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Alta_Plaza Latitude and Longitude:

37°47′28″N 122°26′16″W / 37.7911733°N 122.4376698°W / 37.7911733; -122.4376698
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Alta Plaza Park
Alta Plaza park stairs
Alta Plaza Park is located in San Francisco County
Alta Plaza Park
TypeMunicipal park
LocationJackson & Steiner
Coordinates 37°47′28″N 122°26′16″W / 37.7911733°N 122.4376698°W / 37.7911733; -122.4376698 [1]
Area11.9 acres (4.8 ha) [1]
Established1888 (1888) [1]
Operated by San Francisco Recreation & Parks
Open5am to Midnight [1]

Alta Plaza Park is a public park in San Francisco, California and caps the top of the western edge of Pacific Heights. It falls under the jurisdiction of the city's Supervisorial District 2. [1] The park is served by several San Francisco Municipal Railway bus lines. It gets its name from the eponymous spring. [2]

Background

Alta Plaza consists of four square blocks at the top of Pacific Heights and overlooks much of San Francisco's Marina and Cow Hollow Districts, the Presidio, Fort Mason and Alcatraz. It is bordered by Jackson Street on the north, Clay Street to the south, and with Steiner and Scott Streets on its east and west edges, respectively. The plaza cuts off the east–west continuation of Washington Street and north–south continuation of Pierce Street. The plaza provides three hard surface tennis courts and a small playground in its center and has a large grass park on its northern half and terraced lawns on it southern half. [3]

The steps at Alta Plaza are featured in the 1972 film What's Up, Doc?. They were used without permission and were badly damaged during filming of the signature chase scene (in which a Volkswagen Beetle, a Yellow Cab, a black Cadillac Fleetwood limousine and a Cadillac DeVille Convertible all clumsily speed down the steps), and the damage can still be seen today. [3] [4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Alta Plaza Park". San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  2. ^ Kamiya, Gary. "A Walking Tour of San Francisco's Hidden Waters". San Francisco Magazine. Modern Luxury. Retrieved 2014-03-28.
  3. ^ a b "Alta Plaza Park". San Francisco Parks Alliance. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  4. ^ Gentile, Dan (November 30, 2021). "This SF-set '70s comedy permanently damaged a city landmark". SFGATE. Retrieved December 3, 2021.

External links