South Park, San Francisco
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For other meanings, see South Park (disambiguation).
South Park is a small neighborhood South of Market in San Francisco, California. It centers on the small, oval-shaped park of the same name, and South Park Street, which encircles the park. The area is bounded by Second, Third, Bryant, and Brannan streets.[1]
The two halves of the South Park Street re-join at both ends of the park, and continue for short, straight stretches before terminating at Second Street on one end and Third Street on the other. This creates a curved line of buildings which gives the street and park an unusual enclosed, urban character. Local businesses and restaurants dot the street, as well as a large number of apartment buildings.
Contents |
[edit] History
The park was originally constructed in 1855 as the center of an exclusive residential community. It was modeled after a square in London, England, as a housing development of seventeen mansions and townhouses.[2] The neighborhood began to lose exclusivity, as rich residents moved to the newer Nob Hill neighborhood in the late 19th century.[2] It suffered further decline after the San Francisco earthquake of 1906, when most of the homes around the Rincon Hill neighborhood were destroyed. The oval park, however, has remained unchanged and is still a central meeting place in the neighborhood.[1]
The area was a center of the dot-com boom of the late 1990s, sometimes described as "ground zero" of the dot com revolution,[3] with many start-up Internet companies based in the area. By late 2001, however, many of these companies had closed their doors. Yet, as of 2006, in an era for the Internet that some have dubbed Web 2.0, South Park has once again become home to many small Web-related companies.[4]
Recently, some neighbors in South Park have expressed opposition to a proposal to put an above-ground stop on the Central Subway at the southwestern end of South Park Street, on Third Street. Final routing of the line has not yet been decided by the Municipal Transportation Agency, but will likely be along Fourth Street, one block farther west.
[edit] South Park companies
[edit] Current
- Adaptive Path, 363 Brannan St., Web consulting[4]
- Caffe Centro, coffeehouse frequented by many technology workers and executives[4]
- Engine Yard, 82 South Park, Web Hosting (Ruby on Rails)
- Fuseproject, product design and branding studio that designed new Mini Cooper, founded by Yves Behar[3][5]
- Hummer Winblad, Venture Capital firm[6]
- Leverage Software, 150 South Park, Social networking software
- Levy Design Partners, 90 South Park, Architecture
- Lumos Labs, 500 3rd St., Brain fitness[4]
- LookSmart, 625 Second St., online advertising
- Loomia, 539 Bryant St., video and audio search
- Mule Design Studio, 300 Brannan St., Web design[4]
- MySpace, 625 Second St., Social Network
- Odeo, 164 South Park, podcasting[4]
- PC World, 501 Second St., magazine[4]
- Podshow, 463 Bryant St., podcasting[4]
- Rubyred Labs, 363 Brannan St., Web applications[4]
- Sfist, regional version of Gothamist
- Sputnik SF, 340 Brannan St., online design"[4]
- Technorati, 665 Third St., blogging[4]
- VideoEgg, 300 Brannan St., video sharing[4]
- Wcities
- Wired, 520 Third St., tech magazine[4]
[edit] Former
- Bigwords.com, 21 South Park, used textbooks[7]
- frog design inc., design consultancy
- Obvious Corp., blog-related company, acquired by Odeo.[8][9]
- Organic, Inc., formerly in same building as Wired Magazine.[4]*Sherman Clay (Steinway distributorship), 35 South Park (historical building, now rented out to dot com companies)[10]
[edit] Neighbors
South Park is located between the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge (Interstate 80) and AT&T Park, the city's baseball stadium. Most of the nearby numbered streets are one-way, and carry traffic to and from the bridge, the stadium, and Interstate 280, which terminates slightly to the south of the neighborhood.
AT&T Park (formerly Pacific Bell Park, then SBC Park) where the San Francisco Giants major league baseball team plays is two blocks south and east of South Park.
Moscone Center, San Francisco's main convention facility, is four blocks north and west of South Park.
[edit] References
- ^ a b San Francisco Neighborhood Parks Council article South Park History
- ^ a b "Search for housing bargains turns up few nuggets in San Francisco", 2001-02-15.
- ^ a b "All About Yves", Metropolis Magazine.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dan Fost (16 April 2006). Web 2.0 has a local address: South Park, the neighborhood that fostered the dot-com boom, is back. San Francisco Chronicle.
- ^ Pilar Viladas. "Curve Your Enthusiasm", New York Times, 2004-03-14.
- ^ Charles Babcock. "Born Again:Silicon Valley, the site of busted dot-com dreams, is bustling once more as entrepreneurs focus on business' I.T. infrastructures", InformationWeek, May 2, 2005.
- ^ Dan Fost. "Web 2.0 has a local address: South Park, the neighborhood that fostered the dot-com boom, is back", San Francisco Chronicle, 2006-04-16.
- ^ Dan Fost. "Where Neo-Nomads' Ideas Percolate:New 'bedouins' transform a laptop, cell phone and coffeehouse into their office", San Francisco Chronicle, 2007-03-11.
- ^ Pete Cashmore. "Odeo Gets Acquired by Obvious Corp", Mashable, 2006-10-25.
- ^ James Temple. "UCSF lease adds medical facilities near Mission Bay", San Francisco Business Journal.
[edit] External links
- San Francisco Chronicle article As Wikipedia moves to S.F., founder discusses planned changes published November 30, 2007 says "Wikipedia [...] has found office space in the city's South Park neighborhood."
- South Park, San Francisco is at coordinates Coordinates: