major earthquakes plays a large role in the city's infrastructure development. The city constructed an auxiliary water supply system and has repeatedly upgraded its building codes, requiring retrofits for older buildings and higher engineering standards for new construction.[116] However, there are still thousands of smaller buildings that remain vulnerable to quake damage.[117] USGS has released the California earthquake forecast which models earthquake occurrence in California.[118]

San Francisco's shoreline has grown beyond its natural limits. Entire neighborhoods such as the Marina, Mission Bay, and Hunters Point, as well as large sections of the Embarcadero, sit on areas of landfill. Treasure Island was constructed from material dredged from the bay as well as material resulting from the excavation of the Yerba Buena Tunnel through Yerba Buena Island during the construction of the Bay Bridge. Such land tends to be unstable during earthquakes. The resulting soil liquefaction causes extensive damage to property built upon it, as was evidenced in the Marina district during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.[119] A few natural lakes and creeks (Lake Merced, Mountain Lake, Pine Lake, Lobos Creek, El Polin Spring) are within parks and remain protected in what is essentially their original form, but most of the city's natural watercourses, such as Islais Creek and Mission Creek, have been partially or completely culverted and built over. Since the 1990s, however, the Public Utilities Commission has been studying proposals to daylight or restore some creeks.[120]

Neighborhoods edit

 
View of the city's central districts along its northeastern coastline

The historic center of San Francisco is the northeast quadrant of the city anchored by Market Street and the waterfront. Here the Financial District is centered, with Union Square, the principal shopping and hotel district, and the Tenderloin nearby. Cable cars carry riders up steep inclines to the summit of Nob Hill, once the home of the city's business tycoons, and down to the waterfront tourist attractions of Fisherman's Wharf, and Pier 39, where many restaurants feature Dungeness crab from a still-active fishing industry. Also in this quadrant are Russian Hill, a residential neighborhood with the famously crooked Lombard Street; North Beach, the city's Little Italy and the former center of the Beat Generation; and Telegraph Hill, which features Coit Tower. Abutting Russian Hill and North Beach is San Francisco's Chinatown, the oldest Chinatown in North America.[121][122][123][124] The South of Market, which was once San Francisco's industrial core, has seen significant redevelopment following the construction of Oracle Park and an infusion of startup companies. New skyscrapers, live-work lofts, and condominiums dot the area. Further development is taking place just to the south in Mission Bay area, a former railroad yard, which now has a second campus of the University of California, San Francisco and Chase Center, which opened in 2019 as the new home of the Golden State Warriors.[125]

West of downtown, across Van Ness Avenue, lies the large Western Addition neighborhood, which became established with a large African American population after World War II. The Western Addition is usually divided into smaller neighborhoods including Hayes Valley, the Fillmore, and Japantown, which was once the largest Japantown in North America but suffered when its Japanese American residents were forcibly removed and interned during World War II. The Western Addition survived the 1906 earthquake with its Victorians largely intact, including the famous "Painted Ladies," standing alongside Alamo Square. To the south, near the geographic center of the city is Haight-Ashbury, famously associated with 1960s hippie culture.[126] The Haight is now[timeframe?] home to some expensive boutiques[127][better source needed] and a few controversial chain stores,[128] although it still retains[timeframe?][citation needed] some bohemian character.

 
San Francisco Chinatown, the oldest in North America and one of the world's largest.

North of the Western Addition is Pacific Heights, an affluent neighborhood that features the homes built by wealthy San Franciscans in the wake of the 1906 earthquake. Directly north of Pacific Heights facing the waterfront is the Marina, a neighborhood popular with young professionals that was largely built on reclaimed land from the Bay.[129]

In the southeast quadrant of the city is the Mission District—populated in the 19th century by Californios and working-class immigrants from Germany, Ireland, Italy, and Scandinavia. In the 1910s, a wave of Central American immigrants settled in the Mission and, in the 1950s, immigrants from Mexico began to predominate.[130] In recent years, gentrification has changed the demographics of parts of the Mission from Latino, to twenty-something professionals. Noe Valley to the southwest and Bernal Heights to the south are both increasingly popular among young families with children. East of the Mission is the Potrero Hill neighborhood, a mostly residential neighborhood that features sweeping views of downtown San Francisco. West of the Mission, the area historically known as Eureka Valley, now popularly called the Castro, was once a working-class Scandinavian and Irish area. It has become North America's first gay village, and is now the center of gay life in the city.[131] Located near the city's southern border, the Excelsior District is one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in San Francisco. The Bayview-Hunters Point in the far southeast corner of the city is one of the poorest neighborhoods, though the area has been the focus of several revitalizing and urban renewal projects.

 
The Ferry Building, located in the Embarcadero, the city's eastern waterfront along San Francisco Bay

The construction of the Twin Peaks Tunnel in 1918 connected southwest neighborhoods to downtown via streetcar, hastening the development of West Portal, and nearby affluent Forest Hill and St. Francis Wood. Further west, stretching all the way to the Pacific Ocean and north to Golden Gate Park lies the vast Sunset District, a large middle-class area with a predominantly Asian population.[132]

The northwestern quadrant of the city contains the Richmond, a mostly middle-class neighborhood north of Golden Gate Park, home to immigrants from other parts of Asia as well as many Russian and Ukrainian immigrants. Together, these areas are known as The Avenues. These two districts are each sometimes further divided into two regions: the Outer Richmond and Outer Sunset can refer to the more western portions of their respective district and the Inner Richmond and Inner Sunset can refer to the more eastern portions.

Many piers remained derelict for years until the demolition of the Embarcadero Freeway reopened the downtown waterfront, allowing for redevelopment. The centerpiece of the port, the Ferry Building, while still receiving commuter ferry traffic, has been restored and redeveloped as a gourmet marketplace.

Climate edit

 
San Francisco fog is a regular phenomenon in the summer.

San Francisco has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen: Csb), characteristic of California's coast, with moist winters and dry summers.[133] San Francisco's weather is strongly influenced by the cool currents of the Pacific Ocean on the west side of the city, and the water of San Francisco Bay to the north and east. This moderates temperature swings and produces a remarkably mild year-round climate with little seasonal temperature variation.[134]

Among major U.S. cities, San Francisco has the coolest daily mean, maximum, and minimum temperatures for June, July, and August.[135] During the summer, rising hot air in California's interior valleys creates a low-pressure area that draws winds from the North Pacific High through the Golden Gate, which creates the city's characteristic cool winds and fog.[136] The fog is less pronounced in eastern neighborhoods and during the late summer and early fall. As a result, the year's warmest month, on average, is September, and on average, October is warmer than July, especially in daytime.

Temperatures reach or exceed 80 °F (27 °C) on an average of only 21 and 23 days a year at downtown and San Francisco International Airport (SFO), respectively.[137] The dry period of May to October is mild to warm, with the normal monthly mean temperature peaking in September at 62.7 °F (17.1 °C).[137] The rainy period of November to April is slightly cooler, with the normal monthly mean temperature reaching its lowest in January at 51.3 °F (10.7 °C).[137] On average, there are 73 rainy days a year, and annual precipitation averages 23.65 inches (601 mm).[137] Variation in precipitation from year to year is high. Above-average rain years are often associated with warm El Niño conditions in the Pacific while dry years often occur in cold water La Niña periods. In 2013 (a "La Niña" year), a record low 5.59 in (142 mm) of rainfall was recorded at downtown San Francisco, where records have been kept since 1849.[137] Snowfall in the city is very rare, with only 10 measurable accumulations recorded since 1852, most recently in 1976 when up to 5 inches (13 cm) fell on Twin Peaks.[138][139]

 
The Farallon Islands are located in the Gulf of the Farallones, off the Pacific coast of San Francisco.

The highest recorded temperature at the official National Weather Service downtown observation station[b] was 106 °F (41 °C) on September 1, 2017.[141] During that hot spell, the warmest ever night of 71 °F (22 °C) was also recorded.[142] The lowest recorded temperature was 27 °F (−3 °C) on December 11, 1932.[143]

During an average year between 1991 and 2020, San Francisco recorded a warmest night at 64 °F (18 °C) and a coldest day at 49 °F (9 °C).[137] The coldest daytime high since the station's opening in 1945 was recorded in December 1972 at 37 °F (3 °C).[137]

As a coastal city, San Francisco will be heavily affected by climate change. As of 2021, sea levels are projected to rise by as much as 5 feet (1.5 m), resulting in periodic flooding, rising groundwater levels, and lowland floods from more severe storms.[144]

San Francisco falls under the USDA 10b Plant hardiness zone, though some areas, particularly downtown, border zone 11a.[145][146]

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 79
(26)
81
(27)
87
(31)
94
(34)
97
(36)
103
(39)
99
(37)
98
(37)
106
(41)
102
(39)
86
(30)
76
(24)
106
(41)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 67.1
(19.5)
71.8
(22.1)
76.4
(24.7)
80.7
(27.1)
81.4
(27.4)
84.6
(29.2)
80.5
(26.9)
83.4
(28.6)
90.8
(32.7)
87.9
(31.1)
75.8
(24.3)
66.4
(19.1)
94.0
(34.4)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 57.8
(14.3)
60.4
(15.8)
62.1
(16.7)
63.0
(17.2)
64.1
(17.8)
66.5
(19.2)
66.3
(19.1)
67.9
(19.9)
70.2
(21.2)
69.8
(21.0)
63.7
(17.6)
57.9
(14.4)
64.1
(17.8)
Daily mean °F (°C) 52.2
(11.2)
54.2
(12.3)
55.5
(13.1)
56.4
(13.6)
57.8
(14.3)
59.7
(15.4)
60.3
(15.7)
61.7
(16.5)
62.9
(17.2)
62.1
(16.7)
57.2
(14.0)
52.5
(11.4)
57.7
(14.3)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 46.6
(8.1)
47.9
(8.8)
48.9
(9.4)
49.7
(9.8)
51.4
(10.8)
53.0
(11.7)
54.4
(12.4)
55.5
(13.1)
55.6
(13.1)
54.4
(12.4)
50.7
(10.4)
47.0
(8.3)
51.3
(10.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 40.5
(4.7)
42.0
(5.6)
43.7
(6.5)
45.0
(7.2)
48.0
(8.9)
50.1
(10.1)
51.6
(10.9)
52.9
(11.6)
52.0
(11.1)
49.9
(9.9)
44.9
(7.2)
40.7
(4.8)
38.8
(3.8)
Record low °F (°C) 29
(−2)
31
(−1)
33
(1)
40
(4)
42
(6)
46
(8)
47
(8)
46
(8)
47
(8)
43
(6)
38
(3)
27
(−3)
27
(−3)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 4.40
(112)
4.37
(111)
3.15
(80)
1.60
(41)
0.70
(18)
0.20
(5.1)
0.01
(0.25)
0.06
(1.5)
0.10
(2.5)
0.94
(24)
2.60
(66)
4.76
(121)
22.89
(581)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 11.2 10.8 10.8 6.8 4.0 1.6 0.7 1.1 1.2 3.5 7.9 11.6 71.2
Average relative humidity (%) 80 77 75 72 72 71 75 75 73 71 75 78 75
Mean monthly sunshine hours 185.9 207.7 269.1 309.3 325.1 311.4 313.3 287.4 271.4 247.1 173.4 160.6 3,061.7
Percent possible sunshine 61 69 73 78 74 70 70 68 73 71 57 54 69
Average ultraviolet index 2 3 5 7 9 10 10 9 7 5 3 2 6
Source 1: NOAA (sun 1961–1974)[137][147][148][149]
Source 2: Met Office (humidity)[150], Weather Atlas (UV)[151]

Ecology edit

 
Aerial view of the Presidio of San Francisco and the Golden Gate

Historically, tule elk were present in San Francisco County, based on archeological evidence of elk remains in at least five different Native American shellmounds: at Hunter's Point, Fort Mason, Stevenson Street, Market Street, and Yerba Buena.[152][153] Perhaps the first historical observer record was from the De Anza Expedition on March 23, 1776. Herbert Eugene Bolton wrote about the expedition camp at Mountain Lake, near the southern end of today's Presidio: "Round about were grazing deer, and scattered here and there were the antlers of large elk."[154] Also, when Richard Henry Dana Jr. visited San Francisco Bay in 1835, he wrote about vast elk herds near the Golden Gate: on December 27 ."..we came to anchor near the mouth of the bay, under a high and beautifully sloping hill, upon which herds of hundreds and hundreds of red deer [note: "red deer" is the European term for "elk"], and the stag, with his high branching antlers, were bounding about...," although it is not clear whether this was the Marin side or the San Francisco side.[155]

Demographics edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
18481,000—    
184925,000+2400.0%
185234,776+39.1%
186056,802+63.3%
1870149,473+163.1%
1880233,959+56.5%
1890298,997+27.8%
1900342,782+14.6%
1910416,912+21.6%
1920506,676+21.5%
1930634,394+25.2%
1940634,536+0.0%
1950775,357+22.2%
1960740,316−4.5%
1970715,674−3.3%
1980678,974−5.1%
1990723,959+6.6%
2000776,733+7.3%
2010805,235+3.7%
2020873,965+8.5%
2023808,988−7.4%
https://www.sfchronicle.com/sf/article/s-f-exodus-population-recovery-data-18564064.php

The 2020 United States census showed San Francisco's population to be 873,965, an increase of 8.5% from the 2010 census.[16] With roughly one-quarter the population density of Manhattan, San Francisco is the second-most densely populated large American city, behind only New York City among cities greater than 200,000 population, and the fifth-most densely populated U.S. county, following only four of the five New York City boroughs.

San Francisco is part of the five-county San Francisco–Oakland–Hayward, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area, a region of 4.7 million people (13th most populous in the U.S.), and has served as its traditional demographic focal point. It is also part of the greater 14-county San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA Combined Statistical Area, whose population is over 9.6 million, making it the fifth-largest in the United States as of 2018.[156][failed verification]

Race, ethnicity, religion, and languages edit

 
Ethnic origins in San Francisco

As of the 2020 census, the racial makeup and population of San Francisco included: 361,382 Whites (41.3%), 296,505 Asians (33.9%), 46,725 African Americans (5.3%), 86,233 Multiracial Americans (9.9%), 6,475 Native Americans and Alaska Natives (0.7%), 3,476 Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders (0.4%) and 73,169 persons of other races (8.4%). There were 136,761 Hispanic or Latino residents of any race (15.6%).

San Francisco is a majority minority city, as non-Hispanic White residents comprise less than half of the population; in 1940 they formed 92.5% of the population.[157]

In 2010, residents of Chinese ethnicity constituted the largest single ethnic minority group in San Francisco at 21% of the population; other large Asian groups include Filipinos (5%) and Vietnamese (2%), with Japanese, Koreans and many other Asian and Pacific Islander groups represented in the city.[158] The population of Chinese ancestry is most heavily concentrated in Chinatown and the Sunset and Richmond Districts. Filipinos are most concentrated in SoMa and the Crocker-Amazon; the latter neighborhood shares a border with Daly City, which has one of the highest concentrations of Filipinos in North America.[158][159] The Tenderloin District is home to a large portion of the city's Vietnamese population as well as businesses and restaurants, which is known as the city's Little Saigon.[158]

The principal Hispanic groups in the city were those of Mexican (7%) and Salvadoran (2%) ancestry. The Hispanic population is most heavily concentrated in the Mission District, Tenderloin District, and Excelsior District.[160] The city's percentage of Hispanic residents is less than half of that of the state.

African Americans constituted about 5% of San Francisco's population in 2020; their share of the city's population has been decreasing since the 1970s.[161] The majority of the city's Black residents live in the neighborhoods of Bayview-Hunters Point, Visitacion Valley, and the Fillmore District.[160] There are smaller Black communities in Diamond Heights, Glen Park, and Mission District.

The city has long been home to a significant Jewish community; in 2018 Jewish Americans made up an estimated 10% (80,000) of the city's population. It the third-largest Jewish community in proportional terms in the United States, behind only those of New York City, and Los Angeles, respectively, and it is also relatively young compared to other major U.S. cities.[162] The Jewish community resides throughout the city, but the Richmond District is home to an ethnic enclave of mostly Russian Jews.[163] The Fillmore District was formerly a mostly Jewish neighborhood from the 1920s until the 1970s, when many of its Jewish residents moved to other neighborhoods of the city as well as the suburbs of nearby Marin County.[164]

Demographic profile[165] 1860 1880 1920 1960 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020[166]
Non-Hispanic White alone 90.2% 87.7% 93.5% 72.7% 52.8% 46.9% 43.5% 41.7% 39.1%
Non-Hispanic Asian alone 4.6% 9.3% 2.7% 7.9% 21.3% 28.0% 30.7% 33.1% 33.7%
Chinese American 4.6% 9.3% 1.5% 5.1% 12.1% 17.6% 20.0% 19.8% 21.0%
Filipino American 0.2% 1.5% 5.2% 5.4% 5.0% 4.9% 4.4%
Hispanic or Latino, any race(s) 3.0% 2.4% 3.4% 9.4% 12.6% 13.3% 14.2% 15.2% 15.6%
Mexican American 1.8% 1.4% 1.5% 5.1% 5.0% 5.2% 6.0% 7.5% 7.9%
Non-Hispanic Black alone 2.1% 0.6% 0.4% 9.7% 12.3% 10.7% 7.6% 6.0% 5.1%
Non-Hispanic Pacific Islander alone <0.1% 0.2% 0.4% 0.4% 0.5% 0.3%
Non-Hispanic Native American alone <0.1% <0.1% <0.1% 0.1% 0.4% 0.4% 0.3% 0.3% 0.2%
Non-Hispanic other 0.2% 0.4% 0.2% 0.3% 0.3% 0.8%
Non-Hispanic two or more races 3.0% 2.9% 5.2%
Foreign-born[e] 50.2% 44.5% 30.1% 20.2% 29.5% 35.4% 38.4% 38.2% 34.2%

Source: U.S. Census and IPUMS USA[165]

 
Map of racial distribution in San Francisco, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people:  White  Black  Asian  Hispanic  Other

According to a 2018 study by the Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco, Jews make up 10% (80,000) of the city's population, making Judaism the second-largest religion in San Francisco after Christianity.[162] A prior 2014 study by the Pew Research Center, the largest religious groupings in San Francisco's metropolitan area are Christians (48%), followed by those of no religion (35%), Hindus (5%), Jews (3%), Buddhists (2%), Muslims (1%) and a variety of other religions have smaller followings. According to the same study by the Pew Research Center, about 20% of residents in the area are Protestant, and 25% professing Roman Catholic beliefs. Meanwhile, 10% of the residents in metropolitan San Francisco identify as agnostics, while 5% identify as atheists.[167][168]

As of 2010, 55% (411,728) of San Francisco residents spoke only English at home, while 19% (140,302) spoke a variety of Chinese (mostly Taishanese and Cantonese[169][170]), 12% (88,147) Spanish, 3% (25,767) Tagalog, and 2% (14,017) Russian. In total, 45% (342,693) of San Francisco's population spoke a language at home other than English.[171]

Ethnic clustering edit

San Francisco has several prominent Chinese, Mexican, and Filipino neighborhoods including Chinatown and the Mission District. Research collected on the immigrant clusters in the city show that more than half of the Asian population in San Francisco is either Chinese-born (40.3%) or Philippine-born (13.1%), and of the Mexican population 21% were Mexican-born, meaning these are people who recently immigrated to the United States.[172] Between the years of 1990 and 2000, the number of foreign-born residents increased from 33% to nearly 40%.[172] During this same time period, the San Francisco metropolitan area received 850,000 immigrants, ranking third in the United States after Los Angeles and New York.[172]

Education, households, and income edit

 
Sea Cliff is one of the city's most expensive neighborhoods.[173]

Of all major cities in the United States, San Francisco has the second-highest percentage of residents with a college degree, second only to Seattle. Over 44% of adults have a bachelor's or higher degree.[174] San Francisco had the highest rate at 7,031 per square mile, or over 344,000 total graduates in the city's 46.7 square miles (121 km2).[175]

San Francisco has the highest estimated percentage of gay and lesbian individuals of any of the 50 largest U.S. cities, at 15%.[176] San Francisco also has the highest percentage of same-sex households of any American county, with the Bay Area having a higher concentration than any other metropolitan area.[177]

San Francisco ranks third of American cities in median household income[178] with a 2007 value of $65,519.[179] Median family income is $81,136.[179] An emigration of middle-class families has left the city with a lower proportion of children than any other large American city,[180] with the dog population cited as exceeding the child population of 115,000, in 2018.[181] The city's poverty rate is 12%, lower than the national average.[182] Homelessness has been a chronic problem for San Francisco since the early 1970s.[183] The city is believed to have the highest number of homeless inhabitants per capita of any major U.S. city.[184][185]

There are 345,811 households in the city, out of which: 133,366 households (39%) were individuals, 109,437 (32%) were opposite-sex married couples, 63,577 (18%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 21,677 (6%) were unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 10,384 (3%) were same-sex married couples or partnerships. The average household size was 2.26; the average family size was 3.11. 452,986 people (56%) lived in rental housing units, and 327,985 people (41%) lived in owner-occupied housing units. The median age of the city population is 38 years.

San Francisco declared itself a sanctuary city in 1989, and city officials strengthened the stance in 2013 with its 'Due Process for All' ordinance. The law declared local authorities could not hold immigrants for immigration offenses if they had no violent felonies on their records and did not currently face charges."[186] The city issues a Resident ID Card regardless of the applicant's immigration status.[187]

Homelessness edit

 
Homeless encampment under a freeway in San Francisco

Homelessness in San Francisco emerged as a major issue in the late 20th century and remains a growing problem in modern times.[188]

8,035 homeless people were counted in San Francisco's 2019 point-in-time street and shelter count. This was an increase of more than 17% over the 2017 count of 6,858 people. 5,180 of the people were living unsheltered on the streets and in parks.[189] 26% of respondents in the 2019 count identified job loss as the primary cause of their homelessness, 18% cited alcohol or drug use, and 13% cited being evicted from their residence.[189] The city of San Francisco has been dramatically increasing its spending to service the growing population homelessness crisis: spending jumped by $241 million in 2016–17 to total $275 million, compared to a budget of just $34 million the previous year. In 2017–18 the budget for combatting homelessness stood at $305 million.[190] In the 2019–2020 budget year, the city budgeted $368 million for homelessness services. In the proposed 2020–2021 budget the city budgeted $850 million for homelessness services.[191]

In January 2018 a United Nations special rapporteur on homelessness, Leilani Farha, stated that she was "completely shocked" by San Francisco's homelessness crisis during a visit to the city. She compared the "deplorable conditions" of the homeless camps she witnessed on San Francisco's streets to those she had seen in Mumbai.[190] In May 2020, San Francisco officially sanctioned homeless encampments.[192]

Crime edit

 
SFPD mounted police officers

San Francisco's violent crime rate is low compared to other major cities, though many residents are still concerned about it.[193] In 2011, 50 murders were reported, which is 6.1 per 100,000 people.[194] There were about 134 rapes, 3,142 robberies, and about 2,139 assaults. There were about 4,469 burglaries, 25,100 thefts, and 4,210 motor vehicle thefts.[195] The Tenderloin area has the highest crime rate in San Francisco: 70% of the city's violent crimes, and around one-fourth of the city's murders, occur in this neighborhood. The Tenderloin also sees high rates of drug abuse, gang violence, and prostitution.[196] Another area with high crime rates is the Bayview-Hunters Point area. In the first six months of 2015 there were 25 murders compared to 14 in the first six months of 2014. However, the murder rate is still much lower than in past decades.[197] That rate, though, did rise again by the close of 2016. According to the San Francisco Police Department, there were 59 murders in the city in 2016, an annual total that marked a 13.5% increase in the number of homicides (52) from 2015.[198] The city has also gained a reputation for car break-ins, with over 19,000 car break-ins occurring in 2021.[199]

During the first half of 2018, human feces on San Francisco sidewalks were the second-most-frequent complaint of city residents, with about 65 calls per day. The city has formed a "poop patrol" to attempt to combat the problem.[200]

 
SFPD parking enforcement officers

In January 2022, CBS News reported that a single suspect was "responsible for more than half of all reported hate crimes against the API community in San Francisco last year," and that he "was allowed to be out of custody despite the number of charges against him."[201]

Several street gangs have operated in the city over the decades, including MS-13,[202] the Sureños and Norteños in the Mission District.[203]

African-American street gangs familiar in other cities, including the Bloods, Crips and their sets, have struggled to establish footholds in San Francisco,[204] while police and prosecutors have been accused of liberally labeling young African-American males as gang members.[205]

Criminal gangs with shotcallers in China, including Triad groups such as the Wo Hop To, were active in San Francisco in the 20th century.[206]

Economy edit

 
San Francisco's Financial District, despite its declining importance,[207] is still considered the Wall Street of the West.

The city has a diversified service economy, with employment spread across a wide range of professional services, including tourism, financial services, and (increasingly) high technology.[208] In 2016, approximately 27% of workers were employed in professional business services; 14% in leisure and hospitality; 13% in government services; 12% in education and health care; 11% in trade, transportation, and utilities; and 8% in financial activities.[208] In 2019, GDP in the five-county San Francisco metropolitan area grew 3.8% in real terms to $592 billion.[209][210] Additionally, in 2019 the 14-county San Jose–San Francisco–Oakland combined statistical area had a GDP of $1.086 trillion,[210] ranking 3rd among CSAs, and ahead of all but 16 countries. As of 2019, San Francisco County was the 7th highest-income county in the United States (among 3,142), with a per capita personal income of $139,405.[211] Marin County, directly to the north over the Golden Gate Bridge, and San Mateo County, directly to the south on the Peninsula, were the 6th and 9th highest-income counties respectively.

 
Skyline of South of Market (SoMa), including Salesforce Tower, the tallest building in San Francisco

The legacy of the California gold rush turned San Francisco into the principal banking and finance center of the West Coast in the early twentieth century.[212] Montgomery Street in the Financial District became known as the "Wall Street of the West," home to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, and the site of the now-defunct Pacific Coast Stock Exchange.[212] Bank of America, a pioneer in making banking services accessible to the middle class, was founded in San Francisco and in the 1960s, built the landmark modern skyscraper at 555 California Street for its corporate headquarters, since relocated to Charlotte, North Carolina. Many large financial institutions, multinational banks, and venture capital firms are based in or have regional headquarters in the city. With over 30 international financial institutions,[213] six Fortune 500 companies,[214] and a large supporting infrastructure of professional services—including law, public relations, architecture and design—San Francisco is designated as an Alpha(-) World City.[215] The 2017 Global Financial Centres Index ranked San Francisco as the sixth-most competitive financial center in the world.[216]

Beginning in the 1990s, San Francisco's economy diversified away from finance and tourism towards the growing fields of high tech, biotechnology, and medical research.[217] Technology jobs accounted for just 1 percent of San Francisco's economy in 1990, growing to 4 percent in 2010 and an estimated 8 percent by the end of 2013.[218] San Francisco became a center of Internet start-up companies during the dot-com bubble of the 1990s and the subsequent social media boom of the late 2000s (decade).[219] Since 2010, San Francisco proper has attracted an increasing share of venture capital investments as compared to nearby Silicon Valley, attracting 423 financings worth US$4.58 billion in 2013.[220][221][222] In 2004, the city approved a payroll tax exemption for biotechnology companies[223] to foster growth in the Mission Bay neighborhood, site of a second campus and hospital of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). Mission Bay hosts the UCSF Medical Center, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences, and Gladstone Institutes,[224] as well as more than 40 private-sector life sciences companies.[225]

 
Union Square, despite its declining profile,[226] is still a major retail hub for San Francisco and the Bay Area.

According to academic Rob Wilson, San Francisco is a global city, a status that pre-dated the city's popularity during the California gold rush.[227] However, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to high office vacancy rates and the closure of many retail and tech businesses in the downtown core of San Francisco.[228][229] Attributed causes include a shift to remote work in the technology and professional services sectors, as well as high levels of homelessness, drug use, and crime in areas around downtown San Francisco, such as the Tenderloin and Mid-Market neighborhoods.[230][231]

The top employer in San Francisco is the city government itself, employing 5.6% (31,000+ people) of the city's workforce, followed by UCSF with over 25,000 employees.[232] The largest private-sector employer is Salesforce, with 8,500 employees, as of 2018.[233] Small businesses with fewer than 10 employees and self-employed firms made up 85% of city establishments in 2006,[234] and the number of San Franciscans employed by firms of more than 1,000 employees has fallen by half since 1977.[235] The growth of national big box and formula retail chains into the city has been made intentionally difficult by political and civic consensus. In an effort to buoy small privately owned businesses in San Francisco and preserve the unique retail personality of the city, the Small Business Commission started a publicity campaign in 2004 to keep a larger share of retail dollars in the local economy,[236] and the Board of Supervisors has used the planning code to limit the neighborhoods where formula retail establishments can set up shop,[237] an effort affirmed by San Francisco voters.[238] However, by 2016, San Francisco was rated low by small businesses in a Business Friendliness Survey.[239]

 
Ferry Building in the Embarcadero.

Like many U.S. cities, San Francisco once had a significant manufacturing sector employing nearly 60,000 workers in 1969, but nearly all production left for cheaper locations by the 1980s.[240] As of 2014, San Francisco has seen a small resurgence in manufacturing, with more than 4,000 manufacturing jobs across 500 companies, doubling since 2011. The city's largest manufacturing employer is Anchor Brewing Company, and the largest by revenue is Timbuk2.[240]

As of the first quarter of 2022, the median value of homes in San Francisco County was $1,297,030. It ranked third in the U.S. for counties with highest median home value, behind Nantucket, Massachusetts and San Mateo County, California.[241]

Technology edit

 
Twitter headquarters on Market St.

San Francisco became a hub for technological driven economic growth during the internet boom of the 1990s, and still holds an important position in the world city network today.[172][242] Intense redevelopment towards the "new economy" makes business more technologically minded. Between the years of 1999 and 2000, the job growth rate was 4.9%, creating over 50,000 jobs in technology firms and internet content production.[172] However, the technology industry has become geographically dispersed.[243][244]

In the second technological boom driven by social media in the mid-2000s, San Francisco became a location for companies such as Apple, Google, Ubisoft, Facebook, and Twitter to base their tech offices and for their employees to live.[245]

Tourism and conventions edit

 
The Fisherman's Wharf is a popular tourist attraction.

Tourism is one of San Francisco's most important private-sector industries, accounting for more than one out of seven jobs in the city.[217][246] The city's frequent portrayal in music, film, and popular culture has made the city and its landmarks recognizable worldwide. In 2016, it attracted the fifth-highest number of foreign tourists of any city in the United States.[247] More than 25 million visitors arrived in San Francisco in 2016, adding US$9.96 billion to the economy.[248] With a large hotel infrastructure and a major convention facility in the Moscone Center, San Francisco is a popular destination for annual conventions and conferences.[249]

Some of the most popular tourist attractions in San Francisco, as noted by the Travel Channel, include the Golden Gate Bridge and Alamo Square Park, home to the famous "Painted Ladies." Both of these locations were often used as landscape shots for the hit American television sitcom Full House. There is also Lombard Street, known for its "crookedness" and extensive views. Tourists also visit Pier 39, which offers dining, shopping, entertainment, and views of the bay, sunbathing California sea lions, the Aquarium of the Bay, and the famous Alcatraz Island.[250]

 
Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill

San Francisco also offers tourists varied nightlife in its neighborhoods.[251][252]

The new Terminal Project at Pier 27 opened September 25, 2014, as a replacement for the old Pier 35.[253] Itineraries from San Francisco usually include round-trip cruises to Alaska and Mexico.

A heightened interest in conventioneering in San Francisco, marked by the establishment of convention centers such as Yerba Buena, acted as a feeder into the local tourist economy and resulted in an increase in the hotel industry: "In 1959, the city had fewer than thirty-three hundred first-class hotel rooms; by 1970, the number was nine thousand; and by 1999, there were more than thirty thousand."[254] The commodification of the Castro District has contributed to San Francisco's tourist economy.[255]

Arts and culture edit

 
The Palace of Fine Arts, originally built for the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition

Although the Financial District, Union Square, and Fisherman's Wharf are well known around the world, San Francisco is also characterized by its numerous culturally rich streetscapes featuring mixed-use neighborhoods anchored around central commercial corridors to which residents and visitors alike can walk.[citation needed] Because of these characteristics,[original research?] San Francisco is ranked the "most walkable" city in the United States by Walkscore.com.[256] Many neighborhoods feature a mix of businesses, restaurants and venues that cater to the daily needs of local residents while also serving many visitors and tourists. Some neighborhoods are dotted with boutiques, cafés and nightlife such as Union Street in Cow Hollow, 24th Street in Noe Valley, Valencia Street in the Mission, Grant Avenue in North Beach, and Irving Street in the Inner Sunset. This approach especially has influenced the continuing South of Market neighborhood redevelopment with businesses and neighborhood services rising alongside high-rise residences.[257][failed verification]

 
The Castro is famous as one of the first gay villages in the country.[258]

Since the 1990s, the demand for skilled information technology workers from local startups and nearby Silicon Valley has attracted white-collar workers from all over the world and created a high standard of living in San Francisco.[259] Many neighborhoods that were once blue-collar, middle, and lower class have been gentrifying, as many of the city's traditional business and industrial districts have experienced a renaissance driven by the redevelopment of the Embarcadero, including the neighborhoods South Beach and Mission Bay. The city's property values and household income have risen to among the highest in the nation,[260][261][262] creating a large and upscale restaurant, retail, and entertainment scene. According to a 2014 quality of life survey of global cities, San Francisco has the highest quality of living of any U.S. city.[263] However, due to the exceptionally high cost of living, many of the city's middle and lower-class families have been leaving the city for the outer suburbs of the Bay Area, or for California's Central Valley.[264] By June 2, 2015, the median rent was reported to be as high as $4,225.[265] The high cost of living is due in part to restrictive planning laws which limit new residential construction.[266]

 
The Mission District is the historic center of the city's Chicano/Mexican-American population and greater Hispanic and Latino community.

The international character that San Francisco has enjoyed since its founding is continued today by large numbers of immigrants from Asia and Latin America. With 39% of its residents born overseas,[235] San Francisco has numerous neighborhoods filled with businesses and civic institutions catering to new arrivals. In particular, the arrival of many ethnic Chinese, which began to accelerate in the 1970s, has complemented the long-established community historically based in Chinatown throughout the city and has transformed the annual Chinese New Year Parade into the largest event of its kind on the West Coast.

With the arrival of the "beat" writers and artists of the 1950s and societal changes culminating in the Summer of Love in the Haight-Ashbury district during the 1960s, San Francisco became a center of liberal activism and of the counterculture that arose at that time. The Democrats and to a lesser extent the Green Party have dominated city politics since the late 1970s, after the last serious Republican challenger for city office lost the 1975 mayoral election by a narrow margin. San Francisco has not voted more than 20% for a Republican presidential or senatorial candidate since 1988.[267] In 2007, the city expanded its Medicaid and other indigent medical programs into the Healthy San Francisco program,[268] which subsidizes certain medical services for eligible residents.[269][270][271]

 
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, also known as SF MOMA

Since 1993, the San Francisco Department of Public Health has distributed 400,000 free syringes every month aimed at reducing HIV and other health risks for drug users, as well as providing disposal sites and services.[272][273][274]

San Francisco also has had a very active environmental community. Starting with the founding of the Sierra Club in 1892 to the establishment of the non-profit Friends of the Urban Forest in 1981, San Francisco has been at the forefront of many global discussions regarding the environment.[275][276] The 1980 San Francisco Recycling Program was one of the earliest curbside recycling programs.[277] The city's GoSolarSF incentive promotes solar installations and the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission is rolling out the CleanPowerSF program to sell electricity from local renewable sources.[278][279] SF Greasecycle is a program to recycle used cooking oil for conversion to biodiesel.[280]

The Sunset Reservoir Solar Project, completed in 2010, installed 24,000 solar panels on the roof of the reservoir. The 5-megawatt plant more than tripled the city's 2-megawatt solar generation capacity when it opened in December 2010.[281][282]

LGBT edit

 
San Francisco Pride is one of the oldest and largest LGBT pride events in the world.

San Francisco has long had an LGBT-friendly history. It was home to the first lesbian-rights organization in the United States, Daughters of Bilitis; the first openly gay person to run for public office in the United States, José Sarria; the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, Harvey Milk; the first openly lesbian judge appointed in the U.S., Mary C. Morgan; and the first transgender police commissioner, Theresa Sparks. The city's large gay population has created and sustained a politically and culturally active community over many decades, developing a powerful presence in San Francisco's civic life.[citation needed] Survey data released in 2015 by Gallup places the proportion of LGBT adults in the San Francisco metro area at 6.2%, which is the highest proportion of the 50 most populous metropolitan areas as measured by the polling organization.[283]

 
The gay pride flag was originally developed in San Francisco.

One of the most popular destinations for gay tourists internationally, the city hosts San Francisco Pride, one of the largest and oldest pride parades. San Francisco Pride events have been held continuously since 1972. The events are themed and a new theme is created each year.[284] In 2013, over 1.5 million people attended, around 500,000 more than the previous year.[285] Pink Saturday is an annual street party held the Saturday before the pride parade, which coincides with the Dyke march.

The Folsom Street Fair (FSF) is an annual BDSM and leather subculture street fair that is held in September, endcapping San Francisco's "Leather Pride Week."[286] It started in 1984 and is California's third-largest single-day, outdoor spectator event and the world's largest leather event and showcase for BDSM products and culture.[287]

Performing arts edit

 
War Memorial Opera House, part of the S.F. War Memorial & Performing Arts Center, one of the largest performing arts centers in the U.S.
 
Golden Gate Theatre is located in the historic Theatre District

San Francisco's War Memorial and Performing Arts Center hosts some of the most enduring performing arts companies in the country. The War Memorial Opera House houses the San Francisco Opera, the second-largest opera company in North America[288] as well as the San Francisco Ballet, while the San Francisco Symphony plays in Davies Symphony Hall. Opened in 2013, the SFJAZZ Center hosts jazz performances year round.[289]

The Fillmore is a music venue located in the Western Addition. It is the second incarnation of the historic venue that gained fame in the 1960s, housing the stage where now-famous musicians such as the Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, Led Zeppelin, and Jefferson Airplane first performed, fostering the San Francisco Sound.[290] It closed its doors in 1971 with a final performance by Santana and reopened in 1994 with a show by the Smashing Pumpkins.[291]

San Francisco has a large number of theaters and live performance venues. Local theater companies have been noted for risk taking and innovation.[292] The Tony Award-winning non-profit American Conservatory Theater (A.C.T.) is a member of the national League of Resident Theatres. Other local winners of the Regional Theatre Tony Award include the San Francisco Mime Troupe.[293] San Francisco theaters frequently host pre-Broadway engagements and tryout runs,[294] and some original San Francisco productions have later moved to Broadway.[295]

Museums edit

 
The California Palace of the Legion of Honor, part of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) houses 20th century and contemporary works of art. It moved to its current building in the South of Market neighborhood in 1995 and attracted more than 600,000 visitors annually.[296] SFMOMA closed for renovation and expansion in 2013. The museum reopened on May 14, 2016, with an addition, designed by Snøhetta, that has doubled the museum's size.[297]

The Palace of the Legion of Honor holds primarily European antiquities and works of art at its Lincoln Park building modeled after its Parisian namesake. The de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park features American decorative pieces and anthropological holdings from Africa, Oceania and the Americas, while Asian art is housed in the Asian Art Museum. Opposite the de Young stands the California Academy of Sciences, a natural history museum that also hosts the Morrison Planetarium and Steinhart Aquarium. Located on Pier 15 on the Embarcadero, the Exploratorium is an interactive science museum. The Contemporary Jewish Museum is a non-collecting institution that hosts a broad array of temporary exhibitions. On Nob Hill, the Cable Car Museum is a working museum featuring the cable car powerhouse, which drives the cables.[298] Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts was founded in 1998 and is part of the California College of the Arts.[299]

Sports edit

 
Oracle Park, home of the SF Giants

Major League Baseball's San Francisco Giants have played in San Francisco since moving from New York in 1958. The Giants play at Oracle Park, which opened in 2000.[300] The Giants won World Series titles in 2010, 2012, and in 2014. The Giants have boasted stars such as Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, and Barry Bonds (MLB's career home run leader). In 2012, San Francisco was ranked No. 1 in a study that examined which U.S. metro areas have produced the most Major Leaguers since 1920.[301]

The San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL) began playing in 1946 as an All-America Football Conference (AAFC) league charter member, moved to the NFL in 1950 and into Candlestick Park in 1971. The team left San Francisco in 2014, moving approximately 50 miles south to Santa Clara, and began playing its home games at Levi's Stadium,[302][303] The 49ers have won five Super Bowl titles between 1982 and 1995.

