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  2. Chinatown, San Francisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinatown,_San_Francisco

    Washington Street in Chinatown with Transamerica Pyramid in the background.. Officially, Chinatown is located in downtown San Francisco, covers 24 square blocks, [10] and overlaps five postal ZIP codes (94108, 94133, 94111, 94102, and 94109).

  3. Street art in the San Francisco Bay Area - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_art_in_the_San...

    The San Francisco Bay Area is highly invested in the street art scene because of its prevalence in its community. Areas such as the Mission District of San Francisco have developed a wide public fan base because of its large murals. This area of San Francisco is home to one of the most famous pieces of street art, the Women's Building mural. [2]

  4. Ross Alley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ross_Alley

    The Street of Gamblers (Ross Alley) by Arnold Genthe (1898) Ross Alley was initially built in 1849, adjacent to the house of the pioneer merchant Charles L. Ross, from whom the name is derived. The original name was Stout's Alley , however, for Dr. Arthur Breese Stout, who had purchased Ross's house, which stood near the present-day corner of ...

  5. San Francisco's Chinatown is caught between past and future - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/san-franciscos-chinatown-caught...

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  6. List of streets and alleys in Chinatown, San Francisco

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_streets_and_alleys...

    The following is a list of streets and alleys that are within or pass through San Francisco's Chinatown. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] A plaque map of San Francisco's Chinatown.

  7. Saint Mary's Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Mary's_Square

    Park signage, 2013. Designed in 1957 by Robert Royston the square is a rooftop park located on the top level of a parking garage in San Francisco's Chinatown neighborhood. At the time, rooftop gardens were promoted in the city by real estate developers as a means to maximize buildable areas, and were most often sited on two‐story, above‐ground parking structures. being one of the first ...

  8. Grant Avenue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grant_Avenue

    It runs in a north–south direction starting at Market Street in the heart of downtown and dead-ending past Francisco Street in the North Beach district. It resumes at North Point Street and stretches one block to The Embarcadero and the foot of Pier 39. Grant Avenue is primarily a one-way street; automobile traffic can travel only northbound.

  9. Ping Yuen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ping_Yuen

    In 1893, the San Francisco Call confidently bragged that according to an agent from the United States Department of Labor, there were no slums in the city. Although Chinatown was mentioned as a notable exception, the "unsavory, unsightly quarter" was thought to be "rapidly growing smaller and may finally reach the vanishing point" as immigration had been throttled by the Chinese Exclusion Act ...