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  Worldvisitguide > Places > San Francisco > Streets, avenues > Union Square
Union Square
Section 8 on 8

San Francisco
Streets, avenues

Area related : San Francisco

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Union Square is the central shopping, hotel and theater district in San Francisco, California.
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History   
While Union Square proper dates from the United States Civil War era, the park has undergone many notable changes: the 1906 San Francisco earthquake leveled most of the buildings that surrounded it, a large underground parking garage was installed in the early 1940s and relocated the park's lawns, shrubs and landmark statuary to the garage "roof," and in the 1990s, the square was remodeled again to create more paved surfaces (for easier maintenance) with outdoor cafes. Union Square today retains its role as the ceremonial "heart" of San Francisco, serving as the site of many public concerts, impromptu protests, speeches by visiting dignitaries, and the annual Christmas tree and Menorah. Two cable car lines pass the Square on Powell Street, and public views of the park can be had from such high places as the St. Francis Hotel tower, the Sir Francis Drake Hotel, Macy's top floor, and the Grand Hyatt hotel.

Union Square has also come to describe not only the immediate vicinity of the park but the general shopping, dining and theater sub-districts within the surrounding blocks. The Geary and Curran theaters one block west on Geary anchor the "theater district" and border the Tenderloin. Union Square is also home to San Francisco's Half-Priced Ticket Booth. Run by Theatre Bay Area, tickets for most of San Francisco's performing arts can be purchased the day of the performance at a discounted rate.

At the end of Powell Street two blocks south, where the cable cars turn around beside Hallidie Plaza at Market Street, is a growing retail corridor that leads to the Yerba Buena Gardens, with its own arts and entertainment centers, more large hotels, the Moscone Convention Center and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Also south of Market and near Yerba Buena Gardens is the historic United States Mint Building, built in 1874 of granite: a rare survivor of the 1906 quake. Nob Hill, with its grand mansions, apartment buildings and hotels, stands to the northwest of Union Square. This area is also home to some of the most upscale luxury hotels in San Francisco.

To the north is Chinatown, with its gate at Grant Avenue and Bush Street, one of the largest Chinese communities outside Asia.

The city's historic "French Quarter" runs east along Bush Street and tucks into the alleys of Belden Place and Claude near the French Consulate and the landmark Notre-Dame-des-Victoires Church. This area was the home to the city's first French settlers, who, according to historian Gladys Hansen, were most sympathetic of the housing and employment needs of the Chinese settlers in the nascent days of Chinatown and shared Dupont Street (now Grant Street) as a business address - a tolerance that was only tested, according to Alexandre Dumas in A Gil Blas in California (1852), when Chinese cooks began to tamper with French cuisine. The cafes, hotels and restaurants of the French Quarter today maintain a distinct joie de vivre befitting the Quarter's heritage. Every year, the area is the site of the boisterous Bastille Day celebration, the nation's largest, and Bush Street is temporarily re-named Buisson.

Directly east of the Square is Maiden Lane, a narrow alley of exclusive shops and cafes that leads to the Financial District and boasts San Francisco's only building designed by Frank Lloyd Wright - most notable for being the predecessor for New York City's Guggenheim Museum.

From Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Square%2C_San_Francisco
Text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License
Description   
Its name is derived from the one-block park situated between Post, Geary, Powell and Stockton Streets, but its importance as the largest collection of large department stores, swank boutiques, tourist trinket shops and salons in the Western United States continues to make Union Square a major visitor draw and downtown San Francisco a vital, cosmopolitan place. Grand hotels and small inns, and repertory, off-Broadway and single-act theaters contribute to the area's dynamic, 24-hour character.

Besides the cable cars, Union Square is served by numerous trolley and bus lines and the F Market streetcar. The Muni Metro and BART subway systems both serve the area at nearby Powell Street Station.
Site's content    

Robert Ingersoll Aitken (1878-1949)
Memorial statue celebrating Admiral Dewey's victory over the Spanish Navy during the Spanish-American War
Colonne
Dimensions : 27 m high
1903

Google Maps
Map and view by satellite of Union Square
Photo by satellite

xyz
Lamp
Eclairage
Mobilier urbain et de jardin
Macy's
Grand magasin
Niketown
Boutique
Saks Fifth Avenue
Grand magasin
The Westin St. Francis
Hôtel de luxe
Tiffany & Co
Boutique de luxe
Commerces de luxe
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