 
The Chase Center, home of the Golden State Warriors

The NBA's Golden State Warriors have played in the San Francisco Bay Area since moving from Philadelphia in 1962. The Warriors played as the San Francisco Warriors, from 1962 to 1971, before being renamed the Golden State Warriors prior to the 1971–1972 season in an attempt to present the team as a representation of the whole state of California, which had already adopted "The Golden State" nickname.[304] The Warriors' arena, Chase Center, is located in San Francisco.[305] After winning two championships in Philadelphia, they have won five championships since moving to the San Francisco Bay Area,[306] and made five consecutive NBA Finals from 2015 to 2019, winning three of them. They won again in 2022, the franchise's first championship while residing in San Francisco proper.

At the collegiate level, the San Francisco Dons compete in NCAA Division I. Bill Russell led the Dons basketball team to NCAA championships in 1955 and 1956. There is also the San Francisco State Gators, who compete in NCAA Division II.[307] Oracle Park hosted the annual Fight Hunger Bowl college football game from 2002 through 2013 before it moved to Santa Clara.

There are a handful of lower-league soccer clubs in San Francisco playing mostly from April – June.

 
Bay to Breakers is an annual foot race known for colorful costumes.

The Bay to Breakers footrace, held annually since 1912, is best known for colorful costumes and a celebratory community spirit.[308] The San Francisco Marathon attracts more than 21,000 participants.[309] The Escape from Alcatraz triathlon has, since 1980, attracted 2,000 top professional and amateur triathletes for its annual race.[310] The Olympic Club, founded in 1860, is the oldest athletic club in the United States. Its private golf course has hosted the U.S. Open on five occasions. San Francisco hosted the 2013 America's Cup yacht racing competition.[311]

With an ideal climate for outdoor activities, San Francisco has ample resources and opportunities for amateur and participatory sports and recreation. There are more than 200 miles (320 km) of bicycle paths, lanes and bike routes in the city.[312] San Francisco residents have often ranked among the fittest in the country.[313] Golden Gate Park has miles of paved and unpaved running trails as well as a golf course and disc golf course. Boating, sailing, windsurfing and kitesurfing are among the popular activities on San Francisco Bay, and the city maintains a yacht harbor in the Marina District.

San Francisco also has had Esports teams, such as the Overwatch League's San Francisco Shock. Established in 2017,[314] they won two back-to-back championship titles in 2019 and 2020.[315][316]

Parks and recreation edit

 
Golden Gate Park is the 3rd most-visited city park in the U.S., after Central Park and the National Mall.[317]

Several of San Francisco's parks and nearly all of its beaches form part of the regional Golden Gate National Recreation Area, one of the most visited units of the National Park system in the United States with over 13 million visitors a year. Among the GGNRA's attractions within the city are Ocean Beach, which runs along the Pacific Ocean shoreline and is frequented by a vibrant surfing community, and Baker Beach, which is located in a cove west of the Golden Gate Bridge, as well as the California Academy of Sciences, a research institute and natural history museum.

The Presidio of San Francisco is the former 18th century Spanish military base, which today is one of the city's largest parks and home to numerous museums and institutions. Also within the Presidio is Crissy Field, a former airfield that was restored to its natural salt marsh ecosystem. The GGNRA also administers Fort Funston, Lands End, Fort Mason, and Alcatraz. The National Park Service separately administers the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park – a fleet of historic ships and waterfront property around Aquatic Park.[citation needed]

 
Painted Ladies on Alamo Square.
 
The Cliff House over Ocean Beach

There are more than 220 parks maintained by the San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department.[318] The largest and best-known city park is Golden Gate Park,[319] which stretches from the center of the city west to the Pacific Ocean. Once covered in native grasses and sand dunes, the park was conceived in the 1860s and was created by the extensive planting of thousands of non-native trees and plants. The large park is rich with cultural and natural attractions such as the Conservatory of Flowers, Japanese Tea Garden and San Francisco Botanical Garden.[citation needed]

Lake Merced is a fresh-water lake surrounded by parkland[citation needed] and near the San Francisco Zoo, a city-owned park that houses more than 250 animal species, many of which are endangered.[320] The only park managed by the California State Park system located principally in San Francisco, Candlestick Point was the state's first urban recreation area.[321]

Most of San Francisco's islands are protected as parkland or nature reserves. Alcatraz Island, operated by the National Park Service, is open to the public. The Farallon Islands are protected wildlife refuges. The Seal Rocks are protected as part of Golden Gate National Recreation Area. Red Rock Island is the only privately owned island in San Francisco Bay, but is uninhabited. Yerba Buena Island is largely utilized by the military.

San Francisco is the first city in the U.S. to have a park within a 10-Minute Walk of every resident.[322][323] It also ranks fifth in the U.S. for park access and quality in the 2018 ParkScore ranking of the top 100 park systems across the United States, according to the nonprofit Trust for Public Land.[324]

Government edit

 
San Francisco City Hall, built 1913–16 and designed by Arthur Brown Jr.

The mayor is also the county executive, and the county Board of Supervisors acts as the city council. The government of San Francisco is a charter city and is constituted of two co-equal branches: the executive branch is headed by the mayor and includes other citywide elected and appointed officials as well as the civil service; the 11-member Board of Supervisors, the legislative branch, is headed by a president and is responsible for passing laws and budgets, though San Franciscans also make use of direct ballot initiatives to pass legislation.[325]

Because of its unique city-county status, the local government is able to exercise jurisdiction over certain property outside city limits. San Francisco International Airport, though located in San Mateo County, is owned and operated by the City and County of San Francisco. San Francisco's largest jail complex (County Jail No. 5) is located in San Mateo County, in an unincorporated area adjacent to San Bruno. San Francisco was also granted a perpetual leasehold over the Hetch Hetchy Valley and watershed in Yosemite National Park by the Raker Act in 1913.[326]

 
The Supreme Court of California is based in the Earl Warren Building.

The members of the Board of Supervisors are elected as representatives of specific districts within the city.[327] Upon the death or resignation of the mayor, the President of the Board of Supervisors becomes acting mayor until the full Board elects an interim replacement for the remainder of the term. In 1978, Dianne Feinstein assumed the office following the assassination of George Moscone and was later selected by the board to finish the term.[citation needed] In 2011, Ed Lee was selected by the board to finish the term of Gavin Newsom, who resigned to take office as Lieutenant Governor of California.[328] Lee (who won two elections to remain mayor) was temporarily replaced by San Francisco Board of Supervisors President London Breed after he died on December 12, 2017. Supervisor Mark Farrell was appointed by the Board of Supervisors to finish Lee's term on January 23, 2018.

Most local offices in San Francisco are elected using ranked choice voting.[329]

 
San Francisco Federal Building

San Francisco serves as the regional hub for many arms of the federal bureaucracy, including the U.S. Court of Appeals, the Federal Reserve Bank, and the U.S. Mint. Until decommissioning in the early 1990s, the city had major military installations at the Presidio, Treasure Island, and Hunters Point—a legacy still reflected in the annual celebration of Fleet Week. The State of California uses San Francisco as the home of the state supreme court and other state agencies. Foreign governments maintain more than seventy consulates in San Francisco.[330]

The municipal budget for fiscal year 2015–16 was $8.99 billion,[331] and is one of the largest city budgets in the United States.[332] The City of San Francisco spends more per resident than any city other than Washington, D.C., over $10,000 in FY 2015–2016.[332] The city employs around 27,000 workers.[333]

 
The historic Browning Courthouse

In the California State Senate, San Francisco is in the 11th Senate District, represented by Democrat Scott Wiener. In the California State Assembly, it is split between the 17th Assembly District, represented by Democrat Matt Haney, and the 19th Assembly District, represented by Democrat Phil Ting.[334]

In the United States House of Representatives, San Francisco is split between two congressional districts. Most of the city is in the 11th District, represented by Nancy Pelosi (DSan Francisco). A sliver in the southwest is part of the 15th District represented by Kevin Mullin (DSouth San Francisco).[335] Pelosi served as the House Speaker from January 3, 2019, to January 3, 2023, a post she also held from 2007 through 2011. She has also held the post of House Minority Leader, from 2003 to 2007 and 2011 to 2019.

Education edit

Colleges and universities edit

 
University of San Francisco

The University of California, San Francisco is the sole campus of the University of California system entirely dedicated to graduate education in health and biomedical sciences. It is ranked among the top five medical schools in the United States[336] and operates the UCSF Medical Center, which ranks as the number one hospital in California and the number 5 in the country.[337] UCSF is a major local employer, second in size only to the city and county government.[338][339][340] A 43-acre (17 ha) Mission Bay campus was opened in 2003, complementing its original facility in Parnassus Heights. It contains research space and facilities to foster biotechnology and life sciences entrepreneurship and will double the size of UCSF's research enterprise.[341] All in all, UCSF operates more than 20 facilities across San Francisco.[342]

The University of California College of the Law, San Francisco, founded in Civic Center in 1878, is the oldest law school in California and claims more judges on the state bench than any other institution.[343] San Francisco's two University of California institutions have recently formed an official affiliation in the UCSF/UC Law SF Consortium on Law, Science & Health Policy.[344]

 
San Francisco Art Institute is the oldest art school in the Western U.S.

San Francisco State University is part of the California State University system and is located near Lake Merced.[345] The school has approximately 30,000 students and awards undergraduate, master's and doctoral degrees in more than 100 disciplines.[345] The City College of San Francisco, with its main facility in the Ingleside district, is one of the largest two-year community colleges in the country. It has an enrollment of about 100,000 students and offers an extensive continuing education program.[346]

 
University of California College of the Law

Founded in 1855, the University of San Francisco, a private Jesuit university located on Lone Mountain, is the oldest institution of higher education in San Francisco and one of the oldest universities established west of the Mississippi River.[347] Golden Gate University is a private, nonsectarian, coeducational university formed in 1901 and located in the Financial District.

With an enrollment of 13,000 students, the Academy of Art University is the largest institute of art and design in the nation.[348] Founded in 1871, the San Francisco Art Institute is the oldest art school west of the Mississippi.[349] The California College of the Arts, located north of Potrero Hill, has programs in architecture, fine arts, design, and writing.[350] The San Francisco Conservatory of Music, the only independent music school on the West Coast, grants degrees in orchestral instruments, chamber music, composition, and conducting.

The California Culinary Academy, associated with the Le Cordon Bleu program, offers programs in the culinary arts, baking and pastry arts, and hospitality and restaurant management. California Institute of Integral Studies, founded in 1968, offers a variety of graduate programs in its Schools of Professional Psychology & Health, and Consciousness and Transformation.

Primary and secondary schools edit

 
The San Francisco Unified School District operates 114 schools and is the oldest school district in California.

Public schools are run by the San Francisco Unified School District, which covers the entire city and county,[351] as well as the California State Board of Education for some charter schools. Lowell High School, the oldest public high school in the U.S. west of the Mississippi,[352] and the smaller School of the Arts High School are two of San Francisco's magnet schools at the secondary level. Public school students attend schools based on an assignment system rather than neighborhood proximity.[353]

Just under 30% of the city's school-age population attends one of San Francisco's more than 100 private or parochial schools, compared to a 10% rate nationwide.[354] Nearly 40 of those schools are Catholic schools managed by the Archdiocese of San Francisco.[355]

San Francisco has nearly 300 preschool programs primarily operated by Head Start, San Francisco Unified School District, private for-profit, private non-profit and family child care providers.[356] All four-year-old children living in San Francisco are offered universal access to preschool through the Preschool for All program.[357]

Media edit

 
San Francisco Chronicle building

The major daily newspaper in San Francisco is the San Francisco Chronicle, which is currently Northern California's most widely circulated newspaper.[358] The Chronicle is most famous for a former columnist, the late Herb Caen, whose daily musings attracted critical acclaim and represented the "voice of San Francisco." The San Francisco Examiner, once the cornerstone of William Randolph Hearst's media empire and the home of Ambrose Bierce, declined in circulation over the years and now takes the form of a free daily tabloid, under new ownership.[359][360]

Sing Tao Daily claims to be the largest of several Chinese language dailies that serve the Bay Area.[361] SF Weekly is the city's alternative weekly newspaper. San Francisco and 7x7 are major glossy magazines about San Francisco. The national newsmagazine Mother Jones is also based in San Francisco. San Francisco is home to online-only media publications such as SFist, and AsianWeek.

 
The Julia Morgan-designed Hearst Building, the western headquarters of the Hearst Corporation

The San Francisco Bay Area is the sixth-largest television market.[362] It is the fourth-largest radio market after that of New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago.[363] in the U.S.

All major U.S. television networks have affiliates serving the region, with most of them based in the city. CNN, MSNBC, BBC, Russia Today, and CCTV America also have regional news bureaus in San Francisco. Bloomberg West was launched in 2011 from a studio on the Embarcadero and CNBC broadcasts from One Market Plaza since 2015. ESPN uses the local ABC studio for their broadcasting. The regional sports network, Comcast SportsNet Bay Area and its sister station Comcast SportsNet California, are both located in San Francisco. The Pac-12 Network is also based in San Francisco.

 
Sutro Tower is a broadcast tower and local landmark.

Public broadcasting outlets include both a television station and a radio station, both broadcasting under the call letters KQED from a facility near the Potrero Hill neighborhood. KQED-FM is the most-listened-to National Public Radio affiliate in the country.[364]

KUSF is a student-run radio station by college students from the University of San Francisco.[365] Another local broadcaster, KPOO, is an independent, African-American owned and operated noncommercial radio station established in 1971.[366] CNET, founded 1994, and Salon.com, 1995, are based in San Francisco. Sutro Tower is an important broadcast tower located between Mount Sutro and the Twin Peaks, built in 1973 for KTVU, KRON, and KPIX.

Infrastructure edit

Transportation edit

Public transportation edit

 
A San Francisco cable car with Alcatraz seen behind

Transit is the most used form of transportation every day in San Francisco. Every weekday, more than 560,000 people travel on Muni's 69 bus routes and more than 140,000 customers ride the Muni Metro light rail system.[367] 32% of San Francisco residents use public transportation for their daily commute to work, ranking it fourth in the United States and first on the West Coast.[368] The San Francisco Municipal Railway, primarily known as Muni, is the primary public transit system of San Francisco. As of 2023, Muni is the eighth-largest transit system in the United States.[369] The system operates a combined light rail and subway system, the Muni Metro, as well as large bus and trolley coach networks.[370] Additionally, it runs a historic streetcar line, which runs on Market Street from Castro Street to Fisherman's Wharf.[370] It also operates the famous cable cars,[370] which have been designated as a National Historic Landmark and are a major tourist attraction.[371]

Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), a regional Rapid Transit system, connects San Francisco with the East Bay and San Jose through the underwater Transbay Tube. The line, which contains all except the Orange Line, runs under Market Street to Civic Center where it turns south to the Mission District, the southern part of the city, and through northern San Mateo County, to the San Francisco International Airport, and Millbrae.[370]

 
Muni Metro, run by SF Muni

Another commuter rail system, Caltrain, runs from San Francisco along the San Francisco Peninsula to San Jose.[370] Historically, trains operated by Southern Pacific Lines ran from San Francisco to Los Angeles, via Palo Alto and San Jose.

Amtrak Thruway runs a shuttle bus from three locations in San Francisco to its station across the bay in Emeryville.[372] Additionally, BART offers connections to San Francisco from Amtrak's stations in Emeryville, Oakland and Richmond, and Caltrain offers connections in San Jose and Santa Clara. Thruway service also runs south to San Luis Obispo with connection to the Pacific Surfliner.

San Francisco was an early adopter of carsharing in America. The non-profit City CarShare opened in 2001[373] and Zipcar closely followed.[374]

 
Golden Gate Ferries connect the city to North Bay communities, while San Francisco Bay Ferry connects the city to both the North and East Bay.

San Francisco Bay Ferry operates from the Ferry Building and Pier 39 to points in Oakland, Alameda, Bay Farm Island, South San Francisco, Richmond, and north to Vallejo in Solano County.[375] The Golden Gate Ferry is the other ferry operator with service between San Francisco and Marin County.[376] SolTrans runs supplemental bus service between the Ferry Building and Vallejo.

To accommodate the large amount of San Francisco citizens who commute to the Silicon Valley daily, employers like Genentech, Google, and Apple have begun to provide private bus transportation for their employees, from San Francisco locations. These buses have quickly become a heated topic of debate within the city, as protesters claim they block bus lanes and delay public buses.[377]

Freeways and roads edit

 
The Bay Bridge connects the city to Oakland and the East Bay.

In 2014, only 41.3% of residents commuted by driving alone or carpooling in private vehicles in San Francisco, a decline from 48.6% in 2000.[378] There are 1,088 miles of streets in San Francisco with 946 miles of these streets being surface streets, and 59 miles of freeways.[378] Due to its unique geography, and the freeway revolts of the late 1950s,[379] Interstate 80 begins at the approach to the Bay Bridge and is the only direct automobile link to the East Bay. U.S. Route 101 connects to the western terminus of Interstate 80 and provides access to the south of the city along San Francisco Bay toward Silicon Valley. Northward, the routing for U.S. 101 uses arterial streets to connect to the Golden Gate Bridge, the only direct automobile link to Marin County and the North Bay.

As part of the retrofitting of the Golden Gate Bridge and installation of a suicide barrier, starting in 2019 the railings on the west side of the pedestrian walkway were replaced with thinner, more flexible slats in order to improve the bridge's aerodynamic tolerance of high wind to 100 mph (161 km/h). Starting in June 2020, reports were received of a loud hum produced by the new railing slats, heard across the city when a strong west wind was blowing.[380]

 
Lombard Street in Russian Hill is famed as "the most crooked street in the world."

State Route 1 also enters San Francisco from the north via the Golden Gate Bridge and bisects the city as the 19th Avenue arterial thoroughfare, joining with Interstate 280 at the city's southern border. Interstate 280 continues south from San Francisco, and also turns to the east along the southern edge of the city, terminating just south of the Bay Bridge in the South of Market neighborhood. After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, city leaders demolished the Embarcadero Freeway and a portion of the Central Freeway, converting them into street-level boulevards.[379]

State Route 35 enters the city from the south as Skyline Boulevard and terminates at its intersection with Highway 1. State Route 82 enters San Francisco from the south as Mission Street, and terminates shortly thereafter at its junction with 280. The western terminus of the historic transcontinental Lincoln Highway, the first road across America, is in San Francisco's Lincoln Park.

Vision Zero edit

In 2014, San Francisco committed to Vision Zero, with the goal of ending all traffic fatalities caused by motor vehicles within the city by 2024.[381] San Francisco's Vision Zero plan calls for investing in engineering, enforcement, and education, and focusing on dangerous intersections. In 2013, 25 people were killed by car and truck drivers while walking and biking in the city and 9 car drivers and passengers were killed in collisions. In 2019, 42 people were killed in traffic collisions in San Francisco.[382]

Airports edit

 
San Francisco International Airport, one of the busiest airports in the world

Though located 13 miles (21 km) south of downtown in unincorporated San Mateo County, San Francisco International Airport (SFO) is under the jurisdiction of the City and County of San Francisco. SFO is a hub for United Airlines[383] and Alaska Airlines.[384] SFO is a major international gateway to Asia and Europe, with the largest international terminal in North America.[385] In 2011, SFO was the eighth-busiest airport in the U.S. and the 22nd-busiest in the world, handling over 40.9 million passengers.[386]

Located in the South Bay, the San Jose International Airport (SJC) is the second-busiest airport in the Bay Area, followed by San Francisco Bay Oakland International Airport, which is a popular, low-cost alternative to SFO. Geographically, San Francisco Bay Oakland Airport is approximately the same distance from downtown San Francisco as SFO, but due to its location across San Francisco Bay, it is greater driving distance from San Francisco.[citation needed]

Cycling and walking edit

 
Bay Wheels station on Market St.

Cycling is a popular mode of transportation in San Francisco, with 75,000 residents commuting by bicycle each day.[387] In recent years, the city has installed better cycling infrastructure such as protected bike lanes and parking racks.[388] Bay Wheels, previously named Bay Area Bike Share at inception, launched in August 2013 with 700 bikes in downtown San Francisco, selected cities in the East Bay, and San Jose. The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency and Bay Area Air Quality Management District are responsible for the operation with management provided by Motivate.[389] A major expansion started in 2017, along with a rebranding as Ford GoBike; the company received its current name in 2019.[390] Pedestrian traffic is also widespread. In 2015, Walk Score ranked San Francisco the second-most walkable city in the United States.[391][392][393]

San Francisco has significantly higher rates of pedestrian and bicyclist traffic deaths than the United States on average. In 2013, 21 pedestrians were killed in vehicle collisions, the highest since 2001,[394] which is 2.5 deaths per 100,000 population – 70% higher than the national average of 1.5.[395]

 
San Francisco cycling event

Cycling is becoming increasingly popular in the city. The 2010 Municipal Transportation Agency (MTA) annual bicycle count showed the number of cyclists at 33 locations had increased 58% from the 2006 baseline counts.[396] In 2008, the MTA estimated that about 128,000 trips were made by bicycle each day in the city, or 6% of total trips.[397] As of 2019, 2.6% of the city's streets have protected bike lanes, with 28 miles of protected bike lanes in the city.[367] Since 2006, San Francisco has received a Bicycle Friendly Community status of "Gold" from the League of American Bicyclists.[398] In 2022 a measure on the ballot passed to protect JFK drive in Golden Gate Park as a pedestrian and biking space with 59% of voters in favor.[399]

Public safety edit

The San Francisco Police Department was founded in 1849.[400] The portions of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area located within the city, including the Presidio and Ocean Beach, are patrolled by the United States Park Police.

