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  2. Visitacion Valley, San Francisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visitacion_Valley,_San...

    Visitacion Valley is a residential, family-oriented, working-class neighborhood. Average incomes and housing price for the area is lower than the citywide average. It is one of the few affordable neighborhoods remaining in San Francisco [7].

  3. List of neighborhoods in San Francisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_neighborhoods_in...

    Bordered by Geneva Avenue to the south, Sawyer Street to the east, Sunnydale Avenue to the north and geographically isolated McLaren Park to the west. Known for its notoriously high crime rate and housing projects on Sunnydale Avenue, also known as "the Swamp" or "the Dale". It is the center of Visitacion Valley's African American community. [49]

  4. Excelsior District, San Francisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excelsior_District,_San...

    The neighborhood extends to its end at the county line. Over the years, as the southern end of San Francisco was developed, the city created Major neighborhoods & Districts within the area, and these were given names that appeared on city maps. These are: Bernal Heights, Ingleside, The Excelsior District, Visitacion Valley & The Bay View District.

  5. Bayview–Hunters Point, San Francisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayview–Hunters_Point...

    Food deserts are areas with a 20 percent or greater poverty rate and where a third of residents live more than a mile from a supermarket, farmers market or local grocery store. In the "grocery gap", researchers from Food Trust found African Americans are 400 percent more likely to live in a community that lacks a full-service supermarket. [56]

  6. John McLaren Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_McLaren_Park

    The Wilde Reservoir Overlook, on the eastern edge of the park at the intersection of Mansell Street and Visitacion Avenue, was completed and opened to the public in 1981. [22] The Wilde Reservoir was used to store tap water for the City of San Francisco, but after its abandonment, was used as a nocturnal dumping ground for trash. [ 30 ]

  7. Art Agnos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_Agnos

    Agnos led HUD's effort to uplift San Francisco's Visitacion Valley, blighted by twin 20-story high-rises supported by HUD and which were unsafe for the residents and the community. Agnos created a partnership with the city, the residents, local community leaders, and HUD that led to the demolishing of Geneva Towers in 1998 and a new resident ...

  8. 10 Safest Places To Live Comfortably in Mexico and How Much ...

    www.aol.com/10-safest-places-live-comfortably...

    With the list of popular places to live and the crime rates for each city, GOBankingRates then scored each crime rate and combined the scores together to compare all the cities with each other.

  9. Joseph Eichler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Eichler

    As a result of soaring land prices in the mid-1960s urban redevelopment projects became popular, and Eichler began building low- and high-rise projects in San Francisco's Western Addition and Visitacion Valley, San Francisco districts, a luxury high-rise, the Summit (a.k.a. the Eichler Summit) on Russian Hill and row houses on Diamond Heights.