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About
San Francisco
| City
and County of San Francisco |
| — City — |
|
San
Francisco from the Marin Headlands, with the Golden Gate
Bridge in the foreground |

Flag |

Seal |
|
| Nickname(s):
The City by the Bay, Frisco (antiquated),
The City That Knows How (archaic), Baghdad by the Bay The
Paris of the West |
Motto:
Oro en Paz, Fierro en Guerra
(Spanish for "Gold in Peace, Iron in War") |
|
Location
of San Francisco, California |
| Coordinates:
37°46'45.48"N
122°25'9.12'W
/ 37.7793°N
122.4192°W / 37.7793;
-122.4192 |
| Country |
United
States |
| State |
California |
| Founded |
June
29, 1776 |
| Incorporated |
April
15, 1850 |
| Founder |
Lieutenant
José Joaquin Moraga and Father Francisco Palóu |
| Named
for |
Saint
Francis of Assisi |
| Government |
| - Type |
Mayor-Council |
| - Mayor |
Gavin
Newsom (D) |
| - Board
of Supervisors |
Supervisors
Eric
Mar
Michela Alioto-Pier
David Chiu
Carmen Chu
Ross Mirkarimi
Chris Daly
Sean Elsbernd
Bevan Dufty
David Campos
Sophie Maxwell
John Avalos
|
| - State
Assembly |
Fiona
Ma (D)
Tom Ammiano (D) |
| - State
Senate |
Mark
Leno (D)
Leland Yee (D) |
| - U.S.
House |
Nancy
Pelosi (D)
Jackie Speier (D) |
| Area |
| - City |
231.92 sq mi (600.7 km2) |
| - Land |
46.7 sq mi (121 km2) |
| -
Water |
185.2 sq mi (479.7 km2)
79.8% |
| -
Metro |
3,524.4 sq mi (9,128.2 km2) |
| Elevation |
52 ft
(16 m) |
| Highest elevation |
925 ft
(282 m) |
| Lowest elevation |
0 ft
(0 m) |
| Population
(2008) |
| - City |
808,976 |
| - Density |
17,323/sq mi (6,688.4/km2) |
| -
Urban |
3,228,605 |
| -
Metro |
4,203,898 |
| -
Demonym |
San
Franciscan |
| Time
zone |
Pacific
Standard Time (UTC-8) |
| - Summer (DST) |
Pacific
Daylight Time (UTC-7) |
| ZIP
Code |
94101–94112,
94114–94147, 94150–94170, 94172, 94175, 94177 |
| Area
code(s) |
415 |
| Website |
www.sfgov.org |
The City
and County of San Francisco is the fourth most populous
city in California and the 12th most populous city in the United
States, with a 2008 estimated population of 808,976.
It is the second most densely populated major city in
the U.S. and is the financial, cultural, and transportation
center of the larger San Francisco Bay Area, a region of more
than seven million people. The city is located at the northern
end of the San Francisco Peninsula, with the Pacific Ocean to
the west and San Francisco Bay to the north and east.
In 1776,
the Spanish established a fort at the Golden Gate and a mission
named for Francis of Assisi. The California Gold Rush in 1848
propelled the city into a period of rapid growth, transforming
it into the largest city on the West Coast at the time. After
being devastated by the 1906 earthquake and fire, San Francisco
was quickly rebuilt, hosting the Panama-Pacific International
Exposition nine years later. During World War II, San Francisco
was the send-off point for many soldiers to the Pacific Theater.
After the war, the confluence of returning servicemen, massive
immigration, liberalizing attitudes, and other factors gave
rise to the Summer of Love and the gay rights movement, cementing
San Francisco as a liberal bastion in the United States.
Today, San
Francisco is a popular international tourist destination renowned
for its chilly summer fog, steep rolling hills, eclectic mix
of Victorian and modern architecture and its famous landmarks,
including the Golden Gate Bridge, the cable cars, and Chinatown.
History
The earliest
archaeological evidence of inhabitation of the territory of
the city of San Francisco dates to 3000 BC. People of the Ohlone
language group occupied Northern California from at least the
6th century. Though their territory had been claimed by Spain
since the early 16th century, they would have relatively little
contact with Europeans until 1769, when, as part of an effort
to colonize Alta California, an exploration party led by Don
Gaspar de Portola learned of the existence of San Francisco
Bay.
Mission
San Francisco de Asís (Mission Dolores)
Seven years
later, in 1776, an expedition led by Juan Bautista de Anza selected
the site for the Presidio of San Francisco, which Jose Joaquin
Moraga would soon establish. Later the same year, the Franciscan
missionary Francisco Palóu founded the Mission San Francisco
de Asís (Mission Dolores). The Yelamu tribal group of the Ohlone,
who had had several villages in the area, were among those brought
to live and work at the mission and be converted into the Catholic
faith.
Upon independence
from Spain in 1821, the area became part of Mexico. Under Mexican
rule, the mission system gradually ended and its lands began
to be privatized. In 1835, Englishman William Richardson erected
the first independent homestead, near a boat anchorage around
what is today Portsmouth Square. Together with Alcalde Francisco
de Haro, he laid out a street plan for the expanded settlement,
and the town, named Yerba Buena, began to attract American settlers.
Commodore John D. Sloat claimed California for the United States
on July 7, 1846, during the Mexican-American War, and Captain
John B. Montgomery arrived to claim Yerba Buena two days later.
Yerba Buena was renamed San Francisco the next year, and Mexico
officially ceded the territory to the United States at the end
of the war. Despite its attractive location as a port and naval
base, San Francisco was still a small settlement with inhospitable
geography.
Portsmouth
Square in 1851
The California
Gold Rush brought a flood of treasure seekers. With their sourdough
bread in tow, prospectors accumulated in San Francisco over
rival Benicia, raising the population from 1,000 in 1848 to
25,000 by December 1849. The promise of fabulous riches was
so strong that crews on arriving vessels deserted and rushed
off to the gold fields, leaving behind a forest of masts in
San Francisco harbor. California was quickly granted statehood,
and the U.S. military built Fort Point at the Golden Gate and
a fort on Alcatraz Island to secure the San Francisco Bay. Silver
discoveries, including the Comstock Lode in 1859, further drove
rapid population growth. With hordes of fortune seekers streaming
through the city, lawlessness was common, and the Barbary Coast
section of town gained notoriety as a haven for criminals, prostitution,
and gambling.