The San Francisco Fire Department provides both fire suppression and emergency medical services to the city.[401]

Sister cities edit

San Francisco participates in the Sister Cities program.[402] A total of 41 consulates general and 23 honorary consulates have offices in the San Francisco Bay Area.[403]

In January 1980, Mayor Dianne Feinstein signed a sister cities agreement with Shanghai during a visit to China.[404]

Notable residents edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The land grant was near a boat anchorage around what is today Portsmouth Square.
  2. ^ Station currently at the United States Mint building[140][self-published source?]
  3. ^ The coordinates of the station are 37°46′14″N 122°25′37″W / 37.7706°N 122.4269°W / 37.7706; -122.4269. Precipitation, high temperature, low temperature, snow, and snow depth records date from October 1, 1849; June 1, 1874; January 1, 1875; January 1, 1876; and January 1, 1922; respectively.
  4. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  5. ^ Those not born in the 50 states or D.C., excluding California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas before 1850.

References edit

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  3. ^ 'Be it resolved: The official song of the City and County of San Francisco is, and shall remain, "San Francisco." Be it further resolved that henceforth: "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" shall be the official ballad.' San Francisco Administrative Code — Steven Short, KALW Public Media, May 10, 2021, "San Francisco’s Two Official Songs Or, The Day Tony Bennett Hid In His Hotel" [1]
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francisco, this, article, about, city, county, california, other, uses, disambiguation, officially, city, county, commercial, financial, cultural, center, northern, california, with, population, residents, 2022, fourth, most, populous, city, state, california,. This article is about the city and county in California For other uses see San Francisco disambiguation San Francisco 24 officially the City and County of San Francisco is a commercial financial and cultural center in Northern California With a population of 808 437 residents as of 2022 25 San Francisco is the fourth most populous city in the U S state of California The city covers a land area of 46 9 square miles 121 square kilometers 26 at the end of the San Francisco Peninsula making it the second most densely populated large U S city after New York City and the fifth most densely populated U S county behind only four New York City boroughs Among the 92 U S cities proper with over 250 000 residents San Francisco is ranked first by per capita income and sixth by aggregate income as of 2022 update 27 San FranciscoConsolidated city countyCity and County of San FranciscoGolden Gate Bridge and San Francisco skyline as seen from the Marin HeadlandsPalace of Fine ArtsAlcatraz IslandThe EmbarcaderoSan Francisco City HallFlagSealNicknames See list 1 Motto s Oro en Paz Fierro en Guerra Spanish for Gold in Peace Iron in War Anthem Official song Theme from San Francisco open your Golden Gate Official ballad I Left My Heart in San Francisco 2 3 Interactive map outlining San FranciscoSan Francisco highlighted in California San FranciscoLocation within CaliforniaShow map of CaliforniaSan FranciscoLocation within the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 37 46 39 N 122 24 59 W 37 77750 N 122 41639 W 37 77750 122 41639CountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaCountySan FranciscoMetroSan Francisco Oakland HaywardCSASan Jose San Francisco OaklandMissionJune 29 1776 247 years ago June 29 1776 4 IncorporatedApril 15 1850 174 years ago April 15 1850 5 Founded byJuan Bautista de AnzaJose Joaquin MoragaFrancisco PalouNamed forSt Francis of AssisiGovernment TypeStrong mayor council BodyBoard of Supervisors MayorLondon Breed D 6 Supervisors 10 List Connie Chan D Catherine Stefani D Aaron Peskin D Joel Engardio D Dean Preston D Matt Dorsey D Myrna Melgar D Rafael Mandelman D Hillary Ronen D Shamann Walton D Ahsha Safai D Assembly members 11 12 Matt Haney D Phil Ting D State senatorScott Wiener D 7 United States RepresentativesNancy Pelosi D 8 Kevin Mullin D 9 Area 13 City and county231 89 sq mi 600 59 km2 Land46 9 sq mi 121 48 km2 Water184 99 sq mi 479 11 km2 80 00 Metro3 524 4 sq mi 9 128 km2 Elevation 14 52 ft 16 m Highest elevation 15 Mount Davidson 934 ft 285 m Lowest elevation 15 Pacific Ocean 0 ft 0 m Population 2020 16 City and county873 965 Estimate 2022 16 808 437 Rank39th in North America17th in the United States4th in California Density18 634 65 sq mi 7 194 88 km2 Urban 17 a 3 515 933 US 14th Urban density6 843 0 sq mi 2 642 1 km2 Metro 18 4 566 961 US 13th CSA 19 9 225 160 US 5th DemonymSan Franciscan 20 Time zoneUTC 08 00 PST Summer DST UTC 07 00 PDT ZIP Codes 21 List 94102 9410594107 9411294114 941349413794139 941479415194158 9416194163 94164941729417794188Area codes415 628 22 FIPS code06 67000GNIS feature IDs277593 2411786GDP 2022 23 City 252 2 billion MSA 729 1 billion 4th CSA 1 318 trillion 3rd Websitesf gov Urban area population density are for the San Francisco Oakland CA urban area as of the 2020 Census Prior to European settlement the modern city proper was inhabited by the Yelamu who spoke a language now referred to as Ramaytush Ohlone On June 29 1776 settlers from New Spain established the Presidio of San Francisco at the Golden Gate and the Mission San Francisco de Asis a few miles away both named for Francis of Assisi 4 The California gold rush of 1849 brought rapid growth transforming an unimportant hamlet into a busy port making it the largest city on the West Coast at the time between 1870 and 1900 approximately one quarter of California s population resided in the city proper 27 In 1856 San Francisco became a consolidated city county 28 After three quarters of the city was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake and fire 29 it was quickly rebuilt hosting the Panama Pacific International Exposition nine years later In World War II it was a major port of embarkation for naval service members shipping out to the Pacific Theater 30 In 1945 the United Nations Charter was signed in San Francisco establishing the United Nations and in 1951 the Treaty of San Francisco re established peaceful relations between Japan and the Allied Powers 31 32 33 After the war the confluence of returning servicemen significant immigration liberalizing attitudes the rise of the beatnik and hippie countercultures the sexual revolution the peace movement growing from opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War and other factors led to the Summer of Love and the gay rights movement cementing San Francisco as a center of liberal activism in the United States San Francisco and the surrounding San Francisco Bay Area are a global center of economic activity and the arts and sciences 34 35 spurred by leading universities 36 high tech healthcare finance insurance real estate and professional services sectors 37 As of 2020 update the metropolitan area with 6 7 million residents ranked 5th by GDP 874 billion and 2nd by GDP per capita 131 082 across the OECD countries ahead of global cities like Paris London and Singapore 38 39 40 San Francisco anchors the 13th most populous metropolitan statistical area in the United States with 4 6 million residents and the fourth largest by aggregate income and economic output with a GDP of 729 billion in 2022 update 41 The wider San Jose San Francisco Oakland Combined Statistical Area is the nation s fifth most populous with around nine million residents and the third largest by economic output with a GDP of 1 32 trillion in 2022 update In the same year San Francisco proper had a GDP of 252 2 billion and a GDP per capita of 312 000 41 San Francisco was ranked fifth in the world and second in the United States on the Global Financial Centres Index as of September 2023 update 42 The city is home to numerous companies inside and outside of technology including Salesforce Uber Airbnb X Corp Levi s Gap Dropbox and Lyft In 2022 San Francisco had more than 1 7 million international visitors the fifth most visited city from abroad in the United States after New York City Miami Orlando and Los Angeles and approximately 20 million domestic visitors for a total of 21 9 million visitors 43 44 The city is known for its steep rolling hills and eclectic mix of architecture across varied neighborhoods as well as its cool summers fog and landmarks including the Golden Gate Bridge cable cars and Alcatraz along with the Chinatown and Mission districts 45 The city is home to a number of educational and cultural institutions such as the University of California San Francisco the University of San Francisco San Francisco State University the San Francisco Conservatory of Music the de Young Museum the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art the San Francisco Symphony the San Francisco Ballet the San Francisco Opera the SFJAZZ Center and the California Academy of Sciences Two major league sports teams the San Francisco Giants and the Golden State Warriors play their home games within San Francisco proper San Francisco s main international airport offers flights to over 125 destinations while a light rail and bus network in tandem with the BART and Caltrain systems connects nearly every part of San Francisco with the wider region 46 47 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Indigenous history 2 2 Spanish era 2 3 Mexican era 2 4 Post Conquest era 2 5 1906 earthquake and interwar era 2 6 Contemporary era 3 Geography 3 1 Neighborhoods 3 2 Climate 3 3 Ecology 4 Demographics 4 1 Race ethnicity religion and languages 4 1 1 Ethnic clustering 4 2 Education households and income 4 3 Homelessness 4 4 Crime 5 Economy 5 1 Technology 5 2 Tourism and conventions 6 Arts and culture 6 1 LGBT 6 2 Performing arts 6 3 Museums 7 Sports 8 Parks and recreation 9 Government 10 Education 10 1 Colleges and universities 10 2 Primary and secondary schools 11 Media 12 Infrastructure 12 1 Transportation 12 1 1 Public transportation 12 1 2 Freeways and roads 12 1 2 1 Vision Zero 12 1 3 Airports 12 1 4 Cycling and walking 12 2 Public safety 13 Sister cities 14 Notable residents 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 Bibliography 19 Further reading 20 External linksEtymology editSee also List of San Francisco placename etymologies San Francisco which is Spanish for Saint Francis takes its name from Mission San Francisco de Asis which in turn was named after Saint Francis of Assisi The mission received its name in 1776 when it was founded by the Spanish under the leadership of Padre Francisco Palou The city has officially been known as San Francisco since 1847 when Washington Allon Bartlett then serving as the city s alcalde renamed it from Yerba Buena Spanish for Good Herb which had been name used throughout the Spanish and Mexican eras since approximately 1776 The name Yerba Buena continues to be used in locations in the city such as on Yerba Buena Island and in the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts and Yerba Buena Gardens While residents outside the San Francisco Bay Area use nicknames including Frisco San Fran and SF local residents in the Bay Area sometimes refer to San Francisco as the City 1 for residents of San Francisco living in the more suburban parts of the city the City generally refers to the more densely populated downtown areas around Market Street Its use or lack thereof is a common way for locals to distinguish long time residents from tourists and recent arrivals San Fran and Frisco are sometimes considered controversial as nicknames among San Francisco residents 48 49 50 History editSee also History of San Francisco For a chronological guide see Timeline of San Francisco Indigenous history edit The earliest archeological evidence of human habitation of the territory of San Francisco dates to 3000 BCE 51 The Yelamu group of the Ramaytush people resided in a few small villages when an overland Spanish exploration party arrived on November 2 1769 the first documented European visit to San Francisco Bay 52 The Ohlone name for San Francisco was Ahwaste meaning place at the bay 53 The arrival of Spanish colonists and the implementation of their Mission system marked the beginning of the genocide of the Ramaytush people and the deprivation of language and culture 54 55 56 Spanish era edit nbsp Juan Bautista de Anza established the Presidio of San Francisco for the Spanish Empire in 1776 nbsp Mission San Francisco de Asis was founded by Padre Francisco Palou on October 9 1776 The Spanish Empire claimed San Francisco as part of Las Californias a province of the Viceroyalty of New Spain The Spanish first arrived in what is now San Francisco on November 2 1769 when the Portola expedition led by Don Gaspar de Portola and Juan Crespi arrived at San Francisco Bay Having noted the strategic benefits of the area due to its large natural harbor the Spanish dispatched Pedro Fages in 1770 to find a more direct route to the San Francisco Peninsula from Monterey which would become part of the El Camino Real route By 1774 Juan Bautista de Anza had arrived to the area to select the sites for a mission and presidio The first European maritime presence in San Francisco Bay occurred on August 5 1775 when the Spanish ship San Carlos commanded by Juan Manuel de Ayala became the first ship to anchor in the bay 57 Soon after on March 28 1776 Anza established the Presidio of San Francisco On October 9 Mission San Francisco de Asis also known as Mission Dolores was founded by Padre Francisco Palou 4 In 1794 the Presidio established the Castillo de San Joaquin a fortification on the southern side of the Golden Gate which later came to be known as Fort Point In 1804 the province of Alta California was created which included Yerba Buena the former name of San Francisco At its peak in 1810 1820 the average population at the Mission Dolores settlement was about 1 100 people 58 Mexican era edit nbsp Juana Briones de Miranda known as the Founding Mother of San Francisco 59 In 1821 the Californias were ceded to Mexico by Spain The extensive California mission system gradually lost its influence during the period of Mexican rule Agricultural land became largely privatized as ranchos as was occurring in other parts of California Coastal trade increased including a half dozen barques from various Atlantic ports which regularly sailed in California waters 60 61 Yerba Buena after a native herb a trading post with settlements between the Presidio and Mission grew up around the Plaza de Yerba Buena The plaza was later renamed Portsmouth Square now located in the city s Chinatown and Financial District The Presidio was commanded in 1833 by Captain Mariano G Vallejo 60 In 1833 Juana Briones de Miranda built her rancho near El Polin Spring founding the first civilian household in San Francisco which had previously only been comprised by the military settlement at the Presidio and the religious settlement at Mission Dolores 59 In 1834 Francisco de Haro became the first Alcalde of Yerba Buena De Haro was a native of Mexico from that nation s west coast city of Compostela Nayarit A land survey of Yerba Buena was made by the Swiss immigrant Jean Jacques Vioget as prelude to the city plan The second Alcalde Jose Joaquin Estudillo was a Californio from a prominent Monterey family In 1835 while in office he approved the first land grant in Yerba Buena to William Richardson a naturalized Mexican citizen of English birth Richardson had arrived in San Francisco aboard a whaling ship in 1822 In 1825 he married Maria Antonia Martinez eldest daughter of the Californio Ygnacio Martinez 62 a nbsp The 1846 Battle of Yerba Buena was an early U S victory in the American conquest of California Yerba Buena began to attract American and European settlers an 1842 census listed 21 residents 11 born in the United States or Europe as well as one Filipino merchant 63 Following the Bear Flag Revolt in Sonoma and the beginning of the U S Conquest of California American forces under the command of John B Montgomery captured Yerba Buena on July 9 1846 with little resistance from the local Californio population At the end of the month the Brooklyn arrived with a group of Mormon settlers who had departed New York City six months earlier Following the capture U S forces appointed both Jose de Jesus Noe and Washington Allon Bartlett to serve as co alcaldes mayors while the conquest continued on in the rest of California Following the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 Alta California was ceded from Mexico to the United States Post Conquest era edit nbsp San Francisco in 1849 during the beginning of the California gold rush nbsp Port of San Francisco in 1851 Despite its attractive location as a port and naval base post Conquest San Francisco was still a small settlement with inhospitable geography 64 Its 1847 population was said to be 459 60 The California gold rush brought a flood of treasure seekers known as forty niners as in 1849 With their sourdough bread in tow 65 prospectors accumulated in San Francisco over rival Benicia 66 raising the population from 1 000 in 1848 to 25 000 by December 1849 67 The promise of wealth was so strong that crews on arriving vessels deserted and rushed off to the gold fields leaving behind a forest of masts in San Francisco harbor 68 Some of these approximately 500 abandoned ships were used at times as storeships saloons and hotels many were left to rot and some were sunk to establish title to the underwater lot By 1851 the harbor was extended out into the bay by wharves while buildings were erected on piles among the ships By 1870 Yerba Buena Cove had been filled to create new land Buried ships are occasionally exposed when foundations are dug for new buildings 69 California was quickly granted statehood in 1850 and the U S military built Fort Point at the Golden Gate and a fort on Alcatraz Island to secure the San Francisco Bay San Francisco County was one of the state s 18 original counties established at California statehood in 1850 70 Until 1856 San Francisco s city limits extended west to Divisadero Street and Castro Street and south to 20th Street In 1856 the California state government divided the county A straight line was then drawn across the tip of the San Francisco Peninsula just north of San Bruno Mountain Everything south of the line became the new San Mateo County while everything north of the line became the new consolidated City and County of San Francisco 71 nbsp The Bank of California established in 1863 was the first commercial bank in Western United States 72 Entrepreneurs sought to capitalize on the wealth generated by the gold rush Silver discoveries including the Comstock Lode in Nevada in 1859 further drove rapid population growth 73 With hordes of fortune seekers streaming through the city lawlessness was common and the Barbary Coast section of town gained notoriety as a haven for criminals prostitution bootlegging and gambling 74 Early winners were the banking industry with the founding of Wells Fargo in 1852 and the Bank of California in 1864 Development of the Port of San Francisco and the establishment in 1869 of overland access to the eastern U S rail system via the newly completed Pacific Railroad the construction of which the city only reluctantly helped support 75 helped make the Bay Area a center for trade Catering to the needs and tastes of the growing population Levi Strauss opened a dry goods business and Domingo Ghirardelli began manufacturing chocolate Chinese immigrants made the city a polyglot culture drawn to Old Gold Mountain creating the city s Chinatown quarter By 1880 Chinese made up 9 3 of the population 76 nbsp View of the city in 1878 The first cable cars carried San Franciscans up Clay Street in 1873 The city s sea of Victorian houses began to take shape and civic leaders campaigned for a spacious public park resulting in plans for Golden Gate Park San Franciscans built schools churches theaters and all the hallmarks of civic life The Presidio developed into the most important American military installation on the Pacific coast 77 By 1890 San Francisco s population approached 300 000 making it the eighth largest city in the United States at the time Around 1901 San Francisco was a major city known for its flamboyant style stately hotels ostentatious mansions on Nob Hill and a thriving arts scene 78 The first North American plague epidemic was the San Francisco plague of 1900 1904 79 1906 earthquake and interwar era edit nbsp The 1906 San Francisco earthquake was the deadliest earthquake in U S history At 5 12 am on April 18 1906 a major earthquake struck San Francisco and northern California As buildings collapsed from the shaking ruptured gas lines ignited fires that spread across the city and burned out of control for several days With water mains out of service the Presidio Artillery Corps attempted to contain the inferno by dynamiting blocks of buildings to create firebreaks 80 More than three quarters of the city lay in ruins including almost all of the downtown core 29 Contemporary accounts reported that 498 people died though modern estimates put the number in the several thousands 81 More than half of the city s population of 400 000 was left homeless 82 Refugees settled temporarily in makeshift tent villages in Golden Gate Park the Presidio on the beaches and elsewhere Many fled permanently to the East Bay Jack London is remembered for having famously eulogized the earthquake Not in history has a modern imperial city been so completely destroyed San Francisco is gone 83 nbsp The reconstruction of San Francisco City Hall on Civic Center Plaza c 1913 16 Rebuilding was rapid and performed on a grand scale Rejecting calls to completely remake the street grid San Franciscans opted for speed 84 Amadeo Giannini s Bank of Italy later to become Bank of America provided loans for many of those whose livelihoods had been devastated The influential San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association or SPUR was founded in 1910 to address the quality of housing after the earthquake 85 The earthquake hastened development of western neighborhoods that survived the fire including Pacific Heights where many of the city s wealthy rebuilt their homes 86 In turn the destroyed mansions of Nob Hill became grand hotels City Hall rose again in the Beaux Arts style and the city celebrated its rebirth at the Panama Pacific International Exposition in 1915 87 nbsp The Panama Pacific Exposition a major world s fair held in 1915 was seen as a chance to showcase the city s recovery from the earthquake During this period San Francisco built some of its most important infrastructure Civil Engineer Michael O Shaughnessy was hired by San Francisco Mayor James Rolph as chief engineer for the city in September 1912 to supervise the construction of the Twin Peaks Reservoir the Stockton Street Tunnel the Twin Peaks Tunnel the San Francisco Municipal Railway the Auxiliary Water Supply System and new sewers San Francisco s streetcar system of which the J K L M and N lines survive today was pushed to completion by O Shaughnessy between 1915 and 1927 It was the O Shaughnessy Dam Hetch Hetchy Reservoir and Hetch Hetchy Aqueduct that would have the largest effect on San Francisco 88 An abundant water supply enabled San Francisco to develop into the city it has become today nbsp The Bay Bridge under construction on Yerba Buena Island in 1935 In ensuing years the city solidified its standing as a financial capital in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash not a single San Francisco based bank failed 89 Indeed it was at the height of the Great Depression that San Francisco undertook two great civil engineering projects simultaneously constructing the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge completing them in 1936 and 1937 respectively It was in this period that the island of Alcatraz a former military stockade began its service as a federal maximum security prison housing notorious inmates such as Al Capone and Robert Franklin Stroud the Birdman of Alcatraz San Francisco later celebrated its regained grandeur with a World s fair the Golden Gate International Exposition in 1939 40 creating Treasure Island in the middle of the bay to house it 90 Contemporary era edit See also San Francisco in the 1970s nbsp The United Nations was created in San Francisco in 1945 when the United Nations Charter was signed at the San Francisco Conference During World War II the city owned Sharp Park in Pacifica was used as an internment camp to detain Japanese Americans 91 Hunters Point Naval Shipyard became a hub of activity and Fort Mason became the primary port of embarkation for service members shipping out to the Pacific Theater of Operations 