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This is a list of foreign diplomatic missions located in the San Francisco Bay Area in the United States.As of November 2024, the area hosts 41 consulates-general from 41 countries (Mexico has two). 38 are located in the city of San Francisco; there is one each in Palo Alto, Burlingame, and San Jose.
Host country Host city Mission Concurrent accreditation Ref. Argentina Buenos Aires: Embassy [1]Consulate-General [1]Bariloche (Río Negro) : Consulate-General [1]Córdoba (Córdoba)
The Embassy of Chile in Washington, D.C. is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of Chile to the United States. It is located at 1732 Massachusetts Avenue, Northwest, Washington, D.C., in the Embassy Row neighborhood. [1] The embassy has been located there since 1973.
Consulate-General Zaib Shaikh 550 South Hope Street, 9/F Downtown Chile: Consulate-General Francisco Javier Leal Lisboa 6100 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 575 Carthay China: Consulate-General: Guo Shaochun 443 Shatto Place Koreatown Croatia: Consulate-General Renee Pea 11766 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1250 Sawtelle Czech Republic: Consulate-General
Many of San Francisco's streets carry names of former residents of Chile: Atherton, Ellis, Lick, Larkin, and others. Chilean women also left their names: Mina and Clementina. Manuel Briseño, an early journalist in the mines was one of the founders of the San Diego Union. Juan Evangelista Reyes was a Sacramento pioneer as were the Luco brothers.
(1846, Santiago de Chile – 1900, Buffalo, New York) December 28, 1896 May 11, 1897: Chilean Minister of Foreign affairs, Cult and Colonization, also accreditedt to Japan. [1] Federico Errázuriz Echaurren: William McKinley: September 1, 1901: Eliodoro Infante: Chargé d'affaires. Aníbal Zañartu: Theodore Roosevelt: March 4, 1902: Joaquin ...
In 2023, TECO San Francisco purchased a brand new seven-story building at 345 4th Street, and it was purchased for $52.8 million. [7] After renovations had completed on 17 October 2024, the office with its consular, economic, education and tourism division were all relocated to the fully owned, brand new building.
Prior to 1979, the Republic of China (Taiwan) was represented in Washington by its embassy, occupying the building now used by Haiti. [2] After the transfer of recognition to the People's Republic of China, the Republic of China was no longer recognized by the United States, and therefore no longer entitled to use the former embassy, with its diplomatic mission replaced by the current Taipei ...