|

View The Marina Real Estate Listings
With spectacular views of the Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz, and the
Bay, the Marina is one of the most scenic and user-friendly neighborhoods
in the city. Thanks to its many amenities – museums, shops, restaurants,
and a grassy flat stretch of land perfect for kite flying, running, or
sunning – the Marina is desirable real estate. The side streets
are lined with cozy old-fashioned flats distinguished by art deco design.
Crissy Field: In a relatively short period of time -- 1921 to 2001 --
Crissy Field has been transformed from one of the country's most important
and active military airstrips into an abandoned stretch of crumbling
asphalt into the recent crowning achievement of the Golden Gate National
Parks Association. With over $34 million in grants and donations (the
vast majority were private gifts under $100), the GGNPA has fulfilled
its vision of creating a space that synthesizes recreational public
space with environmental restoration. Walkers and joggers have embraced
the field's shoreline path, known as the Golden Gate Promenade, and
on sunny days, kids, picnickers and Frisbee enthusiasts blanket the
grassy 28-acre expanse. Cyclists have their own bike-only path, and,
when the wind is good, world-class sailboarders can be seen skipping
and soaring across the water. On the environmental end, huge portions
of Crissy Field's original airstrip have been pulled up to allow for
the attempted restoration of 20 acres of original tidal marshland.
So far, the effort looks promising; for the first time in 60 years,
some native animals are timidly beginning to show their faces in the
area. The Crissy Field Conservation Center is a progressive, multicultural
community environmental center providing various programs addressing
the wide range of issues and concerns Crissy Field faces as a park
straddling urban and environmental boundaries. (GGNPA Web site)
Fort Mason: Like Crissy Field, Fort Mason is a former military enclave
now protected under the auspices of the Golden Gate National Parks
Association. Visitors will most likely want to focus on the lower
buildings and piers,
officially know as Fort Mason Center. The center provides a wealth
of cultural and educational societies, museums and nonprofits, including
but not limited to the San Francisco African American Historical and
Cultural Society, the Museum of Craft and Folk Art and the Museu ItaloAmericano.
Fort Mason hosts numerous performances, festivals and exhibits throughout
the year, so be sure to check the calendar at www.fortmason.org or
call
(415) 441-3400 before you go. (Fort Mason Hostel)
Palace of Fine Arts: Created as the landmark building for the 1915
Panama-Pacific International Exposition, the Palace of Fine Arts
is indisputably the
Marina's (if not all of San Francisco's) architectural grand dame.
Though the structure was specifically designed to honor the completion
of the
Panama Canal (and was intended to be temporary), its construction
and the exposition itself were symbols to city residents and to the
world
that San Francisco had overcome -- and in fact risen above -- the
catastrophe of the 1906 earthquake and its consuming fire. Today
the Palace of
Fine Arts is home to one of the city's most beloved museums, the
Exploratorium, which hosts more than 600 science and art exhibits,
including the Tactile
Dome, an experiential maze designed to disorient the senses. Call
ahead to find out about special events and exhibits. 3601 Lyon St.,
(415)
397-5673.
(Exploratorium Web site; The Palace of Fine Arts: A Brief History
of the Exploratorium's Home)
|