30 The explosion of jobs drew many people especially African Americans from the South to the area After the end of the war many military personnel returning from service abroad and civilians who had originally come to work decided to stay The United Nations Charter creating the United Nations was drafted and signed in San Francisco in 1945 and in 1951 the Treaty of San Francisco re established peaceful relations between Japan and the Allied Powers 92 Urban planning projects in the 1950s and 1960s involved widespread destruction and redevelopment of west side neighborhoods and the construction of new freeways of which only a series of short segments were built before being halted by citizen led opposition 93 The onset of containerization made San Francisco s small piers obsolete and cargo activity moved to the larger Port of Oakland 94 The city began to lose industrial jobs and turned to tourism as the most important segment of its economy 95 The suburbs experienced rapid growth and San Francisco underwent significant demographic change as large segments of the white population left the city supplanted by an increasing wave of immigration from Asia and Latin America 96 97 From 1950 to 1980 the city lost over 10 percent of its population nbsp The Summer of Love in 1967 was an influential counterculture phenomenon with as many as 100 000 people converging in San Francisco s Haight Ashbury neighborhood Over this period San Francisco became a magnet for America s counterculture movement Beat Generation writers fueled the San Francisco Renaissance and centered on the North Beach neighborhood in the 1950s 98 Hippies flocked to Haight Ashbury in the 1960s reaching a peak with the 1967 Summer of Love 99 In 1974 the Zebra murders left at least 16 people dead 100 In the 1970s the city became a center of the gay rights movement with the emergence of The Castro as an urban gay village the election of Harvey Milk to the Board of Supervisors and his assassination along with that of Mayor George Moscone in 1978 101 Bank of America now based in Charlotte North Carolina was founded in San Francisco the bank completed 555 California Street in 1969 The Transamerica Pyramid was completed in 1972 102 igniting a wave of Manhattanization that lasted until the late 1980s a period of extensive high rise development downtown 103 The 1980s also saw a dramatic increase in the number of homeless people in the city an issue that remains today despite many attempts to address it 104 nbsp Transamerica Pyramid built in 1972 characterized the Manhattanization of the city s skyline in the 1970 80 s The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake caused destruction and loss of life throughout the Bay Area In San Francisco the quake severely damaged structures in the Marina and South of Market districts and precipitated the demolition of the damaged Embarcadero Freeway and much of the damaged Central Freeway allowing the city to reclaim The Embarcadero as its historic downtown waterfront and revitalizing the Hayes Valley neighborhood 105 The two recent decades have seen booms driven by the internet industry During the dot com boom of the late 1990s startup companies invigorated the San Francisco economy Large numbers of entrepreneurs and computer application developers moved into the city followed by marketing design and sales professionals changing the social landscape as once poorer neighborhoods became increasingly gentrified 106 Demand for new housing and office space ignited a second wave of high rise development this time in the South of Market district 107 By 2000 the city s population reached new highs surpassing the previous record set in 1950 When the bubble burst in 2001 and again in 2023 many of these companies folded and their employees were laid off Yet high technology and entrepreneurship remain mainstays of the San Francisco economy By the mid 2000s decade the social media boom had begun with San Francisco becoming a popular location for tech offices and a common place to live for people employed in Silicon Valley companies such as Apple and Google 108 The early 2020s featured an exodus of tech companies from Downtown San Francisco in the wake of the COVID 19 pandemic and struggles with homelessness and public drug use Although some observers have raised the possibility that office vacancies and declining tax revenues could cause San Francisco to enter an economic doom loop 109 110 other sources have refuted this broad based characterization of the city as a whole asserting that the issues of concern are restricted primarily to the urban core of San Francisco 111 112 The Ferry Station Post Office Building Armour amp Co Building Atherton House and YMCA Hotel are historic buildings among dozens of historical landmarks in the city according to the National Register of Historic Places listings in San Francisco 113 Geography edit nbsp Satellite view of San Francisco San Francisco is located on the West Coast of the United States at the north end of the San Francisco Peninsula and includes significant stretches of the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay within its boundaries Several picturesque islands Alcatraz Treasure Island and the adjacent Yerba Buena Island and small portions of Alameda Island Red Rock Island and Angel Island are part of the city Also included are the uninhabited Farallon Islands 27 miles 43 km offshore in the Pacific Ocean The mainland within the city limits roughly forms a seven by seven mile square a common local colloquialism referring to the city s shape though its total area including water is nearly 232 square miles 600 km2 There are more than 50 hills within the city limits 114 Some neighborhoods are named after the hill on which they are situated including Nob Hill Potrero Hill and Russian Hill Near the geographic center of the city southwest of the downtown area are a series of less densely populated hills Twin Peaks a pair of hills forming one of the city s highest points forms an overlook spot San Francisco s tallest hill Mount Davidson is 928 feet 283 m high and is capped with a 103 foot 31 m tall cross built in 1934 115 Dominating this area is Sutro Tower a large red and white radio and television transmission tower reaching 1 811 ft 552 m above sea level nbsp Lake Merced located in southwestern San Francisco The nearby San Andreas and Hayward Faults are responsible for much earthquake activity although neither physically passes through the city itself The San Andreas Fault caused the earthquakes in 1906 and 1989 Minor earthquakes occur on a regular basis The threat of major earthquakes plays a large role in the city s infrastructure development The city constructed an auxiliary water supply system and has repeatedly upgraded its building codes requiring retrofits for older buildings and higher engineering standards for new construction 116 However there are still thousands of smaller buildings that remain vulnerable to quake damage 117 USGS has released the California earthquake forecast which models earthquake occurrence in California 118 San Francisco s shoreline has grown beyond its natural limits Entire neighborhoods such as the Marina Mission Bay and Hunters Point as well as large sections of the Embarcadero sit on areas of landfill Treasure Island was constructed from material dredged from the bay as well as material resulting from the excavation of the Yerba Buena Tunnel through Yerba Buena Island during the construction of the Bay Bridge Such land tends to be unstable during earthquakes The resulting soil liquefaction causes extensive damage to property built upon it as was evidenced in the Marina district during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake 119 A few natural lakes and creeks Lake Merced Mountain Lake Pine Lake Lobos Creek El Polin Spring are within parks and remain protected in what is essentially their original form but most of the city s natural watercourses such as Islais Creek and Mission Creek have been partially or completely culverted and built over Since the 1990s however the Public Utilities Commission has been studying proposals to daylight or restore some creeks 120 Neighborhoods edit Main articles Neighborhoods in San Francisco and List of Landmarks and Historic Places in San Francisco See also List of tallest buildings in San Francisco nbsp View of the city s central districts along its northeastern coastline The historic center of San Francisco is the northeast quadrant of the city anchored by Market Street and the waterfront Here the Financial District is centered with Union Square the principal shopping and hotel district and the Tenderloin nearby Cable cars carry riders up steep inclines to the summit of Nob Hill once the home of the city s business tycoons and down to the waterfront tourist attractions of Fisherman s Wharf and Pier 39 where many restaurants feature Dungeness crab from a still active fishing industry Also in this quadrant are Russian Hill a residential neighborhood with the famously crooked Lombard Street North Beach the city s Little Italy and the former center of the Beat Generation and Telegraph Hill which features Coit Tower Abutting Russian Hill and North Beach is San Francisco s Chinatown the oldest Chinatown in North America 121 122 123 124 The South of Market which was once San Francisco s industrial core has seen significant redevelopment following the construction of Oracle Park and an infusion of startup companies New skyscrapers live work lofts and condominiums dot the area Further development is taking place just to the south in Mission Bay area a former railroad yard which now has a second campus of the University of California San Francisco and Chase Center which opened in 2019 as the new home of the Golden State Warriors 125 West of downtown across Van Ness Avenue lies the large Western Addition neighborhood which became established with a large African American population after World War II The Western Addition is usually divided into smaller neighborhoods including Hayes Valley the Fillmore and Japantown which was once the largest Japantown in North America but suffered when its Japanese American residents were forcibly removed and interned during World War II The Western Addition survived the 1906 earthquake with its Victorians largely intact including the famous Painted Ladies standing alongside Alamo Square To the south near the geographic center of the city is Haight Ashbury famously associated with 1960s hippie culture 126 The Haight is now timeframe home to some expensive boutiques 127 better source needed and a few controversial chain stores 128 although it still retains timeframe citation needed some bohemian character nbsp San Francisco Chinatown the oldest in North America and one of the world s largest North of the Western Addition is Pacific Heights an affluent neighborhood that features the homes built by wealthy San Franciscans in the wake of the 1906 earthquake Directly north of Pacific Heights facing the waterfront is the Marina a neighborhood popular with young professionals that was largely built on reclaimed land from the Bay 129 In the southeast quadrant of the city is the Mission District populated in the 19th century by Californios and working class immigrants from Germany Ireland Italy and Scandinavia In the 1910s a wave of Central American immigrants settled in the Mission and in the 1950s immigrants from Mexico began to predominate 130 In recent years gentrification has changed the demographics of parts of the Mission from Latino to twenty something professionals Noe Valley to the southwest and Bernal Heights to the south are both increasingly popular among young families with children East of the Mission is the Potrero Hill neighborhood a mostly residential neighborhood that features sweeping views of downtown San Francisco West of the Mission the area historically known as Eureka Valley now popularly called the Castro was once a working class Scandinavian and Irish area It has become North America s first gay village and is now the center of gay life in the city 131 Located near the city s southern border the Excelsior District is one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in San Francisco The Bayview Hunters Point in the far southeast corner of the city is one of the poorest neighborhoods though the area has been the focus of several revitalizing and urban renewal projects nbsp The Ferry Building located in the Embarcadero the city s eastern waterfront along San Francisco Bay The construction of the Twin Peaks Tunnel in 1918 connected southwest neighborhoods to downtown via streetcar hastening the development of West Portal and nearby affluent Forest Hill and St Francis Wood Further west stretching all the way to the Pacific Ocean and north to Golden Gate Park lies the vast Sunset District a large middle class area with a predominantly Asian population 132 The northwestern quadrant of the city contains the Richmond a mostly middle class neighborhood north of Golden Gate Park home to immigrants from other parts of Asia as well as many Russian and Ukrainian immigrants Together these areas are known as The Avenues These two districts are each sometimes further divided into two regions the Outer Richmond and Outer Sunset can refer to the more western portions of their respective district and the Inner Richmond and Inner Sunset can refer to the more eastern portions Many piers remained derelict for years until the demolition of the Embarcadero Freeway reopened the downtown waterfront allowing for redevelopment The centerpiece of the port the Ferry Building while still receiving commuter ferry traffic has been restored and redeveloped as a gourmet marketplace Climate edit nbsp San Francisco fog is a regular phenomenon in the summer San Francisco has a warm summer Mediterranean climate Koppen Csb characteristic of California s coast with moist winters and dry summers 133 San Francisco s weather is strongly influenced by the cool currents of the Pacific Ocean on the west side of the city and the water of San Francisco Bay to the north and east This moderates temperature swings and produces a remarkably mild year round climate with little seasonal temperature variation 134 Among major U S cities San Francisco has the coolest daily mean maximum and minimum temperatures for June July and August 135 During the summer rising hot air in California s interior valleys creates a low pressure area that draws winds from the North Pacific High through the Golden Gate which creates the city s characteristic cool winds and fog 136 The fog is less pronounced in eastern neighborhoods and during the late summer and early fall As a result the year s warmest month on average is September and on average October is warmer than July especially in daytime Temperatures reach or exceed 80 F 27 C on an average of only 21 and 23 days a year at downtown and San Francisco International Airport SFO respectively 137 The dry period of May to October is mild to warm with the normal monthly mean temperature peaking in September at 62 7 F 17 1 C 137 The rainy period of November to April is slightly cooler with the normal monthly mean temperature reaching its lowest in January at 51 3 F 10 7 C 137 On average there are 73 rainy days a year and annual precipitation averages 23 65 inches 601 mm 137 Variation in precipitation from year to year is high Above average rain years are often associated with warm El Nino conditions in the Pacific while dry years often occur in cold water La Nina periods In 2013 a La Nina year a record low 5 59 in 142 mm of rainfall was recorded at downtown San Francisco where records have been kept since 1849 137 Snowfall in the city is very rare with only 10 measurable accumulations recorded since 1852 most recently in 1976 when up to 5 inches 13 cm fell on Twin Peaks 138 139 nbsp The Farallon Islands are located in the Gulf of the Farallones off the Pacific coast of San Francisco The highest recorded temperature at the official National Weather Service downtown observation station b was 106 F 41 C on September 1 2017 141 During that hot spell the warmest ever night of 71 F 22 C was also recorded 142 The lowest recorded temperature was 27 F 3 C on December 11 1932 143 During an average year between 1991 and 2020 San Francisco recorded a warmest night at 64 F 18 C and a coldest day at 49 F 9 C 137 The coldest daytime high since the station s opening in 1945 was recorded in December 1972 at 37 F 3 C 137 As a coastal city San Francisco will be heavily affected by climate change As of 2021 update sea levels are projected to rise by as much as 5 feet 1 5 m resulting in periodic flooding rising groundwater levels and lowland floods from more severe storms 144 San Francisco falls under the USDA 10b Plant hardiness zone though some areas particularly downtown border zone 11a 145 146 vteClimate data for San Francisco downtown c 1991 2020 normals d extremes 1849 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high F C 79 26 81 27 87 31 94 34 97 36 103 39 99 37 98 37 106 41 102 39 86 30 76 24 106 41 Mean maximum F C 67 1 19 5 71 8 22 1 76 4 24 7 80 7 27 1 81 4 27 4 84 6 29 2 80 5 26 9 83 4 28 6 90 8 32 7 87 9 31 1 75 8 24 3 66 4 19 1 94 0 34 4 Mean daily maximum F C 57 8 14 3 60 4 15 8 62 1 16 7 63 0 17 2 64 1 17 8 66 5 19 2 66 3 19 1 67 9 19 9 70 2 21 2 69 8 21 0 63 7 17 6 57 9 14 4 64 1 17 8 Daily mean F C 52 2 11 2 54 2 12 3 55 5 13 1 56 4 13 6 57 8 14 3 59 7 15 4 60 3 15 7 61 7 16 5 62 9 17 2 62 1 16 7 57 2 14 0 52 5 11 4 57 7 14 3 Mean daily minimum F C 46 6 8 1 47 9 8 8 48 9 9 4 49 7 9 8 51 4 10 8 53 0 11 7 54 4 12 4 55 5 13 1 55 6 13 1 54 4 12 4 50 7 10 4 47 0 8 3 51 3 10 7 Mean minimum F C 40 5 4 7 42 0 5 6 43 7 6 5 45 0 7 2 48 0 8 9 50 1 10 1 51 6 10 9 52 9 11 6 52 0 11 1 49 9 9 9 44 9 7 2 40 7 4 8 38 8 3 8 Record low F C 29 2 31 1 33 1 40 4 42 6 46 8 47 8 46 8 47 8 43 6 38 3 27 3 27 3 Average precipitation inches mm 4 40 112 4 37 111 3 15 80 1 60 41 0 70 18 0 20 5 1 0 01 0 25 0 06 1 5 0 10 2 5 0 94 24 2 60 66 4 76 121 22 89 581 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 11 2 10 8 10 8 6 8 4 0 1 6 0 7 1 1 1 2 3 5 7 9 11 6 71 2 Average relative humidity 80 77 75 72 72 71 75 75 73 71 75 78 75 Mean monthly sunshine hours 185 9 207 7 269 1 309 3 325 1 311 4 313 3 287 4 271 4 247 1 173 4 160 6 3 061 7 Percent possible sunshine 61 69 73 78 74 70 70 68 73 71 57 54 69 Average ultraviolet index 2 3 5 7 9 10 10 9 7 5 3 2 6 Source 1 NOAA sun 1961 1974 137 147 148 149 Source 2 Met Office humidity 150 Weather Atlas UV 151 Ecology edit nbsp Aerial view of the Presidio of San Francisco and the Golden Gate Historically tule elk were present in San Francisco County based on archeological evidence of elk remains in at least five different Native American shellmounds at Hunter s Point Fort Mason Stevenson Street Market Street and Yerba Buena 152 153 Perhaps the first historical observer record was from the De Anza Expedition on March 23 1776 Herbert Eugene Bolton wrote about the expedition camp at Mountain Lake near the southern end of today s Presidio Round about were grazing deer and scattered here and there were the antlers of large elk 154 Also when Richard Henry Dana Jr visited San Francisco Bay in 1835 he wrote about vast elk herds near the Golden Gate on December 27 we came to anchor near the mouth of the bay under a high and beautifully sloping hill upon which herds of hundreds and hundreds of red deer note red deer is the European term for elk and the stag with his high branching antlers were bounding about although it is not clear whether this was the Marin side or the San Francisco side 155 Demographics editMain article Demographics of San Francisco Historical populationYearPop 18481 000 184925 000 2400 0 185234 776 39 1 186056 802 63 3 1870149 473 163 1 1880233 959 56 5 1890298 997 27 8 1900342 782 14 6 1910416 912 21 6 1920506 676 21 5 1930634 394 25 2 1940634 536 0 0 1950775 357 22 2 1960740 316 4 5 1970715 674 3 3 1980678 974 5 1 1990723 959 6 6 2000776 733 7 3 2010805 235 3 7 2020873 965 8 5 2023808 988 7 4 https www sfchronicle com sf article s f exodus population recovery data 18564064 php The 2020 United States census showed San Francisco s population to be 873 965 an increase of 8 5 from the 2010 census 16 With roughly one quarter the population density of Manhattan San Francisco is the second most densely populated large American city behind only New York City among cities greater than 200 000 population and the fifth most densely populated U S county following only four of the five New York City boroughs San Francisco is part of the five county San Francisco Oakland Hayward CA Metropolitan Statistical Area a region of 4 7 million people 13th most populous in the U S and has served as its traditional demographic focal point It is also part of the greater 14 county San Jose San Francisco Oakland CA Combined Statistical Area whose population is over 9 6 million making it the fifth largest in the United States as of 2018 update 156 failed verification Race ethnicity religion and languages edit nbsp Ethnic origins in San Francisco As of the 2020 update census the racial makeup and population of San Francisco included 361 382 Whites 41 3 296 505 Asians 33 9 46 725 African Americans 5 3 86 233 Multiracial Americans 9 9 6 475 Native Americans and Alaska Natives 0 7 3 476 Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders 0 4 and 73 169 persons of other races 8 4 There were 136 761 Hispanic or Latino residents of any race 15 6 San Francisco is a majority minority city as non Hispanic White residents comprise less than half of the population in 1940 they formed 92 5 of the population 157 In 2010 residents of Chinese ethnicity constituted the largest single ethnic minority group in San Francisco at 21 of the population other large Asian groups include Filipinos 5 and Vietnamese 2 with Japanese Koreans and many other Asian and Pacific Islander groups represented in the city 158 The population of Chinese ancestry is most heavily concentrated in Chinatown and the Sunset and Richmond Districts Filipinos are most concentrated in SoMa and the Crocker Amazon the latter neighborhood shares a border with Daly City which has one of the highest concentrations of Filipinos in North America 158 159 The Tenderloin District is home to a large portion of the city s Vietnamese population as well as businesses and restaurants which is known as the city s Little Saigon 158 The principal Hispanic groups in the city were those of Mexican 7 and Salvadoran 2 ancestry The Hispanic population is most heavily concentrated in the Mission District Tenderloin District and Excelsior District 160 The city s percentage of Hispanic residents is less than half of that of the state African Americans constituted about 5 of San Francisco s population in 2020 their share of the city s population has been decreasing since the 1970s 161 The majority of the city s Black residents live in the neighborhoods of Bayview Hunters Point Visitacion Valley and the Fillmore District 160 There are smaller Black communities in Diamond Heights Glen Park and Mission District The city has long been home to a significant Jewish community in 2018 Jewish Americans made up an estimated 10 80 000 of the city s population It the third largest Jewish community in proportional terms in the United States behind only those of New York City and Los Angeles respectively and it is also relatively young compared to other major U S cities 162 The Jewish community resides throughout the city but the Richmond District is home to an ethnic enclave of mostly Russian Jews 163 The Fillmore District was formerly a mostly Jewish neighborhood from the 1920s until the 1970s when many of its Jewish residents moved to other neighborhoods of the city as well as the suburbs of nearby Marin County 164 Demographic profile 165 1860 1880 1920 1960 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 166 Non Hispanic White alone 90 2 87 7 93 5 72 7 52 8 46 9 43 5 41 7 39 1 Non Hispanic Asian alone 4 6 9 3 2 7 7 9 21 3 28 0 30 7 33 1 33 7 Chinese American 4 6 9 3 1 5 5 1 12 1 17 6 20 0 19 8 21 0 Filipino American 0 2 1 5 5 2 5 4 5 0 4 9 4 4 Hispanic or Latino any race s 3 0 2 4 3 4 9 4 12 6 13 3 14 2 15 2 15 6 Mexican American 1 8 1 4 1 5 5 1 5 0 5 2 6 0 7 5 7 9 Non Hispanic Black alone 2 1 0 6 0 4 9 7 12 3 10 7 7 6 6 0 5 1 Non Hispanic Pacific Islander alone lt 0 1 0 2 0 4 0 4 0 5 0 3 Non Hispanic Native American alone lt 0 1 lt 0 1 lt 0 1 0 1 0 4 0 4 0 3 0 3 0 2 Non Hispanic other 0 2 0 4 0 2 0 3 0 3 0 8 Non Hispanic two or more races 3 0 2 9 5 2 Foreign born e 50 2 44 5 30 1 20 2 29 5 35 4 38 4 38 2 34 2 See also Demographics of San Francisco Historical estimates Source U S Census and IPUMS USA 165 nbsp Map of racial distribution in San Francisco 2010 U S Census Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic Other According to a 2018 study by the Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco Jews make up 10 80 000 of the city s population making Judaism the second largest religion in San Francisco after Christianity 162 A prior 2014 study by the Pew Research Center the largest religious groupings in San Francisco s metropolitan area are Christians 48 followed by those of no religion 35 Hindus 5 Jews 3 Buddhists 2 Muslims 1 and a variety of other religions have smaller followings According to the same study by the Pew Research Center about 20 of residents in the area are Protestant and 25 professing Roman Catholic beliefs Meanwhile 10 of the residents in metropolitan San Francisco identify as agnostics while 5 identify as atheists 167 168 As of 2010 update 55 411 728 of San Francisco residents spoke only English at home while 19 140 302 spoke a variety of Chinese mostly Taishanese and Cantonese 169 170 12 88 147 Spanish 3 25 767 Tagalog and 2 14 017 Russian In total 45 342 693 of San Francisco s population spoke a language at home other than English 171 Ethnic clustering edit San Francisco has several prominent Chinese Mexican and Filipino neighborhoods including Chinatown and the Mission District Research collected on the immigrant clusters in the city show that more than half of the Asian population in San Francisco is either Chinese born 40 3 or Philippine born 13 1 and of the Mexican population 21 were Mexican born meaning these are people who recently immigrated to the United States 172 Between the years of 1990 and 2000 the number of foreign born residents increased from 33 to nearly 40 172 During this same time period the San Francisco metropolitan area received 850 000 immigrants ranking third in the United States after Los Angeles and New York 172 Education households and income edit nbsp Sea Cliff is one of the city s most expensive neighborhoods 173 Of all major cities in the United States San Francisco has the second highest percentage of residents with a college degree second only to Seattle Over 44 of adults have a bachelor s or higher degree 174 San Francisco had the highest rate at 7 031 per square mile or over 344 000 total graduates in the city s 46 7 square miles 121 km2 175 San Francisco has the highest estimated percentage of gay and lesbian individuals of any of the 50 largest U S cities at 15 176 San Francisco also has the highest percentage of same sex households of any American county with the Bay Area having a higher concentration than any other metropolitan area 177 San Francisco ranks third of American cities in median household income 178 with a 2007 value of 65 519 179 Median family income is 81 136 179 An emigration of middle class families has left the city with a lower proportion of children than any other large American city 180 with the dog population cited as exceeding the child population of 115 000 in 2018 181 The city s poverty rate is 12 lower than the national average 182 Homelessness has been a chronic problem for San Francisco since the early 1970s 183 The city is believed to have the highest number of homeless inhabitants per capita of any major U S city 184 185 There are 345 811 households in the city out of which 133 366 households 39 were individuals 109 437 32 were opposite sex married couples 63 577 18 had children under the age of 18 living in them 21 677 6 were unmarried opposite sex partnerships and 10 384 3 were same sex married couples or partnerships The average household size was 2 26 the average family size was 3 11 452 986 people 56 lived in rental housing units and 327 985 people 41 lived in owner occupied housing units The median age of the city population is 38 years San Francisco declared itself a sanctuary city in 1989 and city officials strengthened the stance in 2013 with its Due Process for All ordinance The law declared local authorities could not hold immigrants for immigration offenses if they had no violent felonies on their records and did not currently face charges 186 The city issues a Resident ID Card regardless of the applicant s immigration status 187 Homelessness edit See also Homelessness in the San Francisco Bay Area nbsp Homeless encampment under a freeway in San Francisco Homelessness in San Francisco emerged as a major issue in the late 20th century and remains a growing problem in modern times 188 8 035 homeless people were counted in San Francisco s 2019 point in time street and shelter count This was an increase of more than 17 over the 2017 count of 6 858 people 5 180 of the people were living unsheltered on the streets and in parks 189 26 of respondents in the 2019 count identified job loss as the primary cause of their homelessness 18 cited alcohol or drug use and 13 cited being evicted from their residence 189 The city of San Francisco has been dramatically increasing its spending to service the growing population homelessness crisis spending jumped by 241 million in 2016 17 to total 275 million compared to a budget of just 34 million the previous year In 2017 18 the budget for combatting homelessness stood at 305 million 190 In the 2019 2020 budget year the city budgeted 368 million for homelessness services In the proposed 2020 2021 budget the city budgeted 850 million for homelessness services 191 In January 2018 a United Nations special rapporteur on homelessness Leilani Farha stated that she was completely shocked by San Francisco s homelessness crisis during a visit to the city She compared the deplorable conditions of the homeless camps she witnessed on San Francisco s streets to those she had seen in Mumbai 190 In May 2020 San Francisco officially sanctioned homeless encampments 192 Crime edit Main article Crime in San Francisco This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2024 nbsp SFPD mounted police officers San Francisco s violent crime rate is low compared to other major cities though many residents are still concerned about it 193 In 2011 50 murders were reported which is 6 1 per 100 000 people 194 There were about 134 rapes 3 142 robberies and about 2 139 assaults There were about 4 469 burglaries 25 100 thefts and 4 210 motor vehicle thefts 195 The Tenderloin area has the highest crime rate in San Francisco 70 of the city s violent crimes and around one fourth of the city s murders occur in this neighborhood The Tenderloin also sees high rates of drug abuse gang violence and prostitution 196 Another area with high crime rates is the Bayview Hunters Point area In the first six months of 2015 there were 25 murders compared to 14 in the first six months of 2014 However the murder rate is still much lower than in past decades 197 That rate though did rise again by the close of 2016 According to the San Francisco Police Department there were 59 murders in the city in 2016 an annual total that marked a 13 5 increase in the number of homicides 52 from 2015 198 The city has also gained a reputation for car break ins with over 19 000 car break ins occurring in 2021 199 During the first half of 2018 human feces on San Francisco sidewalks were the second most frequent complaint of city residents with about 65 calls per day The city has formed a poop patrol to attempt to combat the problem 200 nbsp SFPD parking enforcement officers In January 2022 CBS News reported that a single suspect was responsible for more than half of all reported hate crimes against the API community in San Francisco last year and that he was allowed to be out of custody despite the number of charges against him 201 Several street gangs have operated in the city over the decades including MS 13 202 the Surenos and Nortenos in the Mission District 203 African American street gangs familiar in other cities including the Bloods Crips and their sets have struggled to establish footholds in San Francisco 204 while police and prosecutors have been accused of liberally labeling young African American males as gang members 205 Criminal gangs with shotcallers in China including Triad groups such as the Wo Hop To were active in San Francisco in the 20th century 206 Economy editSee also List of companies based in San Francisco nbsp San Francisco s Financial District despite its declining importance 207 is still considered the Wall Street of the West The city has a diversified service economy with employment spread across a wide range of professional services including tourism financial services and increasingly high technology 208 In 2016 approximately 27 of workers were employed in professional business services 14 in leisure and hospitality 13 in government services 12 in education and health care 11 in trade transportation and utilities and 8 in financial activities 208 In 2019 GDP in the five county San Francisco metropolitan area grew 3 8 in real terms to 592 billion 209 210 Additionally in 2019 the 14 county San Jose San Francisco Oakland combined statistical area had a GDP of 1 086 trillion 210 ranking 3rd among CSAs and ahead of all but 16 countries As of 2019 update San Francisco County was the 7th highest income county in the United States among 3 142 with a per capita personal income of 139 405 211 Marin County directly to the north over the Golden Gate Bridge and San Mateo County directly to the south on the Peninsula were the 6th and 9th highest income counties respectively nbsp Skyline of South of Market SoMa including Salesforce Tower the tallest building in San Francisco The legacy of the California gold rush turned San Francisco into the principal banking and finance center of the West Coast in the early twentieth century 212 Montgomery Street in the Financial District became known as the Wall Street of the West home to the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and the site of the now defunct Pacific Coast Stock Exchange 212 Bank of America a pioneer in making banking services accessible to the middle class was founded in San Francisco and in the 1960s built the landmark modern skyscraper at 555 California Street for its corporate headquarters since relocated to Charlotte North Carolina Many large financial institutions multinational banks and venture capital firms are based in or have regional headquarters in the city With over 30 international financial institutions 213 six Fortune 500 companies 214 and a large supporting infrastructure of professional services including law public relations architecture and design San Francisco is designated as an Alpha World City 215 The 2017 Global Financial Centres Index ranked San Francisco as the sixth most competitive financial center in the world 216 Beginning in the 1990s San Francisco s economy diversified away from finance and tourism towards the growing fields of high tech biotechnology and medical research 217 Technology jobs accounted for just 1 percent of San Francisco s economy in 1990 growing to 4 percent in 2010 and an estimated 8 percent by the end of 2013 218 San Francisco became a center of Internet start up companies during the dot com bubble of the 1990s and the subsequent social media boom of the late 2000s decade 219 Since 2010 San Francisco proper has attracted an increasing share of venture capital investments as compared to nearby Silicon Valley attracting 423 financings worth US 4 58 billion in 2013 220 221 222 In 2004 the city approved a payroll tax exemption for biotechnology companies 223 to foster growth in the Mission Bay neighborhood site of a second campus and hospital of the University of California San Francisco UCSF Mission Bay hosts the UCSF Medical Center the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences and Gladstone Institutes 224 as well as more than 40 private sector life sciences companies 225 nbsp Union Square despite its declining profile 226 is still a major retail hub for San Francisco and the Bay Area According to academic Rob Wilson San Francisco is a global city a status that pre dated the city s popularity during the California gold rush 227 However the COVID 19 pandemic has led to high office vacancy rates and the closure of many retail and tech businesses in the downtown core of San Francisco 228 229 Attributed causes include a shift to remote work in the technology and professional services sectors as well as high levels of homelessness drug use and crime in areas around downtown San Francisco such as the Tenderloin and Mid Market neighborhoods 230 231 The top employer in San Francisco is the city government itself employing 5 6 31 000 people of the city s workforce followed by UCSF with over 25 000 employees 232 The largest private sector employer is Salesforce with 8 500 employees as of 2018 update 233 Small businesses with fewer than 10 employees and self employed firms made up 85 of city establishments in 2006 234 and the number of San Franciscans employed by firms of more than 1 000 employees has fallen by half since 1977 235 The growth of national big box and formula retail chains into the city has been made intentionally difficult by political and civic consensus In an effort to buoy small privately owned businesses in San Francisco and preserve the unique retail personality of the city the Small Business Commission started a publicity campaign in 2004 to keep a larger share of retail dollars in the local economy 236 and the Board of Supervisors has used the planning code to limit the neighborhoods where formula retail establishments can set up shop 237 an effort affirmed by San Francisco voters 238 However by 2016 San Francisco was rated low by small businesses in a Business Friendliness Survey 239 nbsp Ferry Building in the Embarcadero Like many U S cities San Francisco once had a significant manufacturing sector employing nearly 60 000 workers in 1969 but nearly all production left for cheaper locations by the 1980s 240 As of 2014 update San Francisco has seen a small resurgence in manufacturing with more than 4 000 manufacturing jobs across 500 companies doubling since 2011 The city s largest manufacturing employer is Anchor Brewing Company and the largest by revenue is Timbuk2 240 As of the first quarter of 2022 update the median value of homes in San Francisco County was 1 297 030 It ranked third in the U S for counties with highest median home value behind Nantucket Massachusetts and San Mateo County California 241 Technology edit nbsp Twitter headquarters on Market St San Francisco became a hub for technological driven economic growth during the internet boom of the 1990s and still holds an important position in the world city network today 172 242 Intense redevelopment towards the new economy makes business more technologically minded Between the years of 1999 and 2000 the job growth rate was 4 9 creating over 50 000 jobs in technology firms and internet content production 172 However the technology industry has become geographically dispersed 243 244 In the second technological boom driven by social media in the mid 2000s San Francisco became a location for companies such as Apple Google Ubisoft Facebook and Twitter to base their tech offices and for their employees to live 245 Tourism and conventions edit See also Port of San Francisco nbsp The Fisherman s Wharf is a popular tourist attraction Tourism is one of San Francisco s most important private sector industries accounting for more than one out of seven jobs in the city 217 246 The city s frequent portrayal in music film and popular culture has made the city and its landmarks recognizable worldwide In 2016 it attracted the fifth highest number of foreign tourists of any city in the United States 247 More than 25 million visitors arrived in San Francisco in 2016 adding US 9 96 billion to the economy 248 With a large hotel infrastructure and a major convention facility in the Moscone Center San Francisco is a popular destination for annual conventions and conferences 249 Some of the most popular tourist attractions in San Francisco as noted by the Travel Channel include the Golden Gate Bridge and Alamo Square Park home to the famous Painted Ladies Both of these locations were often used as landscape shots for the hit American television sitcom Full House There is also Lombard Street known for its crookedness and extensive views Tourists also visit Pier 39 which offers dining shopping entertainment and views of the bay sunbathing California sea lions the Aquarium of the Bay and the famous Alcatraz Island 250 nbsp Coit Tower on Telegraph Hill San Francisco also offers tourists varied nightlife in its neighborhoods 251 252 The new Terminal Project at Pier 27 opened September 25 2014 as a replacement for the old Pier 35 253 Itineraries from San Francisco usually include round trip cruises to Alaska and Mexico A heightened interest in conventioneering in San Francisco marked by the establishment of convention centers such as Yerba Buena acted as a feeder into the local tourist economy and resulted in an increase in the hotel industry In 1959 the city had fewer than thirty three hundred first class hotel rooms by 1970 the number was nine thousand and by 1999 there were more than thirty thousand 254 The commodification of the Castro District has contributed to San Francisco s tourist economy 255 Arts and culture editMain article Culture of San Francisco See also San Francisco in popular culture nbsp The Palace of Fine Arts originally built for the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition Although the Financial District Union Square and Fisherman s Wharf are well known around the world San Francisco is also characterized by its numerous culturally rich streetscapes featuring mixed use neighborhoods anchored around central commercial corridors to which residents and visitors alike can walk citation needed Because of these characteristics original research San Francisco is ranked the most walkable city in the United States by Walkscore com 256 Many neighborhoods feature a mix of businesses restaurants and venues that cater to the daily needs of local residents while also serving many visitors and tourists Some neighborhoods are dotted with boutiques cafes and nightlife such as Union Street in Cow Hollow 24th Street in Noe Valley Valencia Street in the Mission Grant Avenue in North Beach and Irving Street in the Inner Sunset This approach especially has influenced the continuing South of Market neighborhood redevelopment with businesses and neighborhood services rising alongside high rise residences 257 failed verification nbsp The Castro is famous as one of the first gay villages in the country 258 Since the 1990s the demand for skilled information technology workers from local startups and nearby Silicon Valley has attracted white collar workers from all over the world and created a high standard of living in San Francisco 259 Many neighborhoods that were once blue collar middle and lower class have been gentrifying as many of the city s traditional business and industrial districts have experienced a renaissance driven by the redevelopment of the Embarcadero including the neighborhoods South Beach and Mission Bay The city s property values and household income have risen to among the highest in the nation 260 261 262 creating a large and upscale restaurant retail and entertainment scene According to a 2014 quality of life survey of global cities San Francisco has the highest quality of living of any U S city 263 However due to the exceptionally high cost of living many of the city s middle and lower class families have been leaving the city for the outer suburbs of the Bay Area or for California s Central Valley 264 By June 2 2015 the median rent was reported to be as high as 4 225 265 The high cost of living is due in part to restrictive planning laws which limit new residential construction 266 nbsp The Mission District is the historic center of the city s Chicano Mexican American population and greater Hispanic and Latino community The international character that San Francisco has enjoyed since its founding is continued today by large numbers of immigrants from Asia and Latin America With 39 of its residents born overseas 235 San Francisco has numerous neighborhoods filled with businesses and civic institutions catering to new arrivals In particular the arrival of many ethnic Chinese which began to accelerate in the 1970s has complemented the long established community historically based in Chinatown throughout the city and has transformed the annual Chinese New Year Parade into the largest event of its kind on the West Coast With the arrival of the beat writers and artists of the 1950s and societal changes culminating in the Summer of Love in the Haight Ashbury district during the 1960s San Francisco became a center of liberal activism and of the counterculture that arose at that time The Democrats and to a lesser extent the Green Party have dominated city politics since the late 1970s after the last serious Republican challenger for city office lost the 1975 mayoral election by a narrow margin San Francisco has not voted more than 20 for a Republican presidential or senatorial candidate since 1988 267 In 2007 the city expanded its Medicaid and other indigent medical programs into the Healthy San Francisco program 268 which subsidizes certain medical services for eligible residents 269 270 271 nbsp The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art also known as SF MOMA Since 1993 the San Francisco Department of Public Health has distributed 400 000 free syringes every month aimed at reducing HIV and other health risks for drug users as well as providing disposal sites and services 272 273 274 San Francisco also has had a very active environmental community Starting with the founding of the Sierra Club in 1892 to the establishment of the non profit Friends of the Urban Forest in 1981 San Francisco has been at the forefront of many global discussions regarding the environment 275 276 The 1980 San Francisco Recycling Program was one of the earliest curbside recycling programs 277 The city s GoSolarSF incentive promotes solar installations and the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission is rolling out the CleanPowerSF program to sell electricity from local renewable sources 278 279 SF Greasecycle is a program to recycle used cooking oil for conversion to biodiesel 280 The Sunset Reservoir Solar Project completed in 2010 installed 24 000 solar panels on the roof of the reservoir The 5 megawatt plant more than tripled the city s 2 megawatt solar generation capacity when it opened in December 2010 281 282 LGBT edit Main article LGBT culture in San Francisco nbsp San Francisco Pride is one of the oldest and largest LGBT pride events in the world San Francisco has long had an LGBT friendly history It was home to the first lesbian rights organization in the United States Daughters of Bilitis the first openly gay person to run for public office in the United States Jose Sarria the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California Harvey Milk the first openly lesbian judge appointed in the U S Mary C Morgan and the first transgender police commissioner Theresa Sparks The city s large gay population has created and sustained a politically and culturally active community over many decades developing a powerful presence in San Francisco s civic life citation needed Survey data released in 2015 by Gallup places the proportion of LGBT adults in the San Francisco metro area at 6 2 which is the highest proportion of the 50 most populous metropolitan areas as measured by the polling organization 283 nbsp The gay pride flag was originally developed in San Francisco One of the most popular destinations for gay tourists internationally the city hosts San Francisco Pride one of the largest and oldest pride parades San Francisco Pride events have been held continuously since 1972 The events are themed and a new theme is created each year 284 In 2013 over 1 5 million people attended around 500 000 more than the previous year 285 Pink Saturday is an annual street party held the Saturday before the pride parade which coincides with the Dyke march The Folsom Street Fair FSF is an annual BDSM and leather subculture street fair that is held in September endcapping San Francisco s Leather Pride Week 286 It started in 1984 and is California s third largest single day outdoor spectator event and the world s largest leather event and showcase for BDSM products and culture 287 Performing arts edit See also List of theatres in San Francisco nbsp War Memorial Opera House part of the S F War Memorial amp Performing Arts Center one of the largest performing arts centers in the U S nbsp Golden Gate Theatre is located in the historic Theatre District San Francisco s War Memorial and Performing Arts Center hosts some of the most enduring performing arts companies in the country The War Memorial Opera House houses the San Francisco Opera the second largest opera company in North America 288 as well as the San Francisco Ballet while the San Francisco Symphony plays in Davies Symphony Hall Opened in 2013 the SFJAZZ Center hosts jazz performances year round 289 The Fillmore is