Many San
Francisco entrepreneurs sought to capitalize on the wealth generated
by the Gold Rush. Among the winners were the banking industry
which saw the founding of Wells Fargo in 1852 and the Bank of
California in 1864. The development of the Port of San Francisco
established the city as a center of trade. Catering to the needs
and tastes of the growing population, Levi Strauss opened a
dry goods business and Domingo Ghirardelli began manufacturing
chocolate. Immigrant laborers made the city a polyglot culture,
with Chinese railroad workers creating the city's Chinatown
quarter. The first cable cars carried San Franciscans up Clay
Street in 1873. The city's sea of Victorian houses began to
take shape, and civic leaders campaigned for a spacious public
park, resulting in plans for Golden Gate Park. San Franciscans
built schools, churches, theaters, and all the hallmarks of
civic life. The Presidio developed into the most important American
military installation on the Pacific coast. By the turn of the
century, San Francisco was a major city known for its flamboyant
style, stately hotels, ostentatious mansions on Nob Hill, and
a thriving arts scene.
"Not
in history has a modern imperial city been so completely
destroyed. San Francisco is gone." – Jack London after the
1906 earthquake and fire
At 5:12
am on April 18, 1906, a major earthquake struck San Francisco
and northern California. As buildings collapsed from the shaking,
ruptured gas lines ignited fires that would spread across the
city and burn out of control for several days. With water mains
out of service, the Presidio Artillery Corps attempted to contain
the inferno by dynamiting blocks of buildings to create firebreaks.
More than three-quarters of the city lay in ruins, including
almost all of the downtown core. Contemporary accounts reported
that 498 people lost their lives, though modern estimates put
the number in the several thousands. More than half the city's
population of 400,000 were left homeless. Refugees settled temporarily
in makeshift tent villages in Golden Gate Park, the Presidio,
on the beaches, and elsewhere. Many fled permanently to the
East Bay.
The Palace
of Fine Arts at the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition
Rebuilding
was rapid and performed on a grand scale. Rejecting calls to
completely remake the street grid, San Franciscans opted for
speed. Amadeo Giannini's Bank of Italy, later to become Bank
of America, provided loans for many of those whose livelihoods
had been devastated. The destroyed mansions of Nob Hill became
grand hotels. City Hall rose once again in splendorous Beaux
Arts style, and the city celebrated its rebirth at the Panama-Pacific
International Exposition in 1915.
In ensuing
years, the city solidified its standing as a financial capital;
in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, not a single San
Francisco-based bank failed. Indeed, it was at the height of
the Great Depression that San Francisco undertook two great
civil engineering projects, simultaneously constructing the
San Francisco – Oakland Bay Bridge and the Golden Gate Bridge,
completing them in 1936 and 1937 respectively. It was in this
period that the island of Alcatraz, a former military stockade,
began its service as a federal maximum security prison, housing
notorious inmates such as Al Capone. San Francisco later celebrated
its regained grandeur with a World's Fair, the Golden Gate International
Exposition in 1939–40, creating Treasure Island in the middle
of the bay to house it.
During World
War II, the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard became a hub of activity,
and Fort Mason became the primary port of embarkation for service
members shipping out to the Pacific Theater of Operations. The
explosion of jobs drew many people, especially African Americans
from the South, to the area. After the end of the war, many
military personnel returning from service abroad and civilians
who had originally come to work decided to stay. The UN Charter
creating the United Nations was drafted and signed in San Francisco
in 1945 and, in 1951, the Treaty of San Francisco officially
ended the war with Japan.
The USS
San Francisco steams under the Golden Gate Bridge
in 1942, during World War II.
Urban planning
projects in the 1950s and 1960s saw widespread destruction and
redevelopment of west side neighborhoods and the construction
of new freeways, of which only a series of short segments were
built before being halted by citizen-led opposition. The Transamerica
Pyramid was completed in 1972, and in the 1980s the Manhattanization
of San Francisco saw extensive high-rise development downtown.
Port activity moved to Oakland, the city began to lose industrial
jobs, and San Francisco began to turn to tourism as the most
important segment of its economy. The suburbs experienced rapid
growth, and San Francisco underwent significant demographic
change, as large segments of the white population left the city,
supplanted by an increasing wave of immigration from Asia and
Latin America. Over this same period, San Francisco became a
magnet for America's counterculture. Beat Generation writers
fueled the San Francisco Renaissance and centered on the North
Beach neighborhood in the 1950s. Hippies flocked to Haight-Ashbury
in the 1960s, reaching a peak with the 1967 Summer of Love.
In the 1970s, the city became a center of the gay rights movement,
with the emergence of The Castro as an urban gay village, the
election of Harvey Milk to the Board of Supervisors, and his
assassination, along with that of Mayor George Moscone, in 1978.
The 1989
Loma Prieta earthquake caused destruction and loss of life throughout
the Bay Area. In San Francisco, the quake severely damaged structures
in the Marina and South of Market districts and precipitated
the demolition of the damaged Embarcadero Freeway and much of
the damaged Central Freeway, allowing the city to reclaim its
historic downtown waterfront.
During the
dot-com boom of the late 1990s, startup companies invigorated
the economy. Large numbers of entrepreneurs and computer application
developers moved into the city, followed by marketing and sales
professionals, changing the social landscape as once-poorer
neighborhoods became gentrified. When the bubble burst in 2001,
many of these companies folded, and their employees left, although
high technology and entrepreneurship continued to be mainstays
of the San Francisco economy.
Geography
The San
Francisco Peninsula
San Francisco
is located on the West Coast of the U.S. at the tip of the San
Francisco Peninsula and includes significant stretches of the
Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay within its boundaries. Several
islands—Alcatraz, Treasure Island, and the adjacent Yerba Buena
Island, and small portions of Alameda island, Red Rock Island,
and Angel Island are part of the city. Also included are the
uninhabited Farallon Islands, 27 miles (43 km) offshore
in the Pacific Ocean. The mainland within the city limits roughly
forms a "seven-by-seven-mile square," a common local colloquialism
referring to the city's shape, though its total area, including
water, is nearly 232 square miles (600 km2).
Cars
negotiate Lombard Street to descend Russian Hill.
San Francisco
is famous for its hills. There are more than 50 hills within
city limits.
Some neighborhoods are named after the hill on which
they are situated, including Nob Hill, Pacific Heights, and
Russian Hill. Near the geographic center of the city, southwest
of the downtown area, are a series of less densely populated
hills. Twin Peaks, a pair of hills resting at one of the city's
highest points, forms a popular overlook spot. San Francisco's
tallest hill, Mount Davidson, is 925 feet (282 m)
high and is capped with a 103 foot (31 m) tall cross
built in 1934. Dominating this area is Sutro Tower, a large
red and white radio and television transmission tower.
The San
Andreas and Hayward Faults are responsible for much earthquake
activity, even though neither passes through the city itself.
