The Panhandle, San Francisco — Visitor Guide & Things to Do Nearby

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O The Panhandle

The Panhandle is one of San Francisco's oldest parks, born from an engineering experiment and a fight against urban sprawl. In 1870, the land that would become Golden Gate Park was nothing but shifting sand dunes. William Hammond Hall, the park's visionary designer, used the Panhandle as his testing ground, discovering that planting barley followed by sea bent grass mixed with yellow lupin could stabilize the sand enough to add soil and trees. The Panhandle's distinctive narrow shape has an unexpected origin. Golden Gate Park was originally designed as a solid rectangle extending all the way to Divisadero, but "singularly tenacious" squatters in Hayes Valley refused to leave. City officials had to compromise, resulting in the long, thin strip that gives the Panhandle its name. In the 1950s, freeway planners proposed driving a highway straight through the Panhandle. Citizens revolted. The Board of Supervisors voted against the project in 1959, and again in 1966, saving the park from becoming a concrete trench. The road through the Panhandle was eventually removed entirely. Today, every tree you see in the Panhandle is descended from Hall's original experiments. These are among the oldest trees in San Francisco, planted as part of the effort to transform barren dunes into livable city. Walking beneath their canopy, you are walking through a living laboratory that made Golden Gate Park possible. A Questo quest through this part of San Francisco connects the Panhandle with the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood and Golden Gate Park, tracing the story of how nature, stubbornness, and civic pride shaped the city.

Plan Your Visit

Address
Stanyan St & Fell St, San Francisco, CA 94117, United States

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The PanhandleQuest starting points

Explore The Panhandle with a Questo quest

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