a music venue located in the Western Addition It is the second incarnation of the historic venue that gained fame in the 1960s housing the stage where now famous musicians such as the Grateful Dead Janis Joplin Led Zeppelin and Jefferson Airplane first performed fostering the San Francisco Sound 290 It closed its doors in 1971 with a final performance by Santana and reopened in 1994 with a show by the Smashing Pumpkins 291 San Francisco has a large number of theaters and live performance venues Local theater companies have been noted for risk taking and innovation 292 The Tony Award winning non profit American Conservatory Theater A C T is a member of the national League of Resident Theatres Other local winners of the Regional Theatre Tony Award include the San Francisco Mime Troupe 293 San Francisco theaters frequently host pre Broadway engagements and tryout runs 294 and some original San Francisco productions have later moved to Broadway 295 Museums edit Further information List of museums in San Francisco Bay Area California San Francisco nbsp The California Palace of the Legion of Honor part of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art SFMOMA houses 20th century and contemporary works of art It moved to its current building in the South of Market neighborhood in 1995 and attracted more than 600 000 visitors annually 296 SFMOMA closed for renovation and expansion in 2013 The museum reopened on May 14 2016 with an addition designed by Snohetta that has doubled the museum s size 297 The Palace of the Legion of Honor holds primarily European antiquities and works of art at its Lincoln Park building modeled after its Parisian namesake The de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park features American decorative pieces and anthropological holdings from Africa Oceania and the Americas while Asian art is housed in the Asian Art Museum Opposite the de Young stands the California Academy of Sciences a natural history museum that also hosts the Morrison Planetarium and Steinhart Aquarium Located on Pier 15 on the Embarcadero the Exploratorium is an interactive science museum The Contemporary Jewish Museum is a non collecting institution that hosts a broad array of temporary exhibitions On Nob Hill the Cable Car Museum is a working museum featuring the cable car powerhouse which drives the cables 298 Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts was founded in 1998 and is part of the California College of the Arts 299 Sports editFurther information Sports in the San Francisco Bay Area nbsp Oracle Park home of the SF Giants Major League Baseball s San Francisco Giants have played in San Francisco since moving from New York in 1958 The Giants play at Oracle Park which opened in 2000 300 The Giants won World Series titles in 2010 2012 and in 2014 The Giants have boasted stars such as Willie Mays Willie McCovey and Barry Bonds MLB s career home run leader In 2012 San Francisco was ranked No 1 in a study that examined which U S metro areas have produced the most Major Leaguers since 1920 301 The San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League NFL began playing in 1946 as an All America Football Conference AAFC league charter member moved to the NFL in 1950 and into Candlestick Park in 1971 The team left San Francisco in 2014 moving approximately 50 miles south to Santa Clara and began playing its home games at Levi s Stadium 302 303 The 49ers have won five Super Bowl titles between 1982 and 1995 nbsp The Chase Center home of the Golden State Warriors The NBA s Golden State Warriors have played in the San Francisco Bay Area since moving from Philadelphia in 1962 The Warriors played as the San Francisco Warriors from 1962 to 1971 before being renamed the Golden State Warriors prior to the 1971 1972 season in an attempt to present the team as a representation of the whole state of California which had already adopted The Golden State nickname 304 The Warriors arena Chase Center is located in San Francisco 305 After winning two championships in Philadelphia they have won five championships since moving to the San Francisco Bay Area 306 and made five consecutive NBA Finals from 2015 to 2019 winning three of them They won again in 2022 the franchise s first championship while residing in San Francisco proper At the collegiate level the San Francisco Dons compete in NCAA Division I Bill Russell led the Dons basketball team to NCAA championships in 1955 and 1956 There is also the San Francisco State Gators who compete in NCAA Division II 307 Oracle Park hosted the annual Fight Hunger Bowl college football game from 2002 through 2013 before it moved to Santa Clara There are a handful of lower league soccer clubs in San Francisco playing mostly from April June Club Founded Venue League Tier level El Farolito 1985 Boxer Stadium NPSL 4 San Francisco City FC 2001 Kezar Stadium USL League Two 4 San Francisco Glens SC 1961 Skyline College USL League Two 4 SF Elite Metro 2017 Negoesco Stadium NISA Nation 5 nbsp Bay to Breakers is an annual foot race known for colorful costumes The Bay to Breakers footrace held annually since 1912 is best known for colorful costumes and a celebratory community spirit 308 The San Francisco Marathon attracts more than 21 000 participants 309 The Escape from Alcatraz triathlon has since 1980 attracted 2 000 top professional and amateur triathletes for its annual race 310 The Olympic Club founded in 1860 is the oldest athletic club in the United States Its private golf course has hosted the U S Open on five occasions San Francisco hosted the 2013 America s Cup yacht racing competition 311 With an ideal climate for outdoor activities San Francisco has ample resources and opportunities for amateur and participatory sports and recreation There are more than 200 miles 320 km of bicycle paths lanes and bike routes in the city 312 San Francisco residents have often ranked among the fittest in the country 313 Golden Gate Park has miles of paved and unpaved running trails as well as a golf course and disc golf course Boating sailing windsurfing and kitesurfing are among the popular activities on San Francisco Bay and the city maintains a yacht harbor in the Marina District San Francisco also has had Esports teams such as the Overwatch League s San Francisco Shock Established in 2017 314 they won two back to back championship titles in 2019 and 2020 315 316 Parks and recreation editSee also List of parks in San Francisco nbsp Golden Gate Park is the 3rd most visited city park in the U S after Central Park and the National Mall 317 Several of San Francisco s parks and nearly all of its beaches form part of the regional Golden Gate National Recreation Area one of the most visited units of the National Park system in the United States with over 13 million visitors a year Among the GGNRA s attractions within the city are Ocean Beach which runs along the Pacific Ocean shoreline and is frequented by a vibrant surfing community and Baker Beach which is located in a cove west of the Golden Gate Bridge as well as the California Academy of Sciences a research institute and natural history museum The Presidio of San Francisco is the former 18th century Spanish military base which today is one of the city s largest parks and home to numerous museums and institutions Also within the Presidio is Crissy Field a former airfield that was restored to its natural salt marsh ecosystem The GGNRA also administers Fort Funston Lands End Fort Mason and Alcatraz The National Park Service separately administers the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park a fleet of historic ships and waterfront property around Aquatic Park citation needed nbsp Painted Ladies on Alamo Square nbsp The Cliff House over Ocean Beach There are more than 220 parks maintained by the San Francisco Recreation amp Parks Department 318 The largest and best known city park is Golden Gate Park 319 which stretches from the center of the city west to the Pacific Ocean Once covered in native grasses and sand dunes the park was conceived in the 1860s and was created by the extensive planting of thousands of non native trees and plants The large park is rich with cultural and natural attractions such as the Conservatory of Flowers Japanese Tea Garden and San Francisco Botanical Garden citation needed Lake Merced is a fresh water lake surrounded by parkland citation needed and near the San Francisco Zoo a city owned park that houses more than 250 animal species many of which are endangered 320 The only park managed by the California State Park system located principally in San Francisco Candlestick Point was the state s first urban recreation area 321 Most of San Francisco s islands are protected as parkland or nature reserves Alcatraz Island operated by the National Park Service is open to the public The Farallon Islands are protected wildlife refuges The Seal Rocks are protected as part of Golden Gate National Recreation Area Red Rock Island is the only privately owned island in San Francisco Bay but is uninhabited Yerba Buena Island is largely utilized by the military San Francisco is the first city in the U S to have a park within a 10 Minute Walk of every resident 322 323 It also ranks fifth in the U S for park access and quality in the 2018 ParkScore ranking of the top 100 park systems across the United States according to the nonprofit Trust for Public Land 324 Government editMain articles Government of San Francisco Politics of San Francisco and Mayors of San Francisco See also San Francisco City Hall nbsp San Francisco City Hall built 1913 16 and designed by Arthur Brown Jr The mayor is also the county executive and the county Board of Supervisors acts as the city council The government of San Francisco is a charter city and is constituted of two co equal branches the executive branch is headed by the mayor and includes other citywide elected and appointed officials as well as the civil service the 11 member Board of Supervisors the legislative branch is headed by a president and is responsible for passing laws and budgets though San Franciscans also make use of direct ballot initiatives to pass legislation 325 Because of its unique city county status the local government is able to exercise jurisdiction over certain property outside city limits San Francisco International Airport though located in San Mateo County is owned and operated by the City and County of San Francisco San Francisco s largest jail complex County Jail No 5 is located in San Mateo County in an unincorporated area adjacent to San Bruno San Francisco was also granted a perpetual leasehold over the Hetch Hetchy Valley and watershed in Yosemite National Park by the Raker Act in 1913 326 nbsp The Supreme Court of California is based in the Earl Warren Building The members of the Board of Supervisors are elected as representatives of specific districts within the city 327 Upon the death or resignation of the mayor the President of the Board of Supervisors becomes acting mayor until the full Board elects an interim replacement for the remainder of the term In 1978 Dianne Feinstein assumed the office following the assassination of George Moscone and was later selected by the board to finish the term citation needed In 2011 Ed Lee was selected by the board to finish the term of Gavin Newsom who resigned to take office as Lieutenant Governor of California 328 Lee who won two elections to remain mayor was temporarily replaced by San Francisco Board of Supervisors President London Breed after he died on December 12 2017 Supervisor Mark Farrell was appointed by the Board of Supervisors to finish Lee s term on January 23 2018 Most local offices in San Francisco are elected using ranked choice voting 329 nbsp San Francisco Federal Building San Francisco serves as the regional hub for many arms of the federal bureaucracy including the U S Court of Appeals the Federal Reserve Bank and the U S Mint Until decommissioning in the early 1990s the city had major military installations at the Presidio Treasure Island and Hunters Point a legacy still reflected in the annual celebration of Fleet Week The State of California uses San Francisco as the home of the state supreme court and other state agencies Foreign governments maintain more than seventy consulates in San Francisco 330 The municipal budget for fiscal year 2015 16 was 8 99 billion 331 and is one of the largest city budgets in the United States 332 The City of San Francisco spends more per resident than any city other than Washington D C over 10 000 in FY 2015 2016 332 The city employs around 27 000 workers 333 nbsp The historic Browning Courthouse In the California State Senate San Francisco is in the 11th Senate District represented by Democrat Scott Wiener In the California State Assembly it is split between the 17th Assembly District represented by Democrat Matt Haney and the 19th Assembly District represented by Democrat Phil Ting 334 In the United States House of Representatives San Francisco is split between two congressional districts Most of the city is in the 11th District represented by Nancy Pelosi D San Francisco A sliver in the southwest is part of the 15th District represented by Kevin Mullin D South San Francisco 335 Pelosi served as the House Speaker from January 3 2019 to January 3 2023 a post she also held from 2007 through 2011 She has also held the post of House Minority Leader from 2003 to 2007 and 2011 to 2019 Education editColleges and universities edit See also List of colleges and universities in San Francisco nbsp University of San Francisco The University of California San Francisco is the sole campus of the University of California system entirely dedicated to graduate education in health and biomedical sciences It is ranked among the top five medical schools in the United States 336 and operates the UCSF Medical Center which ranks as the number one hospital in California and the number 5 in the country 337 UCSF is a major local employer second in size only to the city and county government 338 339 340 A 43 acre 17 ha Mission Bay campus was opened in 2003 complementing its original facility in Parnassus Heights It contains research space and facilities to foster biotechnology and life sciences entrepreneurship and will double the size of UCSF s research enterprise 341 All in all UCSF operates more than 20 facilities across San Francisco 342 The University of California College of the Law San Francisco founded in Civic Center in 1878 is the oldest law school in California and claims more judges on the state bench than any other institution 343 San Francisco s two University of California institutions have recently formed an official affiliation in the UCSF UC Law SF Consortium on Law Science amp Health Policy 344 nbsp San Francisco Art Institute is the oldest art school in the Western U S San Francisco State University is part of the California State University system and is located near Lake Merced 345 The school has approximately 30 000 students and awards undergraduate master s and doctoral degrees in more than 100 disciplines 345 The City College of San Francisco with its main facility in the Ingleside district is one of the largest two year community colleges in the country It has an enrollment of about 100 000 students and offers an extensive continuing education program 346 nbsp University of California College of the Law Founded in 1855 the University of San Francisco a private Jesuit university located on Lone Mountain is the oldest institution of higher education in San Francisco and one of the oldest universities established west of the Mississippi River 347 Golden Gate University is a private nonsectarian coeducational university formed in 1901 and located in the Financial District With an enrollment of 13 000 students the Academy of Art University is the largest institute of art and design in the nation 348 Founded in 1871 the San Francisco Art Institute is the oldest art school west of the Mississippi 349 The California College of the Arts located north of Potrero Hill has programs in architecture fine arts design and writing 350 The San Francisco Conservatory of Music the only independent music school on the West Coast grants degrees in orchestral instruments chamber music composition and conducting The California Culinary Academy associated with the Le Cordon Bleu program offers programs in the culinary arts baking and pastry arts and hospitality and restaurant management California Institute of Integral Studies founded in 1968 offers a variety of graduate programs in its Schools of Professional Psychology amp Health and Consciousness and Transformation Primary and secondary schools edit See also San Francisco public grammar schools and List of high schools in California San Francisco County nbsp The San Francisco Unified School District operates 114 schools and is the oldest school district in California Public schools are run by the San Francisco Unified School District which covers the entire city and county 351 as well as the California State Board of Education for some charter schools Lowell High School the oldest public high school in the U S west of the Mississippi 352 and the smaller School of the Arts High School are two of San Francisco s magnet schools at the secondary level Public school students attend schools based on an assignment system rather than neighborhood proximity 353 Just under 30 of the city s school age population attends one of San Francisco s more than 100 private or parochial schools compared to a 10 rate nationwide 354 Nearly 40 of those schools are Catholic schools managed by the Archdiocese of San Francisco 355 San Francisco has nearly 300 preschool programs primarily operated by Head Start San Francisco Unified School District private for profit private non profit and family child care providers 356 All four year old children living in San Francisco are offered universal access to preschool through the Preschool for All program 357 Media editFurther information Media in the San Francisco Bay Area This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp San Francisco Chronicle building The major daily newspaper in San Francisco is the San Francisco Chronicle which is currently Northern California s most widely circulated newspaper 358 The Chronicle is most famous for a former columnist the late Herb Caen whose daily musings attracted critical acclaim and represented the voice of San Francisco The San Francisco Examiner once the cornerstone of William Randolph Hearst s media empire and the home of Ambrose Bierce declined in circulation over the years and now takes the form of a free daily tabloid under new ownership 359 360 Sing Tao Daily claims to be the largest of several Chinese language dailies that serve the Bay Area 361 SF Weekly is the city s alternative weekly newspaper San Francisco and 7x7 are major glossy magazines about San Francisco The national newsmagazine Mother Jones is also based in San Francisco San Francisco is home to online only media publications such as SFist and AsianWeek nbsp The Julia Morgan designed Hearst Building the western headquarters of the Hearst Corporation The San Francisco Bay Area is the sixth largest television market 362 It is the fourth largest radio market after that of New York City Los Angeles and Chicago 363 in the U S All major U S television networks have affiliates serving the region with most of them based in the city CNN MSNBC BBC Russia Today and CCTV America also have regional news bureaus in San Francisco Bloomberg West was launched in 2011 from a studio on the Embarcadero and CNBC broadcasts from One Market Plaza since 2015 ESPN uses the local ABC studio for their broadcasting The regional sports network Comcast SportsNet Bay Area and its sister station Comcast SportsNet California are both located in San Francisco The Pac 12 Network is also based in San Francisco nbsp Sutro Tower is a broadcast tower and local landmark Public broadcasting outlets include both a television station and a radio station both broadcasting under the call letters KQED from a facility near the Potrero Hill neighborhood KQED FM is the most listened to National Public Radio affiliate in the country 364 KUSF is a student run radio station by college students from the University of San Francisco 365 Another local broadcaster KPOO is an independent African American owned and operated noncommercial radio station established in 1971 366 CNET founded 1994 and Salon com 1995 are based in San Francisco Sutro Tower is an important broadcast tower located between Mount Sutro and the Twin Peaks built in 1973 for KTVU KRON and KPIX Infrastructure editTransportation edit See also Transportation in the San Francisco Bay Area Public transportation edit See also San Francisco Municipal Railway nbsp A San Francisco cable car with Alcatraz seen behind Transit is the most used form of transportation every day in San Francisco Every weekday more than 560 000 people travel on Muni s 69 bus routes and more than 140 000 customers ride the Muni Metro light rail system 367 32 of San Francisco residents use public transportation for their daily commute to work ranking it fourth in the United States and first on the West Coast 368 The San Francisco Municipal Railway primarily known as Muni is the primary public transit system of San Francisco As of 2023 Muni is the eighth largest transit system in the United States 369 The system operates a combined light rail and subway system the Muni Metro as well as large bus and trolley coach networks 370 Additionally it runs a historic streetcar line which runs on Market Street from Castro Street to Fisherman s Wharf 370 It also operates the famous cable cars 370 which have been designated as a National Historic Landmark and are a major tourist attraction 371 Bay Area Rapid Transit BART a regional Rapid Transit system connects San Francisco with the East Bay and San Jose through the underwater Transbay Tube The line which contains all except the Orange Line runs under Market Street to Civic Center where it turns south to the Mission District the southern part of the city and through northern San Mateo County to the San Francisco International Airport and Millbrae 370 nbsp Muni Metro run by SF Muni Another commuter rail system Caltrain runs from San Francisco along the San Francisco Peninsula to San Jose 370 Historically trains operated by Southern Pacific Lines ran from San Francisco to Los Angeles via Palo Alto and San Jose Amtrak Thruway runs a shuttle bus from three locations in San Francisco to its station across the bay in Emeryville 372 Additionally BART offers connections to San Francisco from Amtrak s stations in Emeryville Oakland and Richmond and Caltrain offers connections in San Jose and Santa Clara Thruway service also runs south to San Luis Obispo with connection to the Pacific Surfliner San Francisco was an early adopter of carsharing in America The non profit City CarShare opened in 2001 373 and Zipcar closely followed 374 nbsp Golden Gate Ferries connect the city to North Bay communities while San Francisco Bay Ferry connects the city to both the North and East Bay San Francisco Bay Ferry operates from the Ferry Building and Pier 39 to points in Oakland Alameda Bay Farm Island South San Francisco Richmond and north to Vallejo in Solano County 375 The Golden Gate Ferry is the other ferry operator with service between San Francisco and Marin County 376 SolTrans runs supplemental bus service between the Ferry Building and Vallejo To accommodate the large amount of San Francisco citizens who commute to the Silicon Valley daily employers like Genentech Google and Apple have begun to provide private bus transportation for their employees from San Francisco locations These buses have quickly become a heated topic of debate within the city as protesters claim they block bus lanes and delay public buses 377 Freeways and roads edit Further information List of streets in San Francisco nbsp The Bay Bridge connects the city to Oakland and the East Bay In 2014 only 41 3 of residents commuted by driving alone or carpooling in private vehicles in San Francisco a decline from 48 6 in 2000 378 There are 1 088 miles of streets in San Francisco with 946 miles of these streets being surface streets and 59 miles of freeways 378 Due to its unique geography and the freeway revolts of the late 1950s 379 Interstate 80 begins at the approach to the Bay Bridge and is the only direct automobile link to the East Bay U S Route 101 connects to the western terminus of Interstate 80 and provides access to the south of the city along San Francisco Bay toward Silicon Valley Northward the routing for U S 101 uses arterial streets to connect to the Golden Gate Bridge the only direct automobile link to Marin County and the North Bay As part of the retrofitting of the Golden Gate Bridge and installation of a suicide barrier starting in 2019 the railings on the