California Street (San Francisco): Difference between revisions
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== In Popular Culture == |
== In Popular Culture == |
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“Two novels are named for San Francisco’s California Street: California Street by Niven Busch(1959). Busch’s novel documents the rise of a publishing magnate. |
“Two novels are named for San Francisco’s California Street: California Street by [[Niven Busch]] (1959). Busch’s novel documents the rise of a publishing magnate. |
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California Street by Donna Levin |
California Street by Donna Levin [[Donna Levin]] is the story of a psychoanalyst searching for a missing woman. |
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Both novels use “California Street” as a metaphor for the milieu in which the stories unfold. |
Both novels use “California Street” as a metaphor for the milieu in which the stories unfold. |
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Revision as of 00:36, 16 September 2021
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2010) |
![]() View from the top of California Street Looking towards the financial district with the Bay Bridge in the background | |
Length | 5.22 mi (8.40 km) |
---|---|
Location | San Francisco |
Coordinates | 37°47′30″N 122°24′42″W / 37.791761°N 122.411739°W |
East end | Market Street, Main Street, and Drumm Street |
West end | 32nd Avenue |
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e5/California_street_san_francisco.jpg/200px-California_street_san_francisco.jpg)
California Street is a major thoroughfare in San Francisco, California. It is one of the longest streets in San Francisco, and includes a number of important landmarks. It runs in an approximately straight 5.2 mi (8.4 km) east-west line from the Financial District to Lincoln Park in the far Northwest corner of the City.
Description
California Street begins at the intersection of Market Street, Main Street, and Drumm Street in front of the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero Center, one block from the Ferry Building, then travels through Chinatown, over Nob Hill, through Lower Pacific Heights, Laurel Heights, and the Lake District. The street makes a slight bend at 8th Avenue, then parallels the edge of the Presidio of San Francisco through the Richmond District until its dead end terminus just west of 32nd Avenue, at Lincoln Park.
Fifty-four blocks of California Street, from Van Ness Avenue westward to the dead end past 32nd Avenue, comprised the last major leg of the final 1928 alignment of the Lincoln Highway, the first road across America, leading out to the highway's western terminus in Lincoln Park.
The route has four to six lanes for its entire length, and a cable car line on the Eastern portion from Market to Van Ness Avenue.
In Popular Culture
“Two novels are named for San Francisco’s California Street: California Street by Niven Busch (1959). Busch’s novel documents the rise of a publishing magnate. California Street by Donna Levin Donna Levin is the story of a psychoanalyst searching for a missing woman. Both novels use “California Street” as a metaphor for the milieu in which the stories unfold.
Landmarks and points of interest
- Embarcadero Center
- 50 California Street
- 101 California Street
- 150 California Street
- 345 California Center (Loews Regency San Francisco)
- 400 California Street (Bank of California Building)
- 465 California Street (Merchants Exchange Building)
- 555 California Street (Bank of America Center)
- 580 California Street
- 650 California Street (Hartford Building)
- Sing Chong and Sing Fat buildings at Grant and California, in Chinatown
- 600 Stockton (Ritz Carlton hotel)
- 905 California Street (Stanford Court Hotel)
- 800 Powell Street (University Club)
- Fairmont Hotel
- 999 California Street (Mark Hopkins Hotel )
- 1000 California Street (Pacific-Union Club), the former Flood Mansion
- 1075 California Street (Huntington Hotel)
- 1111 California Street (Masonic Auditorium)
- Huntington Park
- Grace Cathedral
- California Pacific Medical Center
See also
External links
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png)