Stairway Walks in San Francisco: The Joy of Urban Exploring

Stairway Walks in San Francisco: The Joy of Urban Exploring

Stairway Walks in San Francisco: The Joy of Urban Exploring

Stairway Walks in San Francisco: The Joy of Urban Exploring

Paperback(10th Revised ed.)

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Overview

The essential San Francisco travel guide for walkers and hikers

Hundreds of public stairways traverse San Francisco’s 42 hills, exposing scenic vistas and linking colorful, diverse neighborhoods. Local authors and city explorers Mary Burk and Adah Bakalinsky present 34 of the best stairway walks that the City by the Bay has to offer. Explore well-known and clandestine corridors, from Lands End to Bernal Heights to Telegraph Hill. Absorb the California city’s sights and sounds while discovering its architecture, history, pop culture, and horticulture.

Stairway Walks in San Francisco has something for everyone, whether you want to see a unique neighborhood, find an inspiring exercise route, or go on a sight-seeing adventure. Each walk features all the information you need, including a description, directions, map, and at-a-glance summary. Plus, the comprehensive appendix lists every one of San Francisco’s 600-plus public stairways. The guidebook has been an essential tool since 1984. Now fully updated in its 9th edition, Stairway Walks in San Francisco is for residents and tourists alike who wish to adventurously uncover the city’s well-known treasures and unexpected delights.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780899978642
Publisher: Wilderness Press
Publication date: 10/08/2024
Edition description: 10th Revised ed.
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 898,125
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Mary Burk has been walking the stairways of San Francisco since the 1980s. While searching the city and its hills, Mary discovered Adah Bakalinsky’s book and quickly fell in love with Adah’s unique way of bringing the city to life.

Mary and Adah first met at a book event for the fourth edition of Stairway Walks at the San Francisco Main Public Library. The two became fast friends, bonding through a deep interest in exploring the city on foot. Adah shared with Mary how every walk has its own rhythm, and the two began improvising walks together from there. In the ninth edition, Mary continues the writing, and the two continue walking the routes together.

When not out walking, Mary works as a software consultant and enjoys swimming and cooking. She shares a home with her husband, her two cats, and their 15-year-old catfish.

Read an Excerpt

Stairway Walks in San Francisco retains the city’s history, appreciates the city’s beauty, and most importantly, encourages healthy activity.”
—Gavin Newsom, Lieutenant Governor of California, from the foreword to this book

FROM THE INTRODUCTION

I had the pleasure of meeting Adah 15 years ago at the San Francisco Public Main Library. I am so glad I told Adah how much I enjoyed her walks back then, and I am so glad too that we’ve had so many good walks together as well. Like Adah, I am blessed to live here, and we both are humbled by the friendly strangers and locals we meet daily, especially when we let a walk take us on a new adventure around town or up a familiar stairway and hill in any sort of weather.

Adah sees how stairways knit our neighborhoods together, embracing our various little enclaves strung over hill and yonder dale. My own interest in the city took on a new dimension once I started exploring it through Adah’s stairway walks, and I never doubt what treasures I can still discover when escalating by foot, tread, and riser to the next platform up ahead. I am honored to continue this work for Adah, happily highlighting all the little gems this city wants to share with us. Also, ascending ambulation is absolutely awesome, but let me walk that back—what I mean is I enjoy walking up (and down) stairs too, so it’s a great pleasure to continue Adah’s stairway walks in this newest, ninth edition.

I have added three new walks and updated all 31 existing walks with new information, where changes or improvements that impacted the walk or its landmarks occurred since the last edition. Look for the Adah Bakalinsky Stairway in Walk 30 (The Good View). Imagine what once was a brawling bowery and bustling immigrant community now scraped away from tiny Irish Hill in Walk 31 (The Serendipity Slipknot), which still includes one stairway.

But before we get started, and for those of you who have not been on this journey with Adah before, let me first say a bit more about where you are at least reading about walking, if you are not already moving, around there, or here—right now.

All civilizations have built stairs, and the oldest still preserved date back to 7000 BCE. The Greeks and, before them, the Egyptians, and then, before them, Phoenicians, Sumerians, and Elamites used steps and terraces to farm, travel, pray, and even practice sacrifice. Moving up was desired and beneficial, unless you were, of course, an unwilling sacrifice.

Because stairs have been used for so long, their inventor is probably lost to the ages. However, since those first unknown walkers pressed their soles into soft earth and yielding roots in the hill ahead, and until they clambered onward and upward just to get where they wanted to go or to escape what they wanted to get away from, stairs were just waiting to be discovered.

Classical stairway design influenced European design. From Italy with Palladio to France with Nicolas Blondel, the standard design for tread and riser became part of architectural treatises and materials widely adopted and used from the 17th through the 20th centuries in both America and Europe, and these designs still influence public and private stairway design in cities worldwide.

San Francisco is a “walking city.” Built upon 43 hills, with another 28 thrown in for good measure, the city is surrounded by the Bay on the east, the Pacific Ocean to the west, a peninsula to the south, and the Golden Gate to the north. Within these confines, however, variety is constant. Light and water combine to produce striking effects on bridges and buildings throughout the day; and at sunset, beams of light dramatize the hills and sides of houses, casting colors like Cézanne. Mirrored tiles and windows glitter like mosaic tiles on the magic stairway at Moraga and 16th Avenue, and its fantastic new sibling at 16th and Kirkham, the Hidden Garden Steps. Come out at sunrise, sunset, in the fog, or in the sun, and take a walk.

Hills and mountains were made to be climbed, and stairways make it easier to traverse them. The hills accelerate changes in perspective as you walk around corners or circle the ridges. Landmarks recede and suddenly emerge in a landscape abounding in inclines and angled streets. The Mt. Sutro TV Tower, viewed from the mid-Sunset District, is a beautiful sky sculpture; from the Sutro Urban Forest, it looks like a ship in space. From Ashbury Heights, it looks pedestrian. Then it appears large again and within touching distance from the Outer Sunset District; now walk two blocks toward it, and it appears distant and small.

The streets of San Francisco range from comparatively flat, such as Irving, to almost vertical, such as sections of Duboce, Filbert, and Duncan. The city’s founders and developers found grading the streets on hills a primary obstacle when converting San Francisco from a tent town into a city of timbered houses. Some of the hills were completely demolished in the process; others were cut into without much planning. When the task seemed insurmountable, the "street" ended. Our streets were pummeled and pushed into rectangular grids familiar from the East Coast but inappropriate for our terrain. Paved streets often follow the contours of hills, but the stairways allow a direct vertical approach from one street to another. They provide accessibility to public transportation; they provide safety in case of fire; and they limit degradation of the land. Plus everyone loves a shortcut.

Within the city limits, there are more than 671 stairways of all descriptions: crooked, straight, short, long, concrete, wood, balustraded, unadorned, narrow, and wide. Some of the stairways are not as easily identified; look on the sidewalk to see if the stairway name is given there—sometimes it is even if a stairway does not have a sign. Sometimes their names are assumed, much like those of some lesser-known hills in the city are.

These walks are designed for the curious walker who loves to explore. Each walk takes between two and two and a half hours if you enjoy all the sights, scents, and sounds along the way. Walks in more well-known neighborhoods like Pacific Heights and Telegraph Hill are here, as are walks in less well-known neighborhoods like Eureka Valley, Edgehill, and Dogpatch. All the walks offer visual interest in the immediate setting and surrounding areas and often produce new organic stories shared by neighbors near the stairs.

The walks are best enjoyed at a pace considered reasonable or steady—give yourself time to look around. The pace of a walk is almost as important as its length or difficulty since everyone needs to give themselves more time to think and imagine. Here, your destination is the walk, so you’ve already arrived. By slowing down, walking half as fast, and taking in what surrounds you, time is the bonus, the joy is in the moving, and the reward is in the path.

The beginning point of each walk can be reached by public transportation. Buses are available at several points of most walks, and alternate routes are occasionally suggested for specific reasons. Some of the walks are quite strenuous, but the rewards of stupendous views and delightful discoveries justify the effort.

