Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Laurel Village shopping center is located on California between Laurel and Spruce, the California Pacific Medical Center is on California between Arguello and Maple, and a previous UCSF campus (UCSF Laurel Heights, which relocated its operation to the UCSF Mission Bay campus in 2023) is located in the northeastern corner of the neighborhood.
Laurel Heights is a neighborhood to the south of the Presidio and the Presidio Heights neighborhood, the east of the Richmond District, and the west of the Lower Pacific Heights neighborhood. It is bordered by Geary Boulevard or the University of San Francisco campus to the south, Arguello Boulevard to the west, California Street to the north ...
Lone Mountain is a neighborhood and a historic hill in west-central San Francisco, California. It is the present site of the northern half of the University of San Francisco's main campus. It was once the location of the Lone Mountain Cemetery, a complex encompassing the Laurel Hill, Calvary, Masonic and Odd Fellows Cemeteries. [3]
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Pages in category "Neighborhoods in San Francisco" ... Laurel Heights, San Francisco; Lincoln Manor;
The University of California, San Francisco traces its history to Hugh Toland, a South Carolina surgeon who found great success and wealth after moving to San Francisco in 1852. [16] A previous school, the Cooper Medical College of the University of Pacific (founded 1858), entered a period of uncertainty in 1862 when its founder, Elias Samuel ...
Forest Knolls is a neighborhood of San Francisco, located within the Inner Sunset built on the southwestern side of Mount Sutro, near the main UCSF campus. Warren Drive is the southern and western border, Mount Sutro is the northern border and the Midtown Terrace neighborhood is to the east.
San Francisco firm Homework transforms a grand historic house in Pacific Heights into a home brimming with color and life for a young family.
The "Hills" chapter of Gladys Hansen's San Francisco Almanac [4] repeated the list given in Hills of San Francisco and added the then-recently-named Cathedral Hill for a total of 43, but the "Places" chapter [5] listed many additional hills. More recent lists include more hills, some lesser-known, some not on the mainland, and some without names.