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  • San Francisco’s airport is not the scariest in the world.

  • But if youve never flown there before,

  • you might find yourself trying to remember where your life-jacket is.

  • With a population of around 850,000,

  • San Francisco is a bit bigger than Frankfurt and a bit smaller than Cologne.

  • Along with New York, it’s one of America’s most iconic cities,

  • and its economy is based on tourism, banking and technology.

  • San Franciscois Spanish forSt Francis”, and hints as the city’s origins.

  • 18th-century Spanish settlers sought to convert the natives to Christianity,

  • and in 1776 founded La Misión de Nuestro Padre San Francisco de Asís,

  • popularly known asMission Delores”.

  • The original building was replaced by this one in 1791,

  • and it’s San Francisco’s oldest surviving building.

  • The church next door is much more modern:

  • it was built after a previous 19th-century church was destroyed in the 1906 earthquake.

  • It’s now a minor basilica,

  • the first church west of the Mississippi to be designated a basilica.

  • But it was the Gold Rush of 1849 that really made San Francisco.

  • Within one year, the population rose from 1,000 to 25,000.

  • And with so many people arriving to find their fortunes, banks were founded,

  • beginning with Wells Fargo in 1852.

  • To this day, the finance sector is one of the city’s most important industries.

  • San Francisco is located on a peninsula at the entrance to the San Francisco Bay,

  • and so quickly became a busy port.

  • The Embarcadero stretches along much of the eastern and northern coastline,

  • a series of piers where boats could dock.

  • The Ferry Terminal was built in 1892

  • at the end of Market Street, San Francisco’s main thoroughfare.

  • Although the terminal building is now used for shops and offices,

  • ferries still operate from here.

  • Most of the piers, of course, are now used as offices, warehouses or parking lots.

  • Pier 27, however, has been transformed into a terminal for cruise ships.

  • More famous is Pier 39,

  • converted in the 1930s into a shopping centre

  • with an unusual attraction: a double-decker carousel.

  • The kitsch factor might be a little high for some people’s tastes,

  • but Pier 39 is popular with the tourists,

  • and is also popular with visitors of a different kind.

  • After the 1989 earthquake, sealions discovered one of the pier’s docks

  • as a great place to bask.

  • Although they normally avoid humans, they seemed quite happy here,

  • and have become a tourist attraction in their own right.

  • There weren’t many this year, as the water is too warm for the fish they usually eat,

  • but some years there can be several hundred of them.

  • Behind the Embarcadero is Telegraph Hill.

  • The tower on its summit, Coit Tower, was built in 1933,

  • but before then there was a semaphore signalling tower.

  • When a ship entered the Golden Gate, the signals could be set

  • to show whether it was friendly, hostile or in distress.

  • The city’s famous Chinatown also had its roots in the second half of the 19th century,

  • beginning with railroad workers, who tended to be Asians, settling down here

  • mostly because, at the time, it was the only place where they were allowed to settle.

  • Today, it is one of the largest Chinese communities outside of Asia,

  • and another of San Francisco’s major tourist attractions.

  • Much more recently, a Japantown grew up a little way out of the downtown area.

  • In the 1960s, whole blocks were demolished

  • to make way for a new expressway and the new Japan Center.

  • Perhaps I just visited on the wrong day, but I personally feel

  • that the Japanese community deserves better than this unlovely concrete plaza;

  • It’s also a little confusing to be a place calledJapantown”,

  • and to see everywhere signs in Korean.

  • But just a few blocks away, old San Francisco is still intact.

  • This houses are not Victorian style, but Victorian-era:

  • the style is quintessentially American,

  • with elements borrowed from a variety of different times and places.

  • It was about this time that San Francisco looked with envy at New York’s Central Park,

  • and decided to create its own version.

  • The result was the Golden Gate Park, one of the world’s biggest urban parks.

  • Plants were carefully selected,

  • so that at any given time of year there was always something in bloom.

  • The Shakespeare Garden contains all the plants mentioned in Shakespeare’s plays,

  • but when I was there it was booked for a wedding.

  • The Golden Gate Park also has its own surprising carousel:

  • this one is indoors.

  • And I also discovered that

  • perhaps the most British of all sports, bowls, is played here.

  • The growing city needed a way of transporting large numbers of people

  • to wherever they needed to go; but there was a snag.

  • San Francisco is very hilly, but the streets are laid out in a grid.

  • This means that many of them are simply too steep for horse-drawn vehicles.

  • And so the cable car was invented.

  • It grips a permanently-moving cable, which then drags it along.

  • Only a few lines are left, but these are preserved as a tourist attraction.

  • In the 1980s, the system was shut down for a couple of years for renovations.

  • For the sake of the tourists, historic streetcars

  • from cities across America and even around the world

  • were operated along Market Street and the Embarcadero.