In order to appreciate the scaffolding of the city and the variety of neighborhoods within a whistle’s call, I’ve included some graceful links to other walks in other neighborhoods that can be traversed comfortably in a single session. Look for these recommendations in each walk’s Further Rambling section.

Using the map given for a particular walk is helpful if you can locate yourself; use the map legend, and orient yourself on the map and the points of the compass. Each walk’s quick-step instructions correspond to the numbered circles on its map. Orienting yourself will help you know which direction you are facing when you can’t see the sun rising in the east or setting in the west, when it is foggy, for instance. Look for street numbers and landmarks too, and always watch for traffic. Always look carefully when crossing streets, and remember drivers may not see you if they are distracted, so do be careful.

I suggest that walkers carry the following gear to make their adventure more comfortable: binoculars, a city map, a compass, water, fruit, sunscreen, and layered clothing, especially long pants and long-sleeved shirts for walks where vegetation may hide poison oak. I use the directions left and right, but also the compass points (north, east, south, and west) to provide additional assurance. I also highly recommend the map “Nature in the City,” which is available for free from the Department of Recreation and Parks. It shows the parks and other green areas in the city.

This edition includes an updated list of every public stairway in San Francisco (see the appendix). Charles Brock has walked every public stairway and every step in San Francisco, and his efforts doubled the previous list. We added one new stairway to this edition’s list and are on the lookout for new public stairways to add as necessary. The descriptions in the walks were up-to-date at publication time. However, neighborhoods continually evolve. If you find discrepancies, please inform Wilderness Press.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Foreword

Introduction

Before You Begin

The Stairway Walks

  1. Yerba Buena Cove, Telegraph Hill & Chinatown - Treasures & Digressions
  2. Telegraph Hill & North Beach - Old Neighborhoods
  3. Nob Hill - Castles in the Air
  4. Russian Hill South - Speaking of Intangibles
  5. Russian Hill North - San Francisco Architectural Signatures
  6. Fort Mason - North Waterfront: A Segmented Metamorphosis o’er Land & Sea
  7. Pacific Heights - Walk Forward, but Always Look Back
  8. Presidio Wall & Marina Waterfront - Tripping Lightly
  9. Fort Winfield Scott in The Presidio - A Magical Walk
  10. Lands End - Sutro’s Legacy for All Time
  11. Golden Gate Heights - Lead Thread on a Sugar Sack
  12. St. Francis Wood - Links & Conundrums
  13. Mount Davidson - Now You See It, Now You Don’t: Discover the Fog & Light of San Francisco
  14. Edgehill - Chert, Hideaway Paths & Open Space
  15. Forest Hill - Marienbad in San Francisco
  16. Forest Knolls - Grading & Sliding, Fog & Drip
  17. Twin Peaks Foothills - Angle vs. Contour
  18. Upper Market - Narrow Streets, Privacy & Quiet Among the Planets
  19. Corona Heights - Trees, Rocks & Underground Wiring
  20. Eureka Valley - Amazing Footpaths
  21. Dolores Heights - A Mondrian Walk
  22. Potrero Hill - From Shipbuilding Through Dot-Com to Biotech
  23. Bernal Heights East - Stairway Trails
  24. Bernal Heights West - Circling Two Hills
  25. Diamond Heights & Fairmount Heights - Follow the Curve, Follow the View
  26. McLaren Park & Excelsior - A Harmonious Walk
  27. Four Hills - Views, Views, Views! A Hop from Hill to Hill
  28. Sunnyside - Jazz & Beyond
  29. The Blue Greenway - Past, Present & Future
  30. Upper Haight - The Good View
  31. Dogpatch - The Serendipity Slipknot
  32. Noe Valley - A Glorious Grade
  33. Golden Gate Park - The East Side Route
  34. The Presidio & Marshall’s Beach - Take the Trail; It’s a Stairway
  35. Glen Canyon Park - Walking Sticks Welcome

An Informal Bibliography

Appendix: List of Stairways

Index

About the Authors

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Stairway Walks in San Francisco retains the city’s history; appreciates the city’s beauty; and, most importantly, encourages healthy activity.” —Gavin Newsom, Lieutenant Governor of California

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