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Encyclopedia > Sunset District

The Sunset District is a neighborhood in the western half of San Francisco, California, USA that is primarily residential and is built along a grid pattern. It was one of the last areas of San Francisco to be developed, and most of its homes and buildings date from the 1920s through the 1950s, with the fastest rate of construction occurring during the 1930s and 1940s (although parts of the Inner Sunset were developed beginning in the 1890s).


Golden Gate Park forms the neighborhood's northern border and the Pacific Ocean (or, more specifically, the long, flat strand of beach known as Ocean Beach) forms its western border. The Sunset District's southern and eastern borders are not as clearly defined, but there is a general consensus that the neighborhood extends no further than Sigmund Stern Grove and Sloat Boulevard in the south and no further east than the Parnassus campus of the University of California, San Francisco and Laguna Honda Hospital. Prior to the residential and commercial development of the Sunset District, the area was covered by sand dunes and was originally referred to by 19th-century San Franciscans as "the Outside Lands."


The Sunset District is in fact often considered to be two separate neighborhoods: the Inner Sunset and the Outer Sunset. The commercial area of the Inner Sunset is centered around Irving Street between 7th and 11th Avenues, and the Outer Sunset is generally considered to begin at 19th Avenue and to extend for approximately 30 blocks to Ocean Beach.


The area is considered to be one of the less fashionable neighborhoods in San Francisco, due to its frequently foggy weather and the prevalence of its mid-20th century single-family housing stock. However, the neighborhood has several assets that belie this reputation, including a low crime rate and the proximity to Ocean Beach and Golden Gate Park. The Church of St. Anne of the Sunset on Judah Street is a striking landmark, and the commercial area along Irving Street is animated and attractive. The steeply hilly area that rises to the south of Irving Street, around Grand View Park and the Golden Gate View Park, contains attractively winding streets sometimes linked by staircases, and many striking and desirable properties with stupendous views over the city and out to the ocean and the Marin headlands. The Muni Metro streetcars provide a fast and convenient link to downtown, with easy connections to BART. Despite the Sunset's less-than-glamorous reputation, the neighborhood's property values have risen along with those in the rest of San Francisco, most spectacularly during the late 1990s.


Approximately half of the Sunset's residents are Asian-American (mostly Chinese-American), a result of a demographic shift that began in the late 1960s and accelerated from the 1980s as Asian immigration to San Francisco increased dramatically and many of the original, almost exclusively white residents of the Sunset moved to outlying suburban areas. A major commercial area of the Sunset District, Irving Street between 19th Avenue and 24th Avenue, is today lined with businesses catering to Asian-Americans, with additional commercial areas filled with Asian grocery stores and restaurants in other parts of the Sunset District as well, such as on Taraval Street west of 19th Avenue.


The strip near the Pacific Ocean has a notable population of surfers who take advantage of the strong waves and currents of Ocean Beach.


The Sunset District and the neighboring Richmond District (on the north side of Golden Gate Park) are often collectively known as The Avenues, because the majority of both neighborhoods are spanned by numbered north-south avenues. The first numbered Avenue is 2nd, starting one block west of Arguello, and increasing incrementally to as high as 48th Avenue in some areas near Ocean Beach. Most of the east-west streets in the Richmond and Sunset Districts are named in ascending alphabetical order in a southward direction. These streets are: Anza, Balboa and Cabrillo in the Richmond District, and Irving, Judah, Kirkham, Lawton, Moraga, Noriega, Ortega, Pacheco, Quintara, Rivera, Santiago, Taraval , Ulloa, Vicente and Wawona in the Sunset.


External links

  • Inner Sunset guided photo tour (http://www.dreamworld.org/sfguide/Neighborhoods/sunsetinner/)
  • Center and Outer Sunset guided photo tour (http://www.dreamworld.org/sfguide/Neighborhoods/sunsetcenterandouter/)
  • Western Neighborhoods Project (http://outsidelands.org/)
  • Inner Sunst Neighborhood Guide (http://www.sfgate.com/traveler/guide/sf/neighborhoods/innersunset.shtml)
  • Outer Sunset Neighborhood Guide (http://www.sfgate.com/traveler/guide/sf/neighborhoods/outersunset.shtml)
  • Sunset Beacon (http://www.sunsetbeacon.com/), local newspaper

Aerial photo


The Outer Sunset from Grand View Park


  Results from FactBites:
 
Sunset District (San Francisco) - definition of Sunset District (San Francisco) in Encyclopedia (705 words)
The Sunset District is a neighborhood in the western half of San Francisco, California, USA that is primarily residential and is built along a grid pattern.
The Sunset District's southern and eastern borders are not as clearly defined, but there is a general consensus that the neighborhood extends no further than Sigmund Stern Grove and Sloat Boulevard in the south and no further east than the Parnassus campus of the University of California, San Francisco and Laguna Honda Hospital.
Approximately half of the Sunset's residents are Asian-American (mostly Chinese-American), a result of a demographic shift that began in the late 1960s and accelerated from the 1980s as Asian immigration to San Francisco increased dramatically and many of the original, almost exclusively white residents of the Sunset moved to outlying suburban areas.
Encyclopedia of San Francisco (2254 words)
San Francisco's "Sunset District" is bordered on the north by Lincoln Way, on the west by the Great Highway, on the south by Sloat Boulevard, and on the east by a vague boundary going south from Arguello, Golden Gate Heights, the hill above Kezar Stadium, Golden Gate Heights, and 15th Avenue.
Sunset streets running east to west were originally named for the letters of the alphabet, starting in the Richmond District with A (later Anza) Street and ending with the Sunset's X (later changed to Yorba-for Y) Street.
Building in the Sunset began primarily in the eastern section, which was more accessible from the city center, and the outer Sunset, which people could reach from the south (and also provided "beachfront homes.") The Central Ocean Toll Road appears on early maps.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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