Welcome to park city

The Presidio is suddenly a neighborhood of 4,650 workers and residents, yet it defends its wild places more fiercely than ever.

Barbara Tannenbaum

presidio san francisco

When George Lucas’s Letterman Digital Arts Center took over 23 acres of the Presidio in 2005, it stoked a controversy that had been simmering for years. While some had feared that development would blight the area’s natural beauty, others pointed out the park had to woo tenants to eventually become self-sufficient.

As it turned out, the center took pains to preserve green space and blend in architecturally with the existing buildings, but other bones of contention soon cropped up. Proposals now under consideration by the Presidio Trust—and raising hackles among preservationists—include 230 apartment units to be built near Lake Street and a museum honoring Walt Disney. Ironically, the trust has also taken flak for its own preservationist tendencies, most recently for considering the idea of shutting down a couple of athletic fields to help restore the creek that runs underneath.

Regardless of whether you view the trust as a benign steward or an indifferent landlord, its success at transforming former U.S. Army barracks into multiuse rental units is what has enabled park managers to turn their attention back to their raison d’être—restoring the wilderness within the city. With the rent money from its various tenants, the park can afford to undertake projects such as replanting 300 acres with Monterey cypress and pines and restoring the 270-acre Tennessee Hollow watershed. Now frequented by hardy dog walkers, Tennessee Hollow is bound to become one of the park’s top destinations for nature lovers of all stripes.

THE TALK
With 225 corporate and nonprofit tenants and 2,650 residential renters, the Presidio Trust has become a major landlord, and some residents have complained that it’s not responsive enough to plumbing problems and the like. Renters everywhere voice similar complaints, but Presidio dwellers, who live on federal land, lack the protection of S.F. rent control laws when disputes arise. For other residents, though, the national park’s beauty outweighs such concerns.

WHAT IT COSTS

…to rent: $2,150 for a two-bedroom, one-bathroom house in the Quarry neighborhood.
…to buy: $6.5 million for a five-bedroom, 6,200-square-foot Georgian home at 2600 Lyon St. (across from the Presidio).

THE GRUB

Curbside Too, an intimate bistro just outside the Lombard Gate, serves delicious New York steaks with green peppercorn sauce; a small but superb wine list complements its French fare. 2769 Lombard St.

Housed in a 100-year-old building jazzed up by designer Olle Lundberg, the Presidio Social Club, slated to open in December, will be an elegant 150-seat restaurant featuring steak, chops, oysters, and cocktails. Diners on the veranda will gaze out at the forest and the bay. 563 Ruger St.

At the casual Perk Presidio Café, dog walkers and digital artists linger over smoothies, lattes, and shots of wheatgrass, carrot, or

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