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0–9. 44 Montgomery; 45 Fremont Street; 50 Beale Street; 50 California Street; 88 Kearny Street; 100 First Plaza; 100 Montgomery Street; 100 Pine Center; 101 California Street
A historic bar located at 2301 Folsom Street in San Francisco's Mission District neighborhood. [20] Built in 1902 by Charles Scharenberg and opened in 1906, originally named "Old Homestead." [ 21 ] During prohibition (1920–1933) it served lunch foods, and secretly functioned as a speakeasy and brothel . [ 22 ]
According to TRI Commercial, the traditional Financial District provides approximately 30 million square feet (2,800,000 m 2) of office space, and the South Financial District offers about 28 million square feet (2,600,000 m 2). [21] In the 2020s, the COVID-19 pandemic has stimulated an exodus of business from the downtown core of San Francisco ...
Highlighted: Hyatt Regency at left and four towers. Not shown: Le Méridien hotel, located behind the other buildings, toward the right of the rightmost highlighted tower. Embarcadero Center is a commercial complex of four office towers, two hotels, and a shopping center located in San Francisco, California. An outdoor ice skating rink opens ...
The Hilton San Francisco Financial District (originally the Holiday Inn Financial District but often referred to as the Holiday Inn Chinatown) is a skyscraper hotel located east across Kearny Street from Portsmouth Square on the border between the Financial District and Chinatown neighborhoods of San Francisco, California.
345 California Center is a 48-story office tower in the financial district of San Francisco, California. Completed in 1986, the 211.8 m (695 ft) tower is the fifth tallest in the city after the Salesforce Tower, Transamerica Pyramid, 181 Fremont, and 555 California Street if the spires are included. It was originally proposed to be 30 m (98 ft ...
The Park Hyatt San Francisco opened in 1988. HEI Hotels & Resorts bought the hotel from SHC Park San Francisco, a subsidiary of Strategic Hotel Capital, on May 9, 2006, and rebranded it as Le Méridien San Francisco the following day, under franchise from Starwood. [3] [4] In 2010, Chesapeake Lodging Trust bought the hotel from HEI for $143 ...
During the early 20th century, "running north from Market Street to the Barbary Coast, Kearny Street was an avenue of honky-tonks and saloons frequented by racetrack tipsters and other shady professionals. On election nights it was the scene of torch-light parades and brass bands", as summarized in the 1940 WPA guide to San Francisco. [6]