Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - (Page 65) coastaltraveler San Francisco By Samantha Gilweit San Francisco would have done well as a Greek city state. The verdant 49-square mile peninsula is devoted to the arts and its three quarter of a million people value a balanced, cosmopolitan lifestyle. It has more restaurants per capita than any other U.S. city. Perhaps H.L. Mencken described San Francisco best when he said, “What fetched me instantly (and thousands of other newcomers with me) was the subtle but unmistakable sense of escape from the United States.” It is an urban refuge for hippies, gays, and other cities’ discontinued street cars. Its Mayoral candidates range from the liberal to the extremely liberal, its summer tourists brave the fog in shorts. Founded by the Spanish in 1776, San Francisco has had its booms and busts, from the Gold Rush to the devastating 1906 earthquake, from the hippie movement and Haight Ashbury to the dot. com era in the 90’s. Despite the recent influx of the upper middle class and dramatic increase in rents, San Francisco is a city of distinct neighborhoods. Experience the sights and smells of Hong Kong in Chinatown, where you can order delicious and cheap dim sum, shop for silk pajamas, and wander the streets eyeing otherworldly curiosities like Chinese medicinal herbs and an astounding array of fish that appear inedible at first glance. Just a few blocks from Chinatown is North Beach, San Francisco’s Little Italy. Here you can bring your copy of Dharma Bums and read while sun bathing at Washington Square Park or sipping a cappuccino at one of many sidewalk cafes. The raucous and tacky Fisherman’s Warf should be seen once and then avoided, unless you want to brave endless throngs of tourists to buy cheap San Francisco souvenirs, board a ferry to Alcatraz, or eat fried shrimp at Bubba Gump’s where it’s always someone’s birthday and the employees never fail to break into a celebratory song. The brick mansions built by silver barons in Pacific Heights have sweeping views of the Golden Gate and East Bay. Here is where the city’s elite reside. Take a steep walk down the Lyon Street Steps towards the Marina or shop at fine boutiques on Fillmore Street. The Mission District is where the majority of the Hispanic and hipster communities reside. Not only can you find a great taqueria on any given street corner in the Mission, but also a group of mop-topped twenty-somethings dressed in thrift store chic arguing about which taqueria is the greatest. SoMa, or South of Market, was originally the warehouse district, but redevelopment in the 70’s and during the dot.com boom have created a vibrant neighborhood full of museums, nightclubs, loft apartments and modern architecture. You know you’ve arrived at the Castro, that fabulous niche of gay culture, when you’ve reached a giant rainbow flag waving high over a neighborhood that’s home to the historic Castro Theatre, shops selling witty T-shirts, and bars with names like “Moby Dick”, “Daddy’s” or “The Men’s Room.” Although each neighborhood has its own flavor, the sum of all the parts creates a friendly, colorful, loud, and unabashedly liberal place that draws over 15 million tourists a year. As Walter Cronkite put it, “Leaving San Francisco is like saying goodbye to an old sweetheart. You want to linger as long as possible. “ Where to Stay The Fairmont 950 Mason St.• 415.772.5000 or www.fairmont. com Chateau Tivoli Bed & Breakfast Inn 1057 Steiner St. • 415.776.5462 or www.chateautivoli.com Hotel Rex 562 Sutter St. • 415.433.4434 or www. jdvhotels.com Where to Eat La Folie 2316 Polk St • 415.776.5577 Bix 56 Gold St. • 415.433.6300 or www.bixrestaurant.com Namu 439 Balboa St. • 415.386.8332 or www.naumubar.com LIMN (furniture) 290 Townsend St • 415.543.5466 or www.limn.com Adolph Gasser Camera 181 2nd St. • 415.495.3852 or www.gassers.com Wilkes Bashford (clothes) 375 Sutter St. • 415.986.4380 or www.wilkesbashford.com spring coastaltraveler 65 Photo by NZ Dave Where to Shop http://www.fairmont.com http://www.dot.com http://www.chateautivoli.com http://www.jdvhotels.com http://www.bixrestaurant.com http://www.naumubar.com http://www.limn.com http://www.gassers.com http://www.wilkesbashford.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 Contents Coastal Connoisseur Coastal Picks Coastal Scenario Coastal Art Coastal Driver Coastal Roadkill Coastal Eco Coastal Hotel Coastal Desert San Diego La Jolla Laguna Beach Malibu Santa Barbara San Luis Obispo Big Sur Carmel Monterey Santa Cruz San Francisco Sausalito Mill Valley Stinson Beach Bolinas Olema Point Reyes Station Fairfax Inverness Marshall, Tomales Sebastopol Petaluma Sonoma Coast Redwood Coast Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 (Page 1) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 (Page 2) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 (Page 3) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 8) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Contents (Page 9) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Connoisseur (Page 10) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Connoisseur (Page 11) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Connoisseur (Page 12) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 13) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 14) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 15) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 16) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 17) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 18) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 19) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 20) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Picks (Page 21) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Scenario (Page 22) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Scenario (Page 23) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 24) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 25) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 26) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Art (Page 27) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 28) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 29) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 30) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 31) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 32) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 33) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 34) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Driver (Page 35) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Roadkill (Page 36) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Roadkill (Page 37) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Roadkill (Page 38) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Roadkill (Page 39) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 40) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Eco (Page 41) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Hotel (Page 42) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Hotel (Page 43) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Hotel (Page 44) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Hotel (Page 45) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 46) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 47) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 48) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 49) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 50) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 51) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 52) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Coastal Desert (Page 53) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - San Diego (Page 54) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - La Jolla (Page 55) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Laguna Beach (Page 56) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Malibu (Page 57) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Santa Barbara (Page 58) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Santa Barbara (Page 59) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - San Luis Obispo (Page 60) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Big Sur (Page 61) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Carmel (Page 62) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Monterey (Page 63) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Santa Cruz (Page 64) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - San Francisco (Page 65) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Sausalito (Page 66) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Sausalito (Page 67) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Mill Valley (Page 68) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Mill Valley (Page 69) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Stinson Beach (Page 70) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Bolinas (Page 71) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Bolinas (Page 72) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Olema (Page 73) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Point Reyes Station (Page 74) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Point Reyes Station (Page 75) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Point Reyes Station (Page 76) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Point Reyes Station (Page 77) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Fairfax (Page 78) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Fairfax (Page 79) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Inverness (Page 80) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Inverness (Page 81) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Marshall, Tomales (Page 82) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Sebastopol (Page 83) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Petaluma (Page 84) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Sonoma Coast (Page 85) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Redwood Coast (Page 86) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Redwood Coast (Page 87) Coastal Traveler - Spring 2008 - Redwood Coast (Page 88)
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