You can walk across San Francisco in a day. Here's how. nationalgeographic.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nationalgeographic.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Underwater San Francisco lot raises eyebrows over cheap listing price foxbusiness.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from foxbusiness.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Skip to main content S.F. real estate deal: 50,000 square feet for $75,000. The catch? It s literally underwater FacebookTwitterEmail 2 1of2The development site of Candlestick Point, Friday, June 21, 2019, in San Francisco, Calif.Santiago Mejia/The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 2of2 A file, aerial photo of Candlestick Point, near the spot where a realtor is attempting to sell a 50,000-square-foot lot at a bargain price. The only catch? It’s literally underwater.Pictometry.comShow MoreShow Less An eye-catching San Francisco real estate listing offers an unbelievable deal: a 50,000-square-foot lot with expansive bay views. But there’s a catch: It’s offshore and underwater in San Francisco Bay.
Skip to main content Currently Reading Here s what it s like to spend the night in the Presidio at one of San Francisco s only campgrounds FacebookTwitterEmail 1of18 The Army built Rob Hill Campground in the 1940s just after World War II, and for more than 70 years it was the city’s only campground.Grant Marek/SFGATEShow MoreShow Less 2of18 3of18 4of18 One of the highlights of six miles of hiking was the National Cemetery overlook.Grant Marek/SFGATEShow MoreShow Less 5of18 6of18 8of18 9of18 10of18 A look at one of the many cool old military buildings in the Presidio.Grant Marek/SFGATEShow MoreShow Less
I went to all the parks in the Bayview. Here s what it was like. FacebookTwitterEmail A walker climbs the hill in Bayview Park in San Francisco on March 8, 2021.Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE As soon as I crest the grassy 425-foot peak and take a moment to enjoy the sprawling vista, it hits me. Where is everybody? Sure, it’s a Tuesday, but I somehow have the 44-acre Bayview Park almost entirely to myself on a sunny afternoon. Aside from one woman and her dog, and a few city workers I saw driving to the radio tower, the trails are empty, and the 360-degree view that includes the bay, the downtown skyline, and the Bay Bridge is unobstructed. Birds are chirping loudly, towering eucalyptus trees sway in the breeze and the distant sound of Highway 101 hums in the background.