  • This proved so popular, that not only are these trams still running,

  • they, like the cable cars, are part of San Francisco’s official public transportation.

  • Modern trams also run in parts of the city.

  • But when they reach Market Street, they go underground,

  • forming a metro system very much like a German stadtbahn.

  • This is supplemented by the Bay Area Rapid Transit system,

  • which also runs underground through San Francisco, exactly like an S-Bahn.

  • In fact, local public transport is pretty decent.

  • But where Germans would be disappointed is long-distance travel.

  • While Frankfurt has two major stations and a third at the airport,

  • from where high-speed trains whisk you away to all parts of the country,

  • San Francisco has the Caltrain terminal, for local services to San Jose.

  • The nearest Amtrak station is on the other side of the bay, in Oakland.

  • There is still a lot of road traffic in San Francisco,

  • and, in an attempt to alleviate the worst of the problems,

  • a new metro line is being built to serve Chinatown.

  • As San Francisco grew during the second half of the 19th century,

  • thoughts turned to its defence.

  • The city’s motto, “Oro en paz, fierro en guerratranslates as: “Gold in peace, iron in war.”

  • Fort Point was to protect the entrance to the bay

  • against a possible invasion during the American Civil War.

  • Cannons placed at Fort Point, Lime Point and Alcatraz would catch ships in the crossfire.

  • In the event, no such invasion happened, and no guns were ever fired in anger.

  • In 1903, a victory column was built in Union Square,

  • commemorating the Battle of Manila Bay.

  • The model for the statue was a certain Alma de Bretteville,

  • who later married Adolph Spreckles.

  • As manager of the Spreckles Sugar Company,

  • Adolph was both much older and much richer than Alma,

  • and so became the original sugar daddy.

  • But one thing San Francisco is famous for is earthquakes.

  • It sits on the San Andreas fault, and from time to time the earth moves.

  • Most famously, the quake of 1906 destroyed large areas of the city

  • and started devastating fires.

  • Small wonder that the city is not shy about honouring its firefighters.

  • But rebuilding was swift.

  • A brand new city emerged, entire neighbourhoods rebuilt.

  • An imposing new City Hall was built as part of the Civic Center.

  • Grand structures like the Church of Saints Peter and Paul were built:

  • this is the church where Marilyn Munroe and Joe DiMaggio had their wedding photos taken,

  • and is also in San Francisco’s Italian district.

  • An area of downtown San Francisco stretching from the Civic Center to Union Square was transformed.

  • Nearly all the buildings in this area had been destroyed,

  • and new places were built in striking Art Deco style.

  • Hotels sprang up everywhere,

  • as well as theatres and other places of entertainment.

  • But more low-brow entertainment started coming in,

  • attracting less desireable people,

  • and the area became notoriously seedy.

  • Crime rates went up,

  • and as people left the area to live in more attractive neighbourhoods,

  • property prices fell and poorer people moved in.

  • Soon, apartments designed for singles and couples were home to entire families;

  • by the 1930s, the area had already acquired a name

  • borrowed from a similar neighbourhood in Manhattan: the Tenderloin.

  • Wikipedia rather diplomatically states that the Tenderloinresisted gentrification”,

  • which is probably perfectly true.

  • But beginning in the 1970s, a new problem arrived:

  • cuts were made to the provision of psychiatric care.

  • The result is possibly the worst rate of homelessness of any major US city.

  • But even while the Tenderloin was falling into disrepute,

  • vast engineering projects were forging ahead and breaking new ground.

  • The best known of these is the Golden Gate Bridge,

  • built right over Fort Point and spanning the Golden Gate itself,

  • linking San Francisco with Sausalito.

  • And this is also the best place to appreciate the reasoning

  • behind San Francisco’s nickname ofFog City”:

  • the fog rolls in from the Pacific, bathing downtown San Francisco in cold air,

  • keeping temperatures well down and ensuring that San Francisco’s number one bestselling souvenir

  • is the sweatshirt.

  • After four years of construction work, the bridge was finally opened in the spring of 1937,

  • and at that time had the world’s longest suspension bridge main span, nearly 1.3 km.

  • It wasn’t the longest bridge, though:

  • in total, it’s about 2.7 km long.

  • The Bay Bridge is over 7 km long in two sections:

  • it connects San Francisco with Oakland,

  • and was completed six months before the Golden Gate Bridge.

  • However, its longest span is less than 1 km.

  • San Francisco is a city of contrasts.

  • It’s one of America’s most historic, and one of its most forward-looking.

  • There is great wealth and extreme poverty,

  • and a jigsaw-puzzle of cultures somehow managing to live together

  • while simultaneously remaining separate.

  • Crammed into the tip of a peninsula in a notorious earthquake zone

  • miles from where any sensible trade route would go,

  • it probably shouldn’t even exist.

  • And yet, implausibly, it does.

San Francisco’s airport is not the scariest in the world.

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