It was the San Andreas Fault which slipped and caused the earthquakes
in 1906 and 1989. Minor earthquakes occur on a regular basis.
The threat of major earthquakes plays a large role in the city's
infrastructure development. The city has repeatedly upgraded
its building codes, requiring retrofits for older buildings
and higher engineering standards for new construction. However,
there are still thousands of smaller buildings that remain vulnerable
to quake damage.
San Francisco's
shoreline has grown beyond its natural limits. Entire neighborhoods
such as the Marina and Hunters Point, as well as large sections
of the Embarcadero, sit on areas of landfill. Treasure Island
was constructed from material dredged from the bay as well as
material resulting from tunneling through Yerba Buena Island
during the construction of the Bay Bridge. Such land tends to
be unstable during earthquakes; the resultant liquefaction causes
extensive damage to property built upon it, as was evidenced
in the Marina district during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
Climate
Fog envelops
the Golden Gate Bridge and approaches Crissy Field.
San Francisco's
climate is characteristic of California’s Mediterranean climate
with mild, wet winters and dry summers. Since it is surrounded
on three sides by water, San Francisco's climate is strongly
influenced by the cool currents of the Pacific Ocean which tends
to moderate temperature swings and produce a remarkably mild
climate with little seasonal temperature variation. The dry
period of May to October is mild to warm, with average high
temperatures of 64-70°F (17-21°C) and lows of 51-56°F (10-13°C).
The rainy period of November to April is cool with high temperatures
of 56-64°F (13-17°C) and lows of 46-51°F (7-10°C). On average,
temperatures exceed 75°F (24°C) 28 days a year.
The combination
of cold ocean water and the high heat of the California mainland
create the city's characteristic fog that can cover the western
half of the city all day during the spring and early summer.
In fact, a quotation incorrectly attributed to Mark Twain is
"The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco."
The fog is less pronounced in eastern neighborhoods,
in the late summer, and during the fall, which are the warmest
months of the year. Due to its sharp topography and maritime
influences, San Francisco exhibits a multitude of distinct microclimates.
The high hills in the geographic center of the city are responsible
for a 20 percent variance in annual rainfall between different
parts of the city. They also protect neighborhoods directly
to their east from the foggy and cool conditions experienced
in the Sunset District; for those who live on the eastern side
of the city, San Francisco is sunnier, with an average of 260
clear days, and only 105 cloudy days per year.
Annual precipitation
is about 20.4 inches (510 mm) which occurs mainly during
the cooler months of November through April. On average, there
are 67 rainy days a year.
Cityscape
San
Francisco panorama from Twin Peaks
Neighborhoods
San Francisco's
Chinatown is the oldest and largest in North America.
The historic
center of San Francisco is the northeast quadrant of the city
bordered by Market Street to the south. It is here that the
Financial District is centered, with Union Square, the principal
shopping and hotel district, nearby. Cable cars carry riders
up steep inclines to the summit of Nob Hill, once the home of
the city's business tycoons, and down to Fisherman's Wharf,
a tourist area featuring Dungeness crab from a still-active
fishing industry. Also in this quadrant are Russian Hill, a
residential neighborhood with the famously crooked Lombard Street,
North Beach, the city's Little Italy, and Telegraph Hill, which
features Coit Tower. Nearby is San Francisco's Chinatown, established
in the 1860s. The Tenderloin is frequently described as the
worst neighborhood in the city by tourist guides.
The Mission
District was populated in the 19th century by Californios and
working-class immigrants from Germany, Ireland, Italy and Scandinavia.
In the 1910s, a wave of Central American immigrants settled
in the Mission and, in the 1950s, immigrants from Mexico began
to predominate. Recent years have seen rapid gentrification
primarily along the Valencia Street corridor which is strongly
associated with modern hipster sub-culture. Haight-Ashbury,
famously associated with 1960s hippie culture, later became
home to expensive boutiques and a few controversial chain stores,
although it still retains some bohemian character. Historically
known as Eureka Valley, the area now popularly called the Castro
is the center of gay life in the city.
The Mission
District is known for its colorful murals. This 2002 design
by Precita Eyes' Martin Travers was applied to a security
gate.
The city's
Japantown district suffered when its Japanese American residents
were forcibly removed and interned during World War II. The
nearby Western Addition became established with a large African
American population at the same time. The "Painted Ladies,"
a row of well-restored Victorian homes, stand alongside Alamo
Square, and the mansions built by the San Francisco business
elite in the wake of the 1906 earthquake can be found in Pacific
Heights. The Marina to the north is a lively area with many
young urban professionals.
The Richmond,
the vast region north of Golden Gate Park that extends to the
Pacific Ocean has a portion called "New Chinatown" but is also
home to immigrants from other parts of Asia and Russia. South
of Golden Gate Park lies the Sunset with a predominantly Asian
population. The Richmond and the Sunset are largely middle class
and, together, are known as The Avenues. These two districts
are each sometimes further divided into two regions, the Outer
Richmond and Outer Sunset can refer to the more Western portions
of their respective district and the Inner Richmond and Inner
Sunset can refer to the more Eastern portions. Bayview-Hunters
Point in the southeast section of the city is one of the poorest
neighborhoods and suffers from a high rate of crime, though
the area has been the focus of controversial plans for urban
renewal.
The South
of Market, once filled with decaying remnants of San Francisco's
industrial past, has seen significant redevelopment. The locus
of the dot-com boom during the late 1990s, by 2004 South of
Market began to see skyscrapers and condominiums dot the area.
Following the success of nearby South Beach, another neighborhood,
Mission Bay, underwent redevelopment, anchored by a second campus
of the University of California, San Francisco. Just southwest
of Mission Bay is the Potrero Hill neighborhood featuring sweeping
views of downtown San Francisco.
Beaches
and parks
The Conservatory
of Flowers in Golden Gate Park
Ocean Beach
runs along the Pacific Ocean shoreline and is frequented by
surfers, but few others swim there because the waters off the
coast are perennially cold and form dangerous rip currents.
Baker Beach is located in a cove just inside the Golden Gate
and adjacent to the Presidio, a former military base. Crissy
Field, within the Presidio, has been restored to its natural
salt marsh ecosystem. All of these together, plus other sites
such as Alcatraz, Lands End, and Fort Funston, form part of
the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, a regional collection
of beaches, parks, and historic sites administered by the National
Park Service. The NPS separately administers the San Francisco
Maritime National Historical Park—a fleet of historic ships
and waterfront property around Aquatic Park.
There are
more than 200 parks maintained by the San Francisco Recreation
and Parks Department. The largest and best-known city park is
Golden Gate Park, which stretches from the center of the city
west to the Pacific Ocean. Once covered in native grasses and
sand dunes, the park was conceived in the 1860s and was created
by the extensive planting of thousands of non-native trees and
plants. The large park is rich with cultural and natural attractions
such as the Conservatory of Flowers, Japanese Tea Garden and
San Francisco Botanical Garden. Lake Merced is a fresh-water
lake surrounded by parkland and near the San Francisco Zoo,
a city-owned park which houses more than 250 animal species,
many of which are designated as endangered. The only park managed
by the California State Park system located principally in San
Francisco, Candlestick Point was the state's first urban recreation
area.
Culture
and contemporary life
San Francisco
is characterized by a high standard of living. The great wealth
and opportunity generated by the Internet revolution continues
to draw many highly educated and high-income workers and residents
to San Francisco. Lower-income neighborhoods consequently have
become increasingly gentrified, and many of the city's traditional
business and industrial districts have experienced a renaissance
driven by the redevelopment of the Embarcadero, including the
neighborhoods South Beach and Mission Bay. The city's property
values and household income have escalated to among the highest
in the nation, allowing the city to support a large restaurant
and entertainment infrastructure. Because the cost of living
in San Francisco is exceptionally high, many middle class families
have decided they can no longer afford to live within the city
and have left.
Boutiques
along Fillmore Street in Pacific Heights
Although
the centralized commerce and shopping districts of the Financial
District and the area around Union Square are well-known around
the world, San Francisco is also characterized by its culturally
rich streetscapes featuring mixed-use neighborhoods anchored
around central commercial corridors to which residents and visitors
alike can walk. Because of these characteristics, San Francisco
was rated "most walkable" city by the website Walkscore.com.
Many neighborhoods feature a mix of businesses, restaurants
and venues catering to the daily needs of the community while
also drawing in visitors. Some neighborhoods are dotted with
boutiques, cafes and nightlife such as Union Street in Cow Hollow,
and 24th Street in Noe Valley. Others are less so, such as Irving
Street in the Sunset, or Mission Street in the Mission. This
approach especially has influenced the continuing South of Market
neighborhood redevelopment with businesses and neighborhood
services rising alongside high-rise residences.
The rainbow
flag, symbol of LGBT pride, originated in San Francisco;
banners like this one decorate streets in The Castro.
The international
character San Francisco has fostered since its founding is continued
today by large numbers of immigrants from Asia and Latin America.
With 39 percent of its residents born overseas, San Francisco
has numerous neighborhoods filled with businesses and civic
institutions catering to new arrivals. In particular, the arrival
of many ethnic Chinese, which accelerated beginning in the 1970s,
has complemented the long-established community historically
based in Chinatown throughout the city and has transformed the
annual Chinese New Year Parade into the largest event of its
kind outside China.
Following
the arrival of writers and artists of the 1950s—who established
the modern coffeehouse culture—and the social upheavals of the
1960s, San Francisco became an epicenter of liberal activism,
with Democrats and Greens dominating city politics. Indeed,
San Franciscans have not provided a Republican presidential
candidate more than 20 percent of the vote since the 1988 election.
The city's large gay population has created and sustained a
politically and culturally active community over many decades,
developing a powerful presence in San Francisco's civic life.
A popular destination for gay tourists, the city hosts San Francisco
Pride, an annual parade and festival.
Entertainment
and performing arts
The lobby
of the War Memorial Opera House, one of the last buildings
erected in Beaux Arts style in the United States
San Francisco's
War Memorial and Performing Arts Center hosts some of the most
enduring performing-arts companies in the U.S. The War Memorial
Opera House houses the San Francisco Opera, the second-largest
opera company in North America as well as the San Francisco
Ballet, while the San Francisco Symphony plays in Davies Symphony
Hall. The Herbst Theatre stages an eclectic mix of music performances,
as well as public radio's City Arts & Lectures.
The Fillmore
is a music venue located in the Western Addition. It is the
second incarnation of the historic venue that gained fame in
the 1960s under concert promoter Bill Graham, housing the stage
where now-famous musicians such as the Grateful Dead, Janis
Joplin and Jefferson Airplane first performed, fostering the
San Francisco Sound. Beach Blanket Babylon is a zany
musical revue and a civic institution that has performed to
sold-out crowds in North Beach since 1974.
The American
Conservatory Theater (A.C.T.) has been a leading force in Bay
Area performing arts since its arrival in San Francisco in 1967,
regularly staging original productions. San Francisco frequently
hosts national touring productions of Broadway theatre shows
in a number of vintage 1920s-era venues in the Theater District
including the Curran, Orpheum, and Golden Gate Theatres.
The red
brick and central circular structure of the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art as seen from Yerba Buena Gardens. The
Art Deco-style PacBell Building (1925) rises behind the
museum.
Museums
The Museum
of Modern Art (SFMOMA) houses 20th century and contemporary
works of art. It moved to its current building in the South
of Market neighborhood in 1995 and now attracts more than 600,000
visitors annually. The Palace of the Legion of Honor holds primarily
European antiquities and works of art at its Lincoln Park building
modeled after its Parisian namesake. It is administered by Fine
Arts Museums of San Francisco, which also operates the de Young
Museum in Golden Gate Park. The de Young's collection features
American decorative pieces and anthropological holdings from
Africa, Oceania and the Americas. Prior to construction of its
current copper-clad structure, completed in 2005, the de Young
also housed the Asian Art Museum which, with artifacts from
over 6,000 years of history across Asia, moved into the former
public library next to Civic Center in 2003.
Opposite
the Music Concourse from the de Young stands the California
Academy of Sciences, a natural history museum which also hosts
the Morrison Planetarium and Steinhart Aquarium. Its current
structure, featuring a living roof, is an example of sustainable
architecture and opened in 2008. The Palace of Fine Arts, built
originally for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, has since
1969 housed the Exploratorium, an interactive science museum.
Media
The San
Francisco Chronicle, in which Herb Caen famously published
his daily musings, is Northern California's most widely circulated
newspaper. The San Francisco Examiner, once the cornerstone
of William Randolph Hearst's media empire and the home of Ambrose
Bierce, declined in circulation over the years and now takes
the form of a free daily tabloid. Sing Tao Daily claims
to be the largest of several Chinese language dailies that serve
the Bay Area. Alternative weekly newspapers include the San
Francisco Bay Guardian and SF Weekly. San Francisco
Magazine and 7x7 are major glossy magazines about
San Francisco. The national newsmagazine Mother Jones
is also based in San Francisco.