west side of the pedestrian walkway were replaced with thinner more flexible slats in order to improve the bridge s aerodynamic tolerance of high wind to 100 mph 161 km h Starting in June 2020 reports were received of a loud hum produced by the new railing slats heard across the city when a strong west wind was blowing 380 nbsp Lombard Street in Russian Hill is famed as the most crooked street in the world State Route 1 also enters San Francisco from the north via the Golden Gate Bridge and bisects the city as the 19th Avenue arterial thoroughfare joining with Interstate 280 at the city s southern border Interstate 280 continues south from San Francisco and also turns to the east along the southern edge of the city terminating just south of the Bay Bridge in the South of Market neighborhood After the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake city leaders demolished the Embarcadero Freeway and a portion of the Central Freeway converting them into street level boulevards 379 State Route 35 enters the city from the south as Skyline Boulevard and terminates at its intersection with Highway 1 State Route 82 enters San Francisco from the south as Mission Street and terminates shortly thereafter at its junction with 280 The western terminus of the historic transcontinental Lincoln Highway the first road across America is in San Francisco s Lincoln Park Vision Zero edit In 2014 San Francisco committed to Vision Zero with the goal of ending all traffic fatalities caused by motor vehicles within the city by 2024 381 San Francisco s Vision Zero plan calls for investing in engineering enforcement and education and focusing on dangerous intersections In 2013 25 people were killed by car and truck drivers while walking and biking in the city and 9 car drivers and passengers were killed in collisions In 2019 42 people were killed in traffic collisions in San Francisco 382 Airports edit Main article San Francisco International Airport nbsp San Francisco International Airport one of the busiest airports in the world Though located 13 miles 21 km south of downtown in unincorporated San Mateo County San Francisco International Airport SFO is under the jurisdiction of the City and County of San Francisco SFO is a hub for United Airlines 383 and Alaska Airlines 384 SFO is a major international gateway to Asia and Europe with the largest international terminal in North America 385 In 2011 SFO was the eighth busiest airport in the U S and the 22nd busiest in the world handling over 40 9 million passengers 386 Located in the South Bay the San Jose International Airport SJC is the second busiest airport in the Bay Area followed by San Francisco Bay Oakland International Airport which is a popular low cost alternative to SFO Geographically San Francisco Bay Oakland Airport is approximately the same distance from downtown San Francisco as SFO but due to its location across San Francisco Bay it is greater driving distance from San Francisco citation needed Cycling and walking edit Main article Cycling in San Francisco nbsp Bay Wheels station on Market St Cycling is a popular mode of transportation in San Francisco with 75 000 residents commuting by bicycle each day 387 In recent years the city has installed better cycling infrastructure such as protected bike lanes and parking racks 388 Bay Wheels previously named Bay Area Bike Share at inception launched in August 2013 with 700 bikes in downtown San Francisco selected cities in the East Bay and San Jose The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency and Bay Area Air Quality Management District are responsible for the operation with management provided by Motivate 389 A major expansion started in 2017 along with a rebranding as Ford GoBike the company received its current name in 2019 390 Pedestrian traffic is also widespread In 2015 Walk Score ranked San Francisco the second most walkable city in the United States 391 392 393 San Francisco has significantly higher rates of pedestrian and bicyclist traffic deaths than the United States on average In 2013 21 pedestrians were killed in vehicle collisions the highest since 2001 394 which is 2 5 deaths per 100 000 population 70 higher than the national average of 1 5 395 nbsp San Francisco cycling event Cycling is becoming increasingly popular in the city The 2010 Municipal Transportation Agency MTA annual bicycle count showed the number of cyclists at 33 locations had increased 58 from the 2006 baseline counts 396 In 2008 the MTA estimated that about 128 000 trips were made by bicycle each day in the city or 6 of total trips 397 As of 2019 update 2 6 of the city s streets have protected bike lanes with 28 miles of protected bike lanes in the city 367 Since 2006 San Francisco has received a Bicycle Friendly Community status of Gold from the League of American Bicyclists 398 In 2022 a measure on the ballot passed to protect JFK drive in Golden Gate Park as a pedestrian and biking space with 59 of voters in favor 399 Public safety edit See also History of the San Francisco Police Department The San Francisco Police Department was founded in 1849 400 The portions of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area located within the city including the Presidio and Ocean Beach are patrolled by the United States Park Police The San Francisco Fire Department provides both fire suppression and emergency medical services to the city 401 Sister cities editMain articles Sister cities of San Francisco California and List of diplomatic missions in San Francisco San Francisco participates in the Sister Cities program 402 A total of 41 consulates general and 23 honorary consulates have offices in the San Francisco Bay Area 403 In January 1980 Mayor Dianne Feinstein signed a sister cities agreement with Shanghai during a visit to China 404 Notable residents editMain article List of people from San FranciscoSee also edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp Cities portal nbsp California portal San Francisco Bay Area List of cities and towns in California List of counties in California List of people from San Francisco Northern California megaregion Ships lost in San Francisco USS San Francisco 3 shipsNotes edit The land grant was near a boat anchorage around what is today Portsmouth Square Station currently at the United States Mint building 140 self published source The coordinates of the station are 37 46 14 N 122 25 37 W 37 7706 N 122 4269 W 37 7706 122 4269 Precipitation high temperature low temperature snow and snow depth records date from October 1 1849 June 1 1874 January 1 1875 January 1 1876 and January 1 1922 respectively Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Those not born in the 50 states or D C excluding California Nevada Utah Arizona New Mexico and Texas before 1850 References edit a b Garling Caleb June 30 2013 Don t Call It Frisco The History of San Francisco s Nicknames The Bold Italic Retrieved June 18 2016 San Francisco s Official Songs Museum of San Francisco Retrieved June 17 2020 Be it resolved The official song of the City and County of San Francisco is and shall remain San Francisco Be it further resolved that henceforth I Left My Heart in San Francisco shall be the official ballad San Francisco Administrative Code Steven Short KALW Public Media May 10 2021 San Francisco s Two Official Songs Or The Day Tony Bennett Hid In His Hotel 1 a b c O Day Edward F October 1926 The Founding of San Francisco San Francisco Water Spring Valley Water Authority Archived from the original on July 27 2010 Retrieved February 14 2009 San Francisco Government SFGov org Archived from the original on March 16 2012 Retrieved March 8 2012 San Francisco was incorporated as a City on April 15th 1850 by act of the Legislature Office of the Mayor Home City amp County of San Francisco Archived from the original on October 24 2009 Retrieved July 11 2018 Statewide Database UC Regents Archived from the original on February 1 2015 Retrieved November 21 2014 California s 11th Congressional District GovTrack Retrieved January 8 2023 California s 15th Congressional District GovTrack Retrieved January 8 2023 Board of Supervisors City and County of San Francisco Retrieved January 28 2017 Communities of Interest City California Citizens Redistricting Commission Archived from the original on October 23 2015 Retrieved September 23 2014 Members Assembly California State Assembly Retrieved September 23 2014 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 1 2020 San Francisco Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior a b Elevations and Distances in the United States US Geological Survey April 29 2005 Archived from the original on November 9 2013 Retrieved October 29 2014 a b c QuickFacts San Francisco city California www census gov United States Census Bureau Retrieved March 14 2024 List of 2020 Census Urban Areas census gov United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 8 2023 Personal Income by County Metro and Other Areas United States Bureau of Economic Analysis Retrieved December 8 2022 Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas Population Totals and Components of Change 2020 2021 United States Census Bureau February 24 2022 Retrieved August 13 2022 Massara Graph February 20 2018 If you re from SF you re a San Franciscan But what if you re from Fremont Berkeley Livermore SFGATE San Francisco Retrieved July 29 2023 ZIP Codes for City of San Francisco CA 2010 United States census 2010 Archived from the original on October 30 2020 Retrieved March 14 2021 via Zip Codes com NPA City Report North American Numbering Plan Administration Archived from the original on November 4 2014 Retrieved November 5 2014 Gross Domestic Product by County and Metropolitan Area 2022 PDF www bea gov Bureau of Economic Analysis ˌ s ae n f r e n ˈ s ɪ s k oʊ SAN fren SISS koh Spanish for Saint Francis QuickFacts San Francisco County California United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 17 2023 GCT PH1 Population Housing Units Area and Density 2010 County Census Tract 2010 United States Census Summary File 1 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved February 8 2018 a b IPUMS NHGIS National Historical Geographic Information System www nhgis org Retrieved December 8 2023 Coy Owen Cochran 1919 Guide to the County Archives of California Sacramento California California Historical Survey Commission p 409 a b Montagne Renee April 11 2006 Remembering the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake People amp Places NPR Retrieved June 13 2008 a b Port of Embarkation Essay World War II in the San Francisco Bay Area A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary US Department of the Interior August 28 2007 Archived from the original on June 24 2011 Retrieved June 22 2011 Charter of the United Nations United Nations Un org August 10 2015 Retrieved December 29 2016 History of the United Nations Un org United Nations August 21 2015 Archived from the original on December 12 2016 Retrieved December 29 2016 Schlesinger Stephen June 19 2015 San Francisco the birthplace of the United Nations San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved December 29 2016 Top 200 Science cities Nature Index Retrieved August 17 2019 The Global Creative Economy Is Big Business Retrieved August 17 2019 2022 Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report Regional Data GDP and Personal Income apps bea gov Retrieved June 18 2022 Metropolitan areas stats oecd org Retrieved September 17 2022 U S Bureau of Labor Statistics January 1 1947 Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers All Items in U S City Average FRED Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Retrieved June 18 2022 World Economic Outlook Database April 2022 IMF Retrieved June 18 2022 a b Gross Domestic Product by County 2022 U S Bureau of Economic Analysis BEA www bea gov Retrieved December 8 2023 The Global Financial Centres Index 34 www longfinance net Retrieved December 8 2023 America s 10 most visited cities World Atlas November 14 2023 San Francisco Travel Association Announces 2022 Results and 2023 Forecast Press release San Francisco Travel March 21 2023 Retrieved December 7 2023 Top U S Destinations for International Visitors The Hotel Price Index Archived from the original on March 27 2014 Retrieved April 12 2014 Leins Casey April 3 2019 The 10 Best Cities for Public Transportation USNews Retrieved February 7 2023 Direct flights from San Francisco SFO FlightConnections www flightconnections com Retrieved February 7 2023 Don t Call It Frisco The History of San Francisco s Nicknames The Bold Italic December 20 2019 Retrieved February 17 2020 Gilson Dave Why San Francisco s Frisco debate will never ever die Mother Jones Retrieved February 17 2020 Brinklow Adam January 26 2018 Is it ever okay to use San Fran Curbed SF Retrieved February 17 2020 Stewart Suzanne B November 2003 Archaeological Research Issues for the Point Reyes National Seashore Golden Gate National Recreation Area PDF Sonoma State University Anthropological Studies Center Retrieved June 12 2008 Visitors San Francisco Historical Information City and County of San Francisco n d Archived from the original on March 1 2006 Retrieved June 10 2008 Billiter Bill January 1 1985 3 000 Year Old Connection Claimed Siberia Tie to California Tribes Cited Los Angeles Times Retrieved September 25 2023 Indigenous Peoples of San Mateo County San Mateo County Office of Education Retrieved January 18 2024 The Association of Ramaytush Ohlone The Association of Ramaytush Ohlone Retrieved January 18 2024 The Ramaytush Ohlone Lessons on stewardship from the ancestral stewards of the Peninsula Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy December 4 2018 Retrieved January 18 2024 Raup H F The Delayed Discovery of San Francisco Bay California Historical Society Quarterly vol 27 no 4 1948 p 293 JSTOR https www jstor org stable 3816007 Accessed November 12 2020 Cleary Brother Guire January 31 2003 Mission Dolores Links San Francisco with its 18th Century Roots Founded as La Mission San Francisco De Asis by Franciscans it survived earthquake and fire Catholic San Francisco Archived from the original on February 5 2007 Retrieved March 23 2007 a b Kamiya Gary August 23 2013 Juana Briones San Francisco s founding mother SFGATE a b c From 1820 to the Gold Rush at San Francisco Museum org accessed 2022 06 03 Cf Richard Henry Dana Jr Two Years before the Mast 1840 The Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco July 16 2004 From the 1820s to the Gold Rush The Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco Archived from the original on October 22 2009 Retrieved June 13 2008 san francisco history san francisco census 1842 SFgenealogy www sfgenealogy org Retrieved June 18 2022 Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 Sourdough bread was a staple of western explorers and miners of the 19th century It became an iconic symbol of San Francisco and is still a staple of city life today Tamony Peter October 1973 Sourdough and French Bread Western Folklore 32 4 265 270 doi 10 2307 1498306 JSTOR 1498306 San Francisco s First Brick Building The Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco July 16 2004 Retrieved June 13 2008 Richards Rand 1992 Historic San Francisco A Concise History and Guide Heritage House ISBN 978 1 879367 00 5 OCLC 214330849 Harris Ron November 14 2005 Crews Unearth Shipwreck on San Francisco Condo Project Associated Press Retrieved September 4 2006 Filion Ron S Buried Ships SFgenealogy Retrieved April 19 2016 Report of Committee on Counties January 4 1850 revised to 27 counties on February 18 1850 Coy Ph D Owen C 1923 California County Boundaries Berkeley California Historical Survey Commission pp 1 2 Statutes of California and Digests of Measures J Winchester 1856 p 145 Mathews Joe April 16 2023 Don t bank on California especially when banks are involved San Francisco Chronicle Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 31 33 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 The miners came in forty nine The whores in fifty one And when they got together They produced the native son Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 237 238 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 Construction of the Pacific Railroad was partially albeit reluctantly funded by the City and County of San Francisco Pacific Railroad Bond issue under the provisions of An Act to Authorize the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco to take and subscribe One Million Dollars to the Capital Stock of the Western Pacific Rail Road Company and the Central Pacific Rail Road Company of California and to provide for the payment of the same and other matters relating thereto approved on April 22 1863 as amended by 5 of the Compromise Act of 1864 approved on April 4 1864 The bond issue was objected to by the Mayor and the Board of Supervisors however and they were not delivered to the WPRR and CPRR until 1865 after Writs of Mandamus ordering such were issued by the Supreme Court of the State of California in 1864 The People of the State of California on the relation of the Central Pacific Railroad Company vs Henry P Coon Mayor Henry M Hale Auditor and Joseph S Paxson Treasurer of the City and County of San Francisco 25 Cal 635 and 1865 The People ex rel The Central Pacific Railroad Company of California vs The Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco and Wilhelm Lowey Clerk 27 Cal 655 IPUMS USA usa ipums org Retrieved June 18 2022 Under Three Flags PDF Golden Gate National Recreation Area Brochures US Department of the Interior November 2004 Retrieved June 22 2011 Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 44 55 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 Kalisch Philip A Summer 1972 The Black Death in Chinatown Plague and Politics in San Francisco 1900 1904 Arizona and the West 14 2 113 136 JSTOR 40168068 PMID 11614219 1906 Earthquake Fire Fighting Golden Gate National Recreation Area US Department of the Interior December 24 2003 Retrieved June 13 2008 Casualties and Damage after the 1906 earthquake Earthquake Hazards Program Northern California US Geological Survey January 25 2008 Retrieved June 13 2008 1906 Earthquake and the Army Golden Gate National Recreation Area US Department of the Interior August 25 2004 Retrieved June 13 2008 Jack London Writes of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and Fire Sfmuseum org May 5 1906 Retrieved June 15 2013 Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 56 62 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 SPUR Our Mission and History Retrieved March 26 2013 O Brien Tricia 2008 San Francisco s Pacific Heights and Presidio Heights San Francisco Arcadia Publishing p 7 ISBN 978 0 7385 5980 3 Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 9 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco M M O Shaughnessy Employed as City Engineer Retrieved March 16 2013 San Francisco Gold Rush Banking 1849 The Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco June 24 2004 Archived from the original on May 9 2008 Retrieved June 13 2008 Treasure Island History timuseum Retrieved August 5 2021 Kamiya Gary August 19 2022 The dark past of San Francisco s Sharp Park San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on August 19 2022 Retrieved June 9 2023 Price John June 2001 A Just Peace The 1951 San Francisco Peace Treaty in Historical Perspective Japan Policy Research Institute Archived from the original on December 7 2020 Retrieved December 8 2020 Fang Eric February 1999 Urban Renewal Revisited A Design Critique SPUR Newsletter San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association Archived from the original on October 11 2009 Retrieved August 3 2009 Rubin Jasper November 1999 The Decline of the Port A look at the transformation of the Port of San Francisco SPUR Newsletter Retrieved January 5 2013 The final insurmountable decline in San Francisco s shipping activity was heralded in 1958 by the departure of the first containerized freighter from San Francisco Bay Terplan Egon June 7 2010 Organizing for Economic Growth A new approach to business attraction and retention in San Francisco SPUR Report Retrieved January 5 2013 During the 1960s and 1970s San Francisco s historic maritime industry relocated to Oakland San Francisco remained a center for business and professional services such as consulting law accounting and finance and also successfully developed its tourism sector which became the leading local industry Willis James Habib Jerry Brittan Jeremy April 19 2004 San Francisco Planning Department Census Data Analysis San Francisco State University Archived from the original PPT on July 18 2011 Retrieved June 13 2008 Minton Torri September 20 1998 Race Through Time San Francisco Chronicle p SC 4 Retrieved September 11 2013 Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 240 242 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 American Experience Summer of Love Film Description Website for American Experience documentary on the Summer of Love PBS March 14 2007 Archived from the original on June 5 2008 Retrieved June 17 2008 Fear in the Streets of San Francisco Time April 29 1974 Archived from the original on December 3 2008 Retrieved August 28 2006 San Francisco History The 1970s and 1980s Gay Rights Destinations San Francisco Frommers com Archived from the original on July 18 2001 Retrieved June 17 2008 Pyramid Facts and Figures Company Profile Transamerica Insurance and Investment Group Retrieved June 13 2008 Wiley Peter Booth 2000 National trust guide San Francisco America s guide for architecture and history travelers New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 95 96 ISBN 978 0 471 19120 9 OCLC 44313415 Fagan Kevin August 4 2006 S F s Homeless Aging on the Street Chronic health problems on the rise as median age nears 50 San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved March 6 2012 The findings support what many social workers have long suspected that there was a big bang homeless population explosion as federal housing programs were slashed and the closing of mental hospitals hit home in the mid 1980s and that this core group constitutes the bulk of the street population Hayes Valley Neighborhood Association Hayes Valley Neighborhood Association Retrieved August 5 2021 Nieves Evelyn November 5 2000 Mission District Fights Case of Dot Com Fever The New York Times Retrieved March 5 2012 Nolte Carl January 2 2008 High rises are a sign of the times in changing San Francisco San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved July 9 2012 Ted Egan April 3 2006 City and County of San Francisco An Overview of San Francisco s Recent Economic Performance PDF Report prepared for Mayor s Office of Economic and Workforce Development ICF Consulting Archived from the original PDF on February 1 2009 Retrieved June 19 2008 Another positive trend for the future is San Francisco s highly entrepreneurial flexible and innovative economy San Francisco s very high reliance on small business and self employment is typical of other dynamic fast growing high technology areas across the country Jim Carlton and Katherine Bindley August 13 2023 Can San Francisco Save Itself From the Doom Loop The Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 5 2023 Elizabeth Weil May 10 2023 Spiraling in San Francisco s Doom Loop Curbed Retrieved November 5 2023 What it s like to live in a city that no longer believes its problems can be fixed J D Morris October 30 2023 London Breed vs the doom loop How will S F s mayor solve her biggest political problem San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 5 2023 Wiley Hannah January 16 2024 All is lost in San Francisco City loyalists take issue with naysayers Data may back them up Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 4 2024 NPGallery Search National Park Service Retrieved April 2 2023 Graham Tom November 7 2004 Peak Experience San Francisco Chronicle Hearst Communications p PK 23 Retrieved June 13 2008 Lee Henry K January 16 1997 Mount Davidson Cross Called Landmark by Panel San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved June 17 2008 Smith Charles April 15 2006 What San Francisco didn t learn from the 06 quake San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved June 30 2008 Selna Robert June 29 2008 S F leaders ignore weak buildings quake risk San Francisco Chronicle p A 1 Retrieved June 30 2008 California Earthquake forecast UCERF3 USGS Factsheet non technical Mar 2015 predicts Earthquake risk for 30 years in California California earthquake forecast Liquefaction Damage in the Marina District during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake PDF California Geological Survey Retrieved June 17, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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