Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

NORTH BEACH, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA

Looking west on Filbert Street, St. Peter and Paul Church and Russian Hill are visible.

'North Beach' is a San Francisco, California neighborhood bounded by the former Barbary Coast, now Jackson Square, and the Financial District south of Broadway (except North Beach institutions extend down Columbus to Washington and Montgomery where the Black Cat originally was), Chinatown to the southwest of Columbus below Green, and then Russian Hill to the west, Telegraph Hill to the east and Fisherman's Wharf at Bay Street to the north.
Originally, the city's northeast shoreline extended only to what is today Taylor and Francisco streets. The area largely known today as North Beach ''was'' an actual beach, filled in with soil years ago.
Typical intersections are Union and Columbus, the southwest corner of Washington Square, Grant Avenue and Vallejo, location of Caffe Trieste, Mason and Francisco, places for much shopping and dining.
The neighborhood, particularly on Broadway east of Columbus, was infamous until fairly recently as home to many of the city's striptease clubs. Many of the sex-related nightspots seen in Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry movies, Paul Schrader's Hardcore and TV's The Streets of San Francisco have been converted to other, more mainstream uses. The Condor Club, on the corner of Columbus and Broadway, was opened in 1964 as America's first topless bar. It is now a lobster restaurant. The Lusty Lady, a peep show establishment, is notable as the world's only worker cooperative strip club. The Broadway strip was also home to the Mabuhay Gardens, the Stone and On Broadway nightclubs, which were important venues in the punk rock scene of the late 1970s to mid-1980s. By the late 1990s, however, the economic facts of life asserted themselves and the area's colorful nightlife was reduced to those places that could afford to stay in business.
There is a street fair on Grant Avenue on Father's Day and a parade along Columbus Avenue to Aquatic Park around Columbus Day. There is a National Shrine at Vallejo and Columbus and St. Peter and Paul Church on Filbert north of Washington Square. The Powell Mason cable car line ends in the outer portion of North Beach where there is no beach.

North Beach, historically an Italian neighborhood, is still perceived by many as such even if its Italian population has decreased. In fact, the area has always attracted diverse peoples including 1950s Beats and Chinese.
An alleyway off of Columbus between Kearny and Broadway is named for Beat Generation writer Jack Kerouac, who once lived there and frequented the famous City Lights Bookstore on the corner of Columbus and Broadway as well as the numerous nearby coffee shops. Baseball legend Joe Dimaggio grew up in the neighborhood and briefly returned to live there with his wife Marilyn Monroe. Prominent trial attorney Tony Serra has his office near the corner of Columbus and Broadway.
The somewhat compact layout of the neighborhood consists of three-story buildings painted in light colors dating from the 1920s, when people rebuilt after the earthquake and fire of 1906. The weather is typically San Franciscan: moderate, with occasional sunny hours between noon, after the morning fog burns off, and four, before the fog starts rolling back in from the Pacific Ocean.
The San Francisco Art Institute is located in the Northern end of North Beach, on Russian Hill.

Contents
Restaurants
Bars and Clubs
Residents past and present
Films featuring North Beach
See also
External links

Restaurants




★ Caffè Greco

★ Caffè Macaroni

★ Caffè Puccini

★ Caffè Sport

★ Caffè Trieste

★ Capps

★ Figaro

★ Fior d'Italia

★ Franchino

★ Il Pollaio

★ Mama's on Washington Square

★ Mara's bakery

★ Maykadeh

★ Melt Cafe

★ Mona Lisa Ristorante

★ North Beach Restaurant

★ Panta Rei

★ Ristorante Volare

★ Rose Pistola

★ Stella's Pastry

★ Steps of Rome and Trattoria

★ The Stinking Rose

★ E' Tutto Qua

Bars and Clubs




★ Gino + Carlo's

★ Grant and Green

★ Impala

★ Jazz at Pearl's

★ Magnet

★ Northstar@Powell and Green

Spec's

★ The Bamboo Hut

★ The Crow Bar

The Purple Onion

The Saloon

★ Tosca Cafe

★ Vesuvio's

Residents past and present




Joseph L. Alioto

Enrico Banducci

Juana Briones

Francis Ford Coppola

Joe Dimaggio

Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Amadeo Giannini

Allen Ginsberg

Jens Hoffmann

Bob Kaufman

Philip Kaufman

Jack Kerouac

Philip Lamantia

Eric "Big Daddy" Nord

Wayne Wang

Films featuring North Beach




★ ''Barbary Coast'' (1935)

★ ''Dirty Harry'' (1971)

★ ''Hardcore'' (1979)

★ ''No Small Affair'' (1984)

★ ''So I Married an Axe Murderer'' (1993)

★ ''EdTV'' (1999)

★ ''North Beach'' (2000)

★ ''Sweet November'' (2001)

★ ''The Wedding Planner'' (2001)

★ ''The Sweetest Thing'' (2002)

★ ''Twisted'' (2004), directed by local resident Philip Kaufman

★ ''Just Like Heaven'' (2005)

See also


49-Mile Scenic Drive

External links



North Beach Interactive Neighborhood Map: MondoMap

North Beach Yahoo Maps

Guided photo tour

The Chronicle's standing article about North Beach

North Beach San Francisco Blog

North Beach Neighbors a San Francisco Neighborhood Organization

JB Monaco - Turn of the Century North Beach Photographer

''Surrounded by Sound: Aurally Exploring the Barbary Coast'' at en fuego magazine

San Francisco North Beach & North Beach Precious Cheese Festival

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.