The San
Francisco Bay Area is the sixth-largest TV market and the fourth-largest
radio market in the U.S. The city's oldest radio station, KCBS
(AM), began as an experimental station in San Jose in 1909.
KALW was the city's first FM radio station when it signed on
the air in 1941. All major U.S. television networks have affiliates
serving the region, with most of them based in the city. There
also are several unaffiliated stations, and CNN, ESPN, and BBC
have regional news bureaus in San Francisco. The city's first
television station was KPIX, which began broadcasting in 1948.
Public broadcasting
outlets include both a television station and a radio station,
both broadcasting under the call letters KQED from a facility
near the Potrero Hill neighborhood. KQED-FM is the most-listened-to
National Public Radio affiliate in the country. San Francisco–based
CNET and Salon.com pioneered the use of the Internet as a media
outlet.
Sports
The San
Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL) are the
longest-tenured major professional sports franchise in the city.
The team began play in 1946 as an All-America Football Conference
(AAFC) league charter member, moved to the NFL in 1950 and into
Candlestick Park in 1971. The 49ers won five Super Bowl titles
in the 1980s and 1990s behind coach Bill Walsh and stars Joe
Montana, Steve Young, Ronnie Lott, and Jerry Rice.
A Muni
light rail vehicle passes AT&T Park, home of the San
Francisco Giants.
Major League
Baseball's San Francisco Giants left New York for California
prior to the 1958 season. Though boasting stars such as Willie
Mays, Willie McCovey and Barry Bonds, and making three appearances
in the World Series, the club has yet to win a world championship
while based in San Francisco. The Oakland Athletics swept the
Giants in the 1989 World Series, after Game 3 in San Francisco
was infamously pre-empted by the Loma Prieta earthquake. The
Giants play at AT&T Park which was opened in 2000, a cornerstone
project of the South Beach and Mission Bay redevelopment.
Kezar Stadium
near the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, former home of the 49ers,
hosts the semiprofessional San Francisco Bay Seals of the United
Soccer League's developmental league.
At the collegiate
level, the Dons of the University of San Francisco compete in
NCAA Division I, where Bill Russell guided the program to basketball
championships in 1955 and 1956. The San Francisco State Gators
and the Academy of Art University Urban Knights compete in Division
II. AT&T Park hosts college football's annual Emerald Bowl.
The Bay
to Breakers footrace, held annually since 1912, is best known
for colorful costumes and a celebratory community spirit. The
San Francisco Marathon is an annual event that attracts more
than 7,000 participants. The Escape from Alcatraz triathlon
has, since 1980, attracted 2,000 top professional and amateur
triathletes for its annual race. The Olympic Club, founded in
1860, is the oldest athletic club in the United States. Its
private golf course, situated on the border with Daly City,
has hosted the U.S. Open on four occasions. The public Harding
Park Golf Course is an occasional stop on the PGA Tour.
With an
ideal climate for outdoor activities, San Francisco has ample
resources and opportunities for amateur and participatory sports
and recreation. There are more than 200 miles (320 km)
of bicycle paths, lanes and bike routes in the city, and the
Embarcadero and Marina Green are favored sites for in-line skating.
Extensive public tennis facilities are available in Golden Gate
Park and Dolores Park, as well as at smaller neighborhood courts
throughout the city. Boating, sailing, windsurfing and kitesurfing
are among the popular activities on San Francisco Bay, and the
city maintains a yacht harbor in the Marina District. San Francisco
residents have often ranked among the fittest in the U.S.
Economy
Alcatraz
receives 1.5 million visitors per year.
Tourism
is the backbone of the San Francisco economy. Its frequent
portrayal in music, film, and popular culture has made the
city and its landmarks recognizable worldwide. It is the city
where Tony Bennett "left his heart," where the Birdman
of Alcatraz spent many of his final years, and where Rice-a-Roni
was said to be the favorite treat. San Francisco attracts
the third-highest number of foreign tourists of any city in
the U.S. and claims Pier 39 near Fisherman's Wharf as the
third-most popular tourist attraction in the nation. More
than 16 million visitors arrived in San Francisco in 2007,
injecting nearly $8.2 billion into the economy—both all-time
high figures for the city. With a large hotel infrastructure
and a world-class convention facility in the Moscone Center,
San Francisco is also among the top-ten North American destinations
for conventions and conferences.
The legacy
of the California Gold Rush turned San Francisco into the principal
banking and finance center of the West Coast in the early twentieth
century. Montgomery Street in the Financial District became
known as the "Wall Street of the West", home to the Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco, the Wells Fargo corporate headquarters,
and the site of the now-defunct Pacific Coast Stock Exchange.
Bank of America, a pioneer in making banking services accessible
to the middle class, was founded in San Francisco and in the
1960s, built the landmark modern skyscraper at 555 California
Street for its corporate headquarters. Many large financial
institutions, multinational banks and venture capital firms
are based in or have regional headquarters in the city. With
over 30 international financial institutions, six Fortune 500
companies, and a large support infrastructure of professional
services—including law, public relations, architecture and design—also
with significant presence in the city, San Francisco is designated
as one of the ten Beta World Cities. The city ranks fifteenth
in the world's list of cities by GDP and eighth in the United
States.
The San
Francisco skyline centered within the Financial District
San Francisco's
economy has increasingly become tied to that of its Bay Area
neighbor San Jose and Silicon Valley to its south, sharing the
need for highly educated workers with specialized skills. San
Francisco has been positioning itself as a biotechnology and
biomedical hub and research center. The Mission Bay neighborhood,
site of a second campus of UCSF, fosters a budding industry
and serves as headquarters of the California Institute for Regenerative
Medicine, the public agency funding stem cell research programs
statewide.
Small businesses
with fewer than 10 employees and self-employed firms make up
85 percent of city establishments. The number of San Franciscans
employed by firms of more than 1,000 employees has fallen by
half since 1977. City government has made it intentionally difficult
for national big box and formula retail chains to expand in
the city; the Board of Supervisors has used the planning code
to limit the neighborhoods in which formula retail establishments
can operate, an effort affirmed by San Francisco voters.
Government
San Francisco
is a consolidated city-county, a status it has held since 1856.
It is the only such consolidation in California. The mayor is
also the county executive, and the county Board of Supervisors
acts as the city council. Under the city charter, the government
of San Francisco is constituted of two co-equal branches. The
executive branch is headed by the mayor and includes other citywide
elected and appointed officials as well as the civil service.
The 11-member Board of Supervisors, the legislative branch,
is headed by a president and is responsible for passing laws
and budgets, though San Franciscans also make use of direct
ballot initiatives to pass legislation.
