Film_Locations_in_San_Francisco_fts

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Link rowid Title Production Company Director Writer ▲ Actor 1 Actor 2 Actor 3 Locations Fun Facts
1622 307 4 213 266 438 118   SF Chronicle Building (901 Mission St)  
1621 306 179 249 265 437 236 551    
1620 305 178 248 264 436     312 Fillmore Street  
1614 304 177 247 263 350 235 202 Former Hall of Justice (750 Kearny Street at Washington)  
1615 304 177 247 263 350 235 202 835-865 Market Street at 5th Street The Emporium, a department store, stood in this location. Bloomingdale's is now located here.
1616 304 177 247 263 350 235 202 819 Mason Street at Pine  
1617 304 177 247 263 350 235 202 772 Commercial Street at Kearney Called "Man Loh's Oriental Roof Garden" in the film.
1618 304 177 247 263 350 235 202 1801 Laguna at Bush  
1619 304 177 247 263 350 235 202 Cable Car Signal Box (California Street at Powell Street) SF Cable Cars are the only moving National Historical Landmark.
1590 302 104 246 262 58 46   Buena Vista Café (2765 Hyde Street)  
1591 302 104 246 262 58 46   Victor's Restaurant, The Westin St. Francis Hotel (335 Powell Street) The hotel was originally supposed to be named the Crocker Hotel, after Charles Founder the railroad magnate who founded it. However, the hotel took the name the St. Francis after one of the earliest Gold Rush hotels.
1592 302 104 246 262 58 46   Spring Valley School (1451 Jackson Street)  
1593 302 104 246 262 58 46   International Studies Academy (993 Vermont Street, Potrero Hill)  
1594 302 104 246 262 58 46   Grant Street at Pacific Avenue  
1595 302 104 246 262 58 46   Cybelle's Pizza (1000 Bush Street)  
1596 302 104 246 262 58 46   766 Vallejo Street at Stockton Street (North Beach)  
1597 302 104 246 262 58 46   1521 Masonic Avenue at Piedmont Street  
1583 301 38 245 261 434 233   St. Peter & Paul's Church (666 Filbert Street, Washington Square) Though Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio were not allowed to be married at the Church (DiMaggio had married his first wife at the Church but was divorced), the couple returned to the steps of the Church for photos, following their City Hall nuptials.
1584 301 38 245 261 434 233   San Francisco Hilton (333 O'Farrell Street)  
1585 301 38 245 261 434 233   Lombard Street between Hyde and Leavenworth  
1586 301 38 245 261 434 233   Hyde Street Pier  
1587 301 38 245 261 434 233   Chinatown First established in the mid-19th Century, SF's Chinatown is the oldest and largest Chinatown in the US.
1588 301 38 245 261 434 233   Alta Plaza Park (Steiner Street) The park was originally a rock quarry and served as a campground for many survivors of the 1906 earthquake. The site was converted to a park in 1910.
1589 301 38 245 261 434 233   22nd Avenue & Balboa Street (Richmond District)  
1582 300 175 244 260 433     Golden Gate National Recreation Area The size of the Recreation Area is over two and a half greater than that of the city and county of San Francisco.
1581 299 156 243 259 265 232   Treasure Island An artificial island, Treasure Island was created for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition, and is named after the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson, a one-time San Francisco resident.
1565 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Palace of Fine Arts (3301 Lyon Street) The original Palace was built for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, and completely destroyed in 1964. It was rebuilt in 1965.
1566 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 York Hotel (940 Sutter Street)  
1567 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 San Francisco Drydock (20th and Illinois Streets)  
1568 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Park Hill Sanatorium (351 Buena Vista Avenue East) This location is now a condominium complex.
1569 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Mission San Juan Bautista (2nd & Mariposa Streets)  
1570 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Mission Dolores (3321 16th Street, Mission District) Mission Dolores' official name is Mission San Francisco de Assis. It is the oldest building in San Francisco, built in 1791, and has survived two major earthquakes.
1571 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Gough & Eddy Streets (Western Addition)  
1572 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Fort Point (Presidio, Golden Gate National Recreation Area) Built in 1853, Fort Point is the only West Coast fort built by the Union Army. Though the Confederate army planned to attack San Francisco, the commanding Confederate general learned that the war had ended while end route to SF.
1573 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Fairmont Hotel (950 Mason Street, Nob Hill) In 1945 the Fairmont hosted the United Nations Conference on International Organization as delegates arrived to draft a charter for the organization. The U.S. Secretary of State, Edward Stettinius drafted the charter in the hotel's Garden Room.
1574 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Ernie's Restaurant (847 Montgomery Street) Called the "Essex Club" in the film.
1575 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Conservatory of Flowers (Golden Gate Park) The Conservatory, unveiled in 1879, is the oldest public conservatory in the Western Hemisphere.
1576 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Claude Lane at Bush Street  
1577 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 California Palace of the Legion of Honor (34th Avenue & Clement, Lincoln Park) Built in 1924, the Legion of Honor is a 3/4 replica of the Parisian Palais de la Legion d'Honneur.
1578 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 Brocklebank Apartments (1000 Mason Street)  
1579 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 900 Lombard Street Lombard Street is not actually the most crooked in SF. That honor goes to Potrero Hill's Vermont Street between 22nd and 23rd.
