Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Recreational Resources



Chapter 11




What are the City’s recreational resources?

Although San Francisco is 7miles x 7 miles, there is an amazing amount of things to do. Because it is a walking city, and transportation is plentiful and constant, it is easy to get around. For instance, I live 10 miles away from my job here in Los Angeles. I have taken the bus before and with our MTA it takes 2 hours to get there because of the poor frequency of buses. I have taken the bus, light rail, trolley, or BART from one end of San Francisco to another, and it is anywhere from 30-45 minutes.

According to an article in Outlook Magazine's quality-of-life report , San Francisco ranked #1 nationally in nine categories: arts, health, recreation, transportation, education,climate, economy, safety, and housing. San Francisco ranked first in the arts, second in health and
recreation, and fourth in transportation.

The City contains many National Recreation areas. One of the biggest and best getaways is Golden Gate Park, a National Park. It is a little over 1,000 acres in the middle of the City and is larger than New York’s Central Park. It starts, or ends depending on how you look at it, at the beach and stretches into San Francisco. There are numerous things to see here other than just green grass and trees; there is a botanical garden, the Striping Arboretum; the Japanese Tea Garden, where you can have Japanese tea service in a traditional Japanese wooden patio overlooking the carefully laid out and beautifully manicured garden and pond; the only national AIDS memorial called the AIDS Memorial Grove; two lakes, Stow Lake and Spreckels Lake where you can rent rowboats and where you can race radio controlled boats; it contains two museums, the De Young Art museum and the Academy of Sciences, one of the largest natural history museums in the world which also houses an aquarium and planetarium; Kezar Stadium is also located here, in the southeast corner of the park, the former home of the Oakland Raiders and 49ers–it now host amateur sports, high school football games, and is the home to the San Francisco Dragons, a lacrosse team.

The Golden Gate National Recreation Area is not a continuous location, but there is a collection of areas all over the San Francisco Bay Area. Some of the more popular areas are: Alcatraz, the Presidio, Ocean & Baker Beaches, and Land’s End.

Additional recreational things to do in San Francisco are sight seeing places like China Town, Coit Tower, Lombard Street (the curvy brick street), jumping on one of the public transpirations and seeing where it takes you. For shoppers and real tourism, you can go to the Embarcadero and Fisherman’s Warf where there are loads of stores, seafood restaurants; Giant’s Stadium is located on that side of town.

One of my favorite things to do in San Francisco is eat. There are so many great places to dine. Just like Los Angeles, they have every ethnicity, but it’s all in walking distance or a hop on the bus: Indian, Asian, Little Italy, Russian, American, or British just to name a few.

More about The City




Chapter 9




What kind of urban city is SF and what makes it urban?

San Francisco is the 14th most populated city in the US, and the 4th in CA. Its situation and site one of the most densely populated in the US, with a little over 750,000 people at the tip of the San Francisco Peninsula (37°46´0´´´N 122°26´0´´W). The City is 54 feet above sea level at the edge of the Pacific Ocean to its west, and the peninsula creating a bay to the east, known as the San Francisco Bay. The San Francisco Bay Area which is made up the cities that surround the San Francisco Bay contain at least 7 million people.

There are several smaller islands that are part of the city and sit in the Bay. Most famous of them all is Alcatraz. There are also a set of islands located 27 miles to the west of the City in the Pacific Ocean called the Farallon Islands, which are uninhabited.

San Francisco is a metropolitan area. According to our text, the definition of metropolitan area is “a large-scale functional entity, perhaps containing several urbanized areas, discontinuously built-up but nonetheless operating as an integrated economic whole.” San Francisco is a part of the conurbation known as the San Francisco Bay Area, which is a part of the Cities of Oakland and San Jose, and including the counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Solano, and Sonoma. According to the text, San Francisco ranks 5th in the largest Metropolitan area in the U.S.

Although San Francisco was not fully built up before 1850, it followed a city planning structure like that of New York or Boston, a very pre-1850, East Coast city structure; it is very much a walking city. Yerba Buena was the City’s first name. The first homestead was put up in 1835 and it was built up around the Mission Dolores settlement by the Spaniards in the 1770’s. Yerba Buena started to attract Americans. It was claimed for the U.S. during the Mexican-American War in 1846 and renamed San Francisco. By then, the California Gold Rush brought in many settlers. The City grew in one year from 1,000 to 25,000 people. Because of the gold coming in, there arose a need for banks. San Francisco in its early years was a banking city. And where there is money, there is strong politics, and that too is very evident by their stunning City Hall and, even today, thriving Civic Center.

Although this chapter does bring up ethnic and racial distribution, segregation, and gentrification, I believe that these topics can be better explored in chapters 10 & 13 when talking about neighborhoods.