The members
of the Board of Supervisors are elected as representatives of
specific districts within the city. Upon the death or resignation
of mayor, the President of the Board of Supervisors assumes
that office, as did Dianne Feinstein after the assassination
of George Moscone in 1978.
Because
of its unique city-county status, local government exercises
jurisdiction over property that would otherwise be located outside
of its corporation limit. San Francisco International Airport,
though located in San Mateo County, is owned and operated by
the City and County of San Francisco. San Francisco was also
granted a perpetual leasehold over the Hetch Hetchy Valley and
watershed in Yosemite National Park by the Raker Act in 1913.
In 2006,
the Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance making San Francisco
the first city in the nation to provide health care services
to all uninsured residents, with creation of the Healthy San
Francisco program. The municipal budget for fiscal year 2007-2008
was just over $6 billion.
The federal
government utilizes San Francisco as the regional hub for many
arms of the federal bureaucracy, including the U.S. Court of
Appeals, the Federal Reserve Bank, and the U.S. Mint. Until
decommissioning in the early 1990s, the city had major military
installations at the Presidio, Treasure Island, and Hunters
Point—a legacy still reflected in the annual celebration of
Fleet Week. The State of California uses San Francisco as the
home of the state supreme court and other state agencies. Foreign
governments maintain more than seventy consulates in San Francisco.
Demographics
The estimated
2008 population of San Francisco was 808,976. With over 17,000
people per square mile, San Francisco is the second-most densely
populated major American city. San Francisco is the traditional
focal point of the San Francisco Bay Area and forms part of
the San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont Metropolitan Statistical Area
and the greater San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland Combined Statistical
Area (CSA) whose population is over seven million, making it
the fifth largest in the United States as of the 2000 Census.
Like many
larger U.S. cities, San Francisco is a minority-majority city,
as non-Hispanic whites comprise less than half of the population.
As of 2007, the Census Bureau estimated that 45.0 percent of
the population was non-Hispanic white. Asian Americans make
up 33.1% of the population; Chinese Americans constitute the
largest single ethnic group in San Francisco at about a fifth
of the population. Hispanics of any race make up 14.0% of the
population. San Francisco's African American population has
declined in recent decades, from 13.4 percent of the city in
1970 to 7.3 percent of the population in 2007. The current percentage
of African Americans in San Francisco is similar to that of
the state of California; conversely, the city's percentage of
Hispanic residents is less than half of that of the state.
Native San
Franciscans form a relatively small percentage of the city's
population: only 37.4 percent of its residents were born in
California, while 26.9 percent were born in a different U.S.
state. More than a third of city residents (35.7 percent) were
born outside the United States.
According
to the 2005 American Community Survey, San Francisco has the
highest percentage of gay and lesbian individuals of any of
the 50 largest U.S cities, at 15.4%. San Francisco also has
the highest percentage of same-sex households of any American
county, with the Bay Area having a higher concentration than
any other metropolitan area.
San Francisco
ranks third of American cities in median household income with
a 2007 value of $65,519. Median family income is $81,136, and
San Francisco ranks 8th of major cities worldwide in the number
of billionaires known to be living within city limits.
Following
a national trend, an out-migration of middle class families
is contributing to widening income disparity and has left the
city with a lower proportion of children, 14.5 percent, than
any other large American city.
The city's
poverty rate, at 7.7 percent, is lower than the national average
and among the lowest for cities ranked by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Homelessness
has been a chronic and controversial problem for San Francisco
since the early 1980s. The city is believed to have the highest
number of homeless inhabitants per capita of any major U.S.
city.
San Francisco's
rates of violent and property crime, reported for 2006 as 875
and 4,958 incidents per 100,000 residents respectively, are
higher than the national average.
Education
Colleges
and universities
The Mission
Bay campus of UCSF
The University
of California, San Francisco is part of the University of California
system but is solely dedicated to graduate education in health
and biomedical sciences. It is ranked among the top-five medical
schools in the United States and also operates the UCSF Medical
Center, ranked among the top 10 hospitals in the country UCSF
is a major local employer, second in size only to the city and
county government. A 43-acre Mission Bay campus was opened in
2003, complementing its original facility in Parnassus Heights.
It contains research space and facilities to foster biotechnology
and life sciences entrepreneurship and will double the size
of UCSF's research enterprise. The University of California,
Hastings College of the Law, founded in Civic Center in 1878,
is the oldest law school in California and claims more judges
on the state bench than any other institution.
Founded
in 1855, the University of San Francisco, a private Jesuit university
located on Lone Mountain, is the oldest institution of higher
education in San Francisco and one of the oldest universities
established west of the Mississippi River.
San Francisco
State University is part of the California State University
system and is located near Lake Merced.
The school has close to 30,000 students and awards undergraduate
and master's degrees in more than 100 disciplines. The City
College of San Francisco, with its main facility in the Ingleside
district, is one of the largest two-year community colleges
in the country. It has an enrollment of about 100,000 students
and offers an extensive continuing education program.
With an
enrollment of 13,000 students, Academy of Art University is
the largest institute of art and design in the nation. Founded
in 1871, the San Francisco Art Institute is the oldest art school
west of the Mississippi. The San Francisco Conservatory of Music,
the only independent school of music on the West Coast, grants
degrees in orchestral instruments, chamber music, composition,
and conducting.
The California
Culinary Academy, associated with the Le Cordon Bleu program,
offers programs in the culinary arts, baking and pastry arts,
and hospitality and restaurant management.
Primary
and secondary schools
Public schools
are run by the San Francisco Unified School District as well
as the State Board of Education for some charter schools. Lowell
High School, the oldest public high school in the U.S. west
of the Mississippi, and the smaller School of the Arts High
School are two of San Francisco's magnet schools at the secondary
level. Just under 30 percent of the city's school-age population
attends one of San Francisco's more than 100 private or parochial
schools, compared to a 10 percent rate nationwide. Nearly 40
of those schools are Catholic schools managed by the Archdiocese
of San Francisco.
Transportation
T he Bay
Bridge connects to Oakland and the East Bay.
Roads
and highways
Because
of its unique geography—making beltways somewhat impractical—and
the results of the freeway revolts of the late 1950s, San Francisco
is one of the few American cities that has opted for European-style
arterial thoroughfares instead of a large network of freeways.
This trend continued following the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake,
when city leaders decided to demolish the Embarcadero Freeway,
and voters approved demolition of a portion of the Central Freeway,
converting them into street-level boulevards.
