Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts

Sunday, November 30, 2025

San Francisco Housing - Sunset District

Many, many San Francisco houses are attached, one to the other, block by block.  

My son's family lives in the Sunset District which is south of Golden Gate Park and stretches down to the ocean.  As we walk the neighborhood, I'm struck by how these houses were, for the most part, built up against each other.  There are minor cosmetic differences - window shapes particularly - but most have steps up to the front door and a tiny garage.  Many of the steps have been covered over, so they are now inside with an iron gate. And some use color to make their house more distinctive. 

Here are some examples:




A 2013 report by Mary Brown  for the San Francisco Planning Department - SUNSET DISTRICT
"The vast majority of construction activity in the Sunset District occurred between 1925 and 1950. The mid-1920s witnessed the introduction of the form and massing of residential buildings constructed in the neighborhood for the following 25 years: a stucco-clad, single-family house, with integrated garage at the ground story and living spaces above. The houses were tightly packed on 25-foot-wide lots, giving the appearance of small-scale attached row houses. The end date of 1950 was chosen to mark the slowing down of the frenzied construction activity that occurred following the end of World War II and the shift from single-family houses to multi-family complexes and residential towers. Major factors that influenced design and construction of residential tracts during this 25-year period included infrastructure development, such as the construction of streetcar tunnels and graded streets to cross the sand dunes, the mass adoption of automobiles, the Great Depression and resultant federal government intervention to stimulate building and increase home ownership, population shifts associated with the defense industry, and the postwar population boom."
This is just one paragraph from the 115 page report, which includes lots of photos of houses, and descriptions of the different styles and architectural features.  


The missing house below was a meth lab that blew up in February 2023..  The two next to it were badly damaged and many of the houses on the block had windows blown out.  \

Here's what it looked like a couple of days after the explosion.  You can see moe pictures of it here (below the Frank Lloyd Wright houses in Oak Park).







I'd note that this house is not far from Golden Gate Park which has bison in one area.  


Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Subbing In San Francisco- USS Pampanito

The grandkids had contradictory ideas about  where they wanted to go yesterday.  She was more willing, but he adamantly didn't want to go to the Children's Creativity Museum.  

I googled 'San Francisco for kids' and pointed out that we could go visit a submarine.  Immediate mood change.  

So we got the 28 bus and rode it to Fisherman's Wharf.  



The USS Pampanito SS-383 is a WWII Balao Class Fleet Submarine.





There were something like 80 men aboard, and a sign outside said they were gone for long periods of time without a shower.  But on the tour we saw two showers.  One for the crew and one for the officers.  My granddaughter asked about that after the tour.  The lady said that the men who worked in the engine room and got oily and the cooks got to take showers, as well as the officers.  But water had to be rationed.  

Q:  Couldn't they use saltwater?

A:  When they surfaced, and it was safe, the men could just jump into the water.




Sleeping quarters for the crew.  There was one bed for three crew members since two were always on duty.  


















This was the kitchen for the crew!








I saved this image below at higher resolution, but I still don't think you can read it.  So here's a link to a site on How Submarines Work.  It has a better animated version of how it takes on water to dive.



From the lower part of the sign below: 

"The United States submarines and the men who served on them represented less than 1.6% of America's al naval force during WWII, yet was responsible for sinking 55% of Japanese naval and merchant marine flees.  This extraordinary record was nt without cost.  Almost 23% of the submarine force was lost, comprising more than 3.500 men and 52 submarines."

Two subs were lost on October 24, 1944 and another on October 25.  The last one was lost on August 6, 1945 - the day the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, three days before the Japanese surrendered.  


The kids enjoyed the visit to the sub a lot.  And we kept them occupied on and around Fisherman's Wharf for several hours before getting the bus back home.  

A benefit of the 28 bus is that it stops, along the way, at the Golden Gate Bridge visitor center. 



Monday, October 09, 2023

San Francisco Shots

Went for a walk today with the SF grandkids.  Here ae some things we saw along the way.



The Easy Breezy yogurt shop was the kids' destination.  




They were also checking out the hooded with Halloween decorations.  







 [I'd add that my nine year old grandson talked non-stop the whole way (about two hours) about his Minecraft creations.]

Saturday, February 18, 2023

Random Shots San Francisco

 



Prickly pear foot.


Went to the Castro to buy a friend a rainbow flag.


Someone chalked a memorial to their grandfather on the garage door.








One architectural feature I began to notice I've finally got a name for - quoins.  Lots of the San Francisco buildings have them.  They seem to be both structural and decorative.  In the picture they are the lighter color pieces on the corners.  

I first started to notice them (first you see something, but don't consciously register them and then you do) on a bright blue house I put up in a previous post.  I don't usually post the same picture twice, but I think it's appropriate here.  

On this house, because of the starkly contrasting colors, they really stand out.  And while some go around the corners, others seem mainly decorative.  






Look closely for the hummingbird.
















Waiting for the bus.










Cymbidium seem to do alright in San Francisco.  From Orchidweb:

"While these orchids can be cultured successfully indoors, Cymbidium benefit tremendously from growing outdoors between May to early October. In late summer and early fall, night temperatures that fall below 58°F (15°F) initiate the development of flower spikes. Keep in mind, these are not frost-tolerant plants, and should not be exposed to temperatures below 35°F (2°C)"




Other Avenues is a worker owned coop grocery in San Francisco with a small woke book section.  

I ended up buying two bars of soap which caused TSA to pull my roller bag aside and look for the suspicious blocks.  



I'm pretty sure this is an aeonium arboreum.  These plants are very popular in San Francisco.  

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Nearby Houses - Frank Lloyd Wright In Chicago, Blown Up Drug Lab In San Francisco

 I mentioned in the previous post that Oak Park, Illinois was Frank Lloyd Wright's home for a long time.  Then Sunday I discovered there were some of his houses around the corner from my friend's place.  Here are some pictures.  





The first pictures are of the Moore-Dugal House.  Our friends said it was for sale, but that it needed a lot of work.  






And these are some other FLW houses across the street and next door to the first house.





Sunday night we flew from Chicago to San Francisco.  My daughter-in-law is out of town and we're here to help with the grandkids.  Always a delight.  The nasturtiums and sweetpeas my grandson planted when we were here in December are doing well - at least the ones that survived his watering schedule.  My granddaughter has a birthday Thursday.  

Yesterday after school the kids took us a couple of blocks over to see the house that blew up Thursday. 





The house on the left is the neighbor's house.









You can watch a video of the explosion from a neighbor's surveillance camera here as well as learn more details.  




And to end this on a lighter note, here's a house we walked by that looks like it's out of a cartoon.