November 2007
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The Lower Haight may be just six blocks east of Ashbury Street, but tourists won’t find a chapter on this inconspicuous neighborhood in Frommer’s. Nor will they find any Gap stores or boutiques selling $800 dresses. Here in the center of the city, the news is that while seemingly every other commercial strip in town is replacing bohemian grit with bourgeois gloss, the Lower Haight isn’t, making it the perfect home for those who still hanker for old-fashioned urban pioneering. “It’s now San Francisco’s version of New York’s East Village,” says 14-year Lower Haight resident Rob Bregoff.
It helps that the area has gotten safer, thanks in large part to the efforts of one visionary entrepreneur, Matt Revelli. In 2000, Revelli opened the first of five Upper Playground stores—all non-glitzy shops featuring clothing or furniture designed by local artists—and, along with other watchdogs, started chasing the druggies and loiterers off their stoops and out of the neighborhood. Today, city officials have also joined the crime watch, beefing up foot patrols and installing surveillance cameras on Haight and Webster Streets.
Add to these initiatives a smattering of intimate, independent new stores and restaurants, and you have the makings of a hood that offers young professionals and creatives on-the-edge urbanity (sans mugging). And many in the neighborhood feel confident it can retain that identity. “With small businesses and a wide range of people, it’s is one of the last pockets that feels like San Francisco,” says Revelli. “It’s an independent-thinking neighborhood.”
Like a genuine Parisian café (sans the rude waiter), Café du Soleil offers capp-uccinos, French wine, and open-face sand-wiches in its living room–style corner space. 200 FILLMORE ST.
Once the go-to place for all-out sweaty dancing, Nickies is now a classy lounge with DJs playing nightly—but, like most bars in this neighbor-hood, it sells no hard liquor. 466 HAIGHT ST.
WHAT IT COSTS
To buy…$700,000
for a one-bedroom, 821-square-foot unit with a parking space at 645 HAIGHT ST.
To rent…$1,550 for a one-bedroom, one-bath apartment at 525 HAIGHT ST.
THE TALK
Since UC Berkeley Extension aban-doned its former San Francisco campus in 2003, the five buildings taking up an entire city block have stood empty, witnesses to drug use and car break-ins. Berkeley wanted to demolish two buildings to build rental housing, LGBT-friendly senior housing, a park, and a community center. The neighbors were mostly in favor of the plan, but city preservationists who were attached to the historical buildings stalled the project. The supervisors finally ended the fighting by assigning landmark status to three of the five lots and allowing the developer to move forward with the other two, which will break
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