Interstate
80 begins at the approach to the Bay Bridge and is the only
direct automobile link to the East Bay. U.S. Route 101 extends
Interstate 80 to the south along the San Francisco Bay toward
Silicon Valley. Northbound, 101 uses arterial streets Van Ness
Avenue and Lombard Street to the Golden Gate Bridge, the only
direct road access from San Francisco to Marin County and points
north. Highway 1 also enters San Francisco at the Golden Gate
Bridge, but diverts away from 101, bisecting the west side of
the city as the 19th Avenue arterial thoroughfare, and joining
with Interstate 280 at the city's southern border. Interstate
280 continues this route along the central portion of the Peninsula
south to San Jose. Northbound, 280 turns north and east and
terminates in the South of Market area. State Route 35, which
traverses the majority of the Peninsula along the ridge of the
Santa Cruz Mountains, enters the city from the south as Skyline
Boulevard, following city streets until it terminates at its
intersection with Highway 1. State Route 82 enters San Francisco
from the south as Mission Street, following the path of the
historic El Camino Real and terminating shortly thereafter at
its junction with 280. The cross-country Lincoln Highway's western
terminus is in Lincoln Park. Major east–west thoroughfares include
Geary Boulevard, the Lincoln Way/Fell Street corridor, and Market
Street/Portola Drive.
Cycling
is a popular mode of transportation in San Francisco, with about
40,000 residents commuting to work regularly by bicycle.
Public
transportation
A cable
car descending Nob Hill
Many people
in San Francisco use public transportation, nearly a third of
commuters in 2005. Public transit solely within the city of
San Francisco is provided predominantly by the San Francisco
Municipal Railway (Muni). The city-owned system operates both
a combined light rail/subway system (the Muni Metro) and a bus
network that includes trolleybuses, standard diesel motorcoaches
and diesel hybrid buses. The Metro streetcars run on surface
streets in outlying neighborhoods but underground in the downtown
area. Additionally, Muni runs the highly visible F Market historic
streetcar line, which runs on surface streets from Castro Street
to Fisherman's Wharf (through Market Street), and the iconic
San Francisco cable car system, which has been designated as
a National Historic Landmark.
Commuter
rail is provided by two complementary agencies. Bay Area Rapid
Transit (BART) is the regional rapid transit system which connects
San Francisco with the East Bay through the Transbay Tube. The
line runs under Market Street to Civic Center, where it turns
south to the Mission District, the southern part of the city,
and through northern San Mateo County, to the San Francisco
International Airport, and Millbrae. The Caltrain rail system
runs from San Francisco along the Peninsula down to San Jose.
The line dates from 1863, and for many years was operated by
Southern Pacific.
The Transbay
Terminal serves as the terminus for long-range bus service (such
as Greyhound) and as a hub for regional bus systems AC Transit
(Alameda County), SamTrans (San Mateo County), and Golden Gate
Transit (Marin and Sonoma Counties). Amtrak also runs a shuttle
bus from San Francisco to its rail station in Emeryville.
A small
fleet of commuter and tourist ferries operate from the Ferry
Building and Pier 39 to points in Marin County, Oakland, and
north to Vallejo in Solano County.
Airports
San Francisco
International Airport
San Francisco
International Airport (SFO), though located 13 miles (21 km)
south of the city in San Mateo County, is under the jurisdiction
of the City and County of San Francisco. SFO is primarily adjacent
to the cities of Millbrae and San Bruno, but also borders the
most southern part of the city of South San Francisco. SFO is
a hub for United Airlines, its largest tenant, and the decision
by Virgin America to base its operations out of SFO reversed
the trend of low-cost carriers opting to bypass SFO for Oakland
and San Jose. SFO is an international gateway, with the largest
international terminal in North America. The airport is built
on a landfill extension into the San Francisco Bay. During the
economic boom of the late 1990s, when traffic saturation led
to frequent delays, it became difficult to respond to calls
to relieve the pressure by constructing an additional runway
as that would have required additional landfill. Such calls
subsided in the early 2000s as traffic declined, and, in 2006,
SFO was the 14th busiest airport in the U.S. and 26th busiest
in the world, handling 33.5 million passengers.
Seaports
The Ferry
Building along the Embarcadero
The Port
of San Francisco was once the largest and busiest seaport on
the West Coast. It featured rows of piers perpendicular to the
shore, where cargo from the moored ships was handled by cranes
and manual labor and transported to nearby warehouses. The port
handled cargo to and from trans-Pacific and Atlantic destinations,
and was the West Coast center of the lumber trade. The 1934
West Coast Longshore Strike, an important episode in the history
of the American labor movement, brought the port to a standstill.
The advent of container shipping made pier-based ports obsolete,
and most commercial berths moved to the Port of Oakland. A few
active berths specializing in break bulk cargo remain alongside
the Islais Creek Channel.
Many piers
remained derelict for years until the demolition of the Embarcadero
Freeway reopened the downtown waterfront, allowing for redevelopment.
The centerpiece of the port, the Ferry Building, while still
receiving commuter ferry traffic, has been restored and redeveloped
as a gourmet marketplace. The port's other activities now focus
on developing waterside assets to support recreation and tourism.
