Stairway Walks in San Francisco: The Joy of Urban Exploring

$17.38
by Mary Burk

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See San Francisco like never before: Step up to 39 of its best stairway walks! Hundreds of public stairways traverse San Francisco’s boundless hills, revealing scenic vistas and connecting colorful, diverse neighborhoods. Since 1984, Stairway Walks in San Francisco has been helping urban explorers discover the best of the City by the Bay via riser and handrail. Now in its 10th edition, this beloved guidebook by Mary Burk with Adah Bakalinsky includes four new walks, updates of classic favorites, and many new photographs. The amazing walks invite you to explore well-known and clandestine corridors, from Marshall Beach and Noe Valley to Lands End and Telegraph Hill. Whether you want to learn about the city’s history and architecture, elevate your exercise routine, or just let your feet lead the way to new adventures, Stairway Walks in San Francisco has something for everyone. Book Features Comprehensive list of the city’s 600-plus stairways - 39 walks incorporating San Francisco’s magnificent stairway network - Lively route descriptions, at-a-glance Quick-Step summaries, and easy-to-read maps - Parking and public-transportation information for each walk Stairway Walks in San Francisco has been the essential city walking guide for more than 40 years! Get this updated edition, and start walking. “ Stairway Walks in San Francisco retains the city’s history; appreciates the city’s beauty; and, most importantly, encourages healthy activity.” —Gavin Newsom, Governor of California Mary Burk has been walking the stairways of San Francisco since the 1980s. While researching the city and its seven hills, Mary discovered Adah Bakalinsky’s book and quickly fell in love with her unique way of bringing the city to life. Mary and Adah first met at a book event for the fourth edition at the San Francisco Main Public Library. The two became fast friends, bonding through their deep interest in exploring the city on foot. Adah shared with Mary how every walk has its own rhythm, and so the two of them began improvising new walks together. Three editions later, Adah passed the torch to Mary. Mary and Adah still walk together and scout out new stairways and interesting routes for upcoming editions. When not out walking, Mary works as a software systems consultant and enjoys swimming and cooking. She shares a home with her husband, their two cats, and their 25-year-old plecostomus (catfish). Adah Bakalinsky grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota, surrounded by flat land. She remembers trying, as a child, to walk up icy Ramsey Hill (near Pleasant Avenue) in winter, slithering down, trying again, and finally reaching the top. Fifty years later, while walking the old neighborhood on a visit, she discovered a stairway had been built to ascend the hill! Looking for a synthesis for her social work, music, and film background, she discovered, surprisingly, that it was walking. She walks and, as she walks, she talks to whomever will talk with her. She carries a tape recorder to capture stories; she finds that walks shape themselves into a variety of musical forms and dances, and she redesigns a walk until it has just the rhythm it must have. She walks to see and returns to photograph the objects that give flavor to the walk. She feels lucky to live in San Francisco, where walking seems the most natural way to traverse the city. Happy heeling, frisky footing, and merry walking! Walk 4: Russian Hill South Speaking of Intangibles Every San Francisco neighborhood has its own unique character, a distillation of the folklore and stories of its early days surviving through continual modifications. Russian Hill acquired its name from an early cemetery located on the east side of Vallejo and Jones where Russian sailors were buried before the gold rush (a stairway is located on the site). Greek Orthodox crosses and bones have been unearthed there. The sailors had probably come down from Fort Ross, the Russian settlement, with the pelts of seals and otters. In the late 1800s and even more so after the 1906 earthquake demolished other structures, small cottages expressing the special ambience of the neighborhood adorned Russian Hill. The active Russian Hill Neighbors Association is working diligently to preserve this sense of neighborhood in the face of great economic and demographic changes, fighting against cottages being demolished and replaced with three- and four-story condominiums. Only about 38 cottages remain out of the 100 originally built. Russian Hill is a craggy, physically compact area. Jasper O’Farrell, the city surveyor, extended the street grid to Leavenworth in 1847. Somehow, working theoretically and on paper, he didn’t make allowance for the hills. As a result of the rectangular street configuration, the summit of Russian Hill became isolated. At Jones, a ladder was placed against the bluff to access the 1000 block of Vallejo. Broadway, Vallejo, and Green were impassable for horse teams. These features attracted people who des

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