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Geography
/ Zipcodes we do business in:
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San Francisco,
94101, 94102, 94103,94104, 94105, 94107,
94108, 94109, 94110, 94111, 94112, 94114, 94115, 94116,94117,
94118 , 94119, 94120, 94121, 94122, 94123, 94124, 94125,
94126, 94127, 94129, 94130, 94131, 94132, 94133, 94134,
94137, 94139, 94140, 94141, 94142, 94143, 94144, 94145,
94146, 94147, 94151, 94153, 94154, 94156, 94158, 94159,
94160, 94161, 94162, 94163, 94164, 94171, 94172 , 94177,
94188, 94199, 94506
Alamo, 94507
Antioch,94509,
94531
Brentwood, 90049,
94513
Byron, 94514
Clayton, 94517
Concord, 94518,
94519, 94520, 94521, 94522, 94523, 94524, 94527, 94529
Pleasant Hill,
94523
Crockett, 94525
Danville, 94506,
94526
El Cerrito, 94530
Antioch, 94509,
94531
Hercules, 94547
Lafayette, 94549,
94596
Martinez,94553
Moraga, 94556,
94570, 94575
Oakley,94561
Orinda, 94563
Pinole, 94564
Pittsburg, 94565
Rodeo, 94547,
94572
San Ramon, 94583
Walnut Creek,
94595, 94596, 94597, 94598
Richmond, 94530,
94801, 94802, 94803, 94804, 94805, 94806, 94807, 94808,
94820, 94850
El Sobrante, 94803,
94820
San Pablo, 94806
Alameda 94501,
94502
Santa Clara 95050,
95051, 95052, 95053, 95054, 95055,95056, 94002 650
Belmont , 94002,
94003
Brisbane, 94005
Burlingame, 94010,
94011, 94012
Daly City, 94013,
94014, 94015, 94016, 94017
El Grananda, 94018
Half Moon Bay,
94019
La Honda, 94020
Loma Mar, 94021
Menlo Park, 94025,
94026, 94027, 94028, 94029
Atherton, 94027
Portola Valley,
94028
Millbrae, 94030,
94031
Montara,93940,
93942, 93943, 93944
Moss Beach, 94038
Mountain View,
94035, 94039, 94040, 94041, 94042, 94043
Pacifica, 94044,
94045
Pescadero, 94060
Redwood City,
94059, 94061, 94062, 94063, 94064, 94065
San Bruno, 94066,
94067, 94096, 94098
San Carlos, 94070,
94071
South San Francisco,
94080, 94083, 94099
Palo Alto, 94301,
94302, 94303, 94304, 94305, 94306, 94307, 94308, 94309,
94310
San Mateo, 94401,
94402, 94403, 94404, 94405, 94406, 94407, 94408, 94409,
94497
San Rafael 94901,
94903, 94904, 94912, 94913, 94914, 94915
Greenbrae 94904,
94914
Kentfield 94904,
94914
Belvedere, 94920
Tiburon 94920
Bolinas 94924
Corte Madera 94925,
94976
Dillon Beach 94929
Fairfax 94930,
94978
Forest Knolls 94933
Inverness 94937
Lagunitas 94938
Larkspur 94939,
94977
Marshall 94940
Mill Valley 94941,
94942
Novato 94945,
94947, 94948, 94949, 94998
Nicasio 94946
Oleama 94950
Point Reyes Station 94956
Ross 94957
San Anselmo 94960,
94979
San Geronimo 94963
San Jose, 95101,
95102, 95103, 95106, 95108, 95109, 95110, 95111, 95112,
95113, 95114, 95115, 95116, 95117, 95118, 95119, 95120,
95121, 95122, 95123, 95124, 95125, 95126, 95127, 95128,
95129, 95130, 95131, 95132, 95133, 95134, 95135, 95136,
95137, 95138, 95139, 95140, 95141, 95142, 95148, 95150,
95151, 95152, 95153, 95154, 95155, 95156, 95157, 95158,
95159, 95160, 95161, 95164, 95170, 95171, 95172, 95173,
95190, 95191, 95192, 95193, 95194, 95196
San Quentin 94964,
94974
Sauslito 94965,
94966
Stinson Beach
94970
Tomales 94971
Wood acre 94973
Corte Madera 94925,
94976
Monterey
93940, 93942,
93943, 93944
Santa
Cruz 95060, 95061, 95062, 95063, 95064, 95065,
95066, 95067
Cupertiono
95014, 95015
Los
Gatos 95030, 95031,
95032, 95033
Morgan
Hill 95037, 95038
Campbell
95008, 95009, 95011
Sunnyvale
94085, 94086, 94087, 94088, 94089, 94090
Saratoga
95070, 95071
Los
Altos 94022, 94023, 94024
Stanford
94305, 94309
Milpitas
95035, 95036
Portolla
Valley 94028
Wood
Side 94062
Fremont
94536, 94537, 94538, 94539, 94555
Newark
94560
Union
City 94587
Hayward
94540, 94541, 94542, 94543, 94544, 94545, 94546,
94552, 94557
San
Leandro 94577, 94578, 94579
Oakland
94601, 94602, 94603, 94604, 94605, 94606, 94607,
94608, 94609, 94610, 94611, 94612, 94613, 94614, 94615,
94617, 94618, 94619, 94620, 94621, 94622, 94623, 94624,
94625, 94626, 94627, 94643, 94649, 94659, 94660, 94661,
94662, 94666
Berkely
94701, 94702, 94703, 94704, 94705, 94706, 94707,
94708, 94709, 94710, 94712, 94720
Emeryville
94608, 94662
Dublin
94568
Livermore
94550, 94551
Vallejo
94503, 94589, 94590, 94591, 94592
Benicia
94510
Napa
94558, 94559, 94581, 94585
Santa
Rosa 95401, 95402, 95403, 95404, 95405, 95406,
95407, 95408, 95409
Sanoma
95476
Fairfield
94533, 94534, 94535, 94585
Sacramento
94203, 94204, 94205, 94206, 94207, 94208, 94209,
94211, 94229, 94230, 94232, 94234, 94235, 94236, 94237,
94239, 94240, 94243, 94244, 94245, 94246, 94247, 94248,
94249, 94250, 94252, 94253, 94254, 94256, 94257, 94258,
94259, 94261, 94262, 94263, 94267, 94268, 94269, 94271,
94273, 94274, 94277, 94278, 94279, 94280, 94282, 94283,
94284, 94285, 94286, 94287, 94288, 94289, 94290, 94291,
94293, 94294, 94295, 94296, 94297, 94298, 94299, 95812,
95813, 95814, 95815, 95816, 95817, 95818, 95819, 95820,
95821, 95822, 95823, 95824, 95825, 95826, 95827, 95828,
95829, 95830, 95831, 95832, 95833, 95834, 95835, 95836,
95837, 95838, 95840, 95841, 95842, 95843, 95851, 95852,
95853, 95857, 95860, 95864, 95865, 95866, 95867, 95873,
95887, 95894, 95899
Vacaville
95687, 95688, 95696
Dixon
95620
Stockton
95201, 95202, 95203, 95204, 95205, 95206, 95207,
95208, 95209, 95210, 95211, 95212, 95213, 95215, 95219,
95267, 95269, 95290, 95296, 95297, 95298
Tracy
95304, 95376, 95377, 95378, 95385, 95391
Manteca
95336, 95337
Modesto
95350, 95351, 95352, 95353, 95354, 95355, 95356,
95357, 95358, 95397
Hollister
95023, 95024
Watsonville
95076, 95077
Gilroy
95020, 95021
Salinas
93901, 93902, 93905, 93906, 93907, 93908, 93912,
93915, 93962
Marina
93933
Carmel
93921, 93922, 93923
Pacific
Grove 93950
Fresno
93650, 93701, 93702, 93703, 93704, 93705, 93706,
93707, 93708, 93709, 93710, 93711, 93712, 93714, 93715,
93716, 93717, 93718, 93720, 93721, 93722, 93724, 93725,
93726, 93727, 93728, 93729, 93740, 93741, 93744, 93745,
93747, 93750, 93755, 93760, 93761, 93762, 93764, 93765,
93771, 93772, 93773, 93774, 93775, 93776, 93777, 93778,
93779, 93780, 93784, 93786, 93790, 93791, 93792, 93793,
93794, 93844, 93888
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