1580 298 174 81 258 432 231 106 1007 Gough Street Tennis courts now sit on the site; in the movie the structure was Carlota Valdes' home.
1559 297 173 242 257 431 230 549 Project Artaud (Florida Street)  
1560 297 173 242 257 431 230 549 Corona Heights Park  
1561 297 173 242 257 431 230 549 544 Natoma (SOMA)  
1562 297 173 242 257 431 230 549 422 Oak Street at Laguna  
1563 297 173 242 257 431 230 549 3567 18th Street  
1564 297 173 242 257 431 230 549 Under Highway 101 (near Potrero and Cesar Chavez Streets)  
1558 296 172 241 256 430     Tosca Café (242 Columbus Avenue, North Beach)  
1557 295 104 240 255 112 229   Mecca Restaurant (2029 Market Street)  
1546 294 171 239 254 429        
1545 293 170 127 253 113 228 548 City Hall The dome of SF's City Hall is almost a foot taller than that of the US Capitol Building. In 1954, Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe married at the Beaux Arts-style building.
1544 292 5 238 252 428 227      
1543 291 169 112 251 427 226 547    
1542 290 52 237 250 426 225      
1518 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Lombard & Laguna Streets (Marina District)  
1519 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Lombard & Fillmore Streets (Marina District)  
1520 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Lombard & Divisadero Streets (Marina District)  
1521 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Lombard & Broderick Streets (Marina District)  
1522 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Justin Herman Plaza  
1523 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Intersection of Fulton & 6th Streets (Chinatown)  
1524 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Intersection of California & Grant Streets (Richmond District)  
1525 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Hyatt Regency Hotel (5 Embarcadero Center)  
1526 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Huntington Park (California & Taylor Streets, Nob Hill) The mansion of Arabella Huntington, widow of railroad magnate Collis P. Huntington, was destroyed in the 1906 earthquake and fire. Mrs. Huntington the donated the land on which the park now stands to the city.
1527 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Golden Gate Park Golden Gate Park is similar in shape but 20% larger than New York's Central Park.
1528 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Golden Gate Bridge With 23 miles of ladders and 300,000 rivets in each tower, the Golden Gate Bridge was the world's longest span when it opened in 1937.
1529 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Ghirardelli Square (900 North Point Street, Fisherman's Wharf) In 1893, chocolatier Domingo Ghirardelli bought an entire city block to house the headquarters of Ghirardelli Chocolates.
1530 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Chestnut & Divisadero Streets (Marina District)  
1531 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 California Academy of Sciences (Golden Gate Park) Founded in 1853, 3 years after California joined the United States, the Academy was originally named the California Academy of Natural Sciences and was the first institution of its kind in the United States.
1532 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Broadway at Osgood Street (North Beach)  
1533 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 2340 Francisco Street  
1534 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 100 Block of Union Street (Cow Hollow)  
1535 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Old St. Mary's Church (660 California Street at Grant)  
1536 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 United Nations Plaza (Civic Center) United Nations Plaza was built in 1975 and across its walkways are white lines into which the preamble to the preamble of the UN charter is carved.
1537 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 SF General Hospital Center (1001 Potrero Avenue, Potrero Hill) SF General Hospital is the only Level I Trauma Center serving San Francisco and northern San Mateo County.
1538 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Palace of Fine Arts (3301 Lyon Street) The original Palace was built for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, and completely destroyed in 1964. It was rebuilt in 1965.
1539 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 One Embarcadero Center (Financial District)  
1540 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Merchant Exchange (465 California Street at Leidesdorff)  
1541 289 166 186 249 425 224 546 Marina Green (Marina District) Before the 1906 earthquake, the land on which Marina Green sits was a tidal marsh, and rubble from the earthquake was dumped on the site. However, the site was filled in to provide land for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exhibition.
1517 288 4 236 248 424 223 545    
1515 286 167 234 247 423 44      
1511 285 166 233 246 422 221   Postcard Row (Alamo Square, Hayes Valley) The 6 Victorian homes across from Alamo Square Park are among the few Victorians to survive the Great Fire.
1512 285 166 233 246 422 221   Brocklebank Apartments (1000 Mason Street)  
1513 285 166 233 246 422 221   Palace of Fine Arts (3301 Lyon Street) The original Palace was built for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, and completely destroyed in 1964. It was rebuilt in 1965.
1514 285 166 233 246 422 221   Montgomery Street at Union Street  
1503 284 165 232 245 421 220   Grace Cathedral Episcopal Church (1100 California Street) Grace Cathedral Episcopal Church is the West Coast's largest Episcopalian cathedral.
1504 284 165 232 245 421 220   The Music Concourse (Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive, Golden Gate Park) Golden Gate Park is similar in shape but 20% larger than New York's Central Park.
1505 284 165 232 245 421 220   Pleasant Street at Taylor  
1506 284 165 232 245 421 220   Pier 7 (The Embarcadero)  
1507 284 165 232 245 421 220   Montgomery Street at Union Street  
1508 284 165 232 245 421 220   Lincoln Park The land on which the park stands was a cemetery until the late 1860s.
1509 284 165 232 245 421 220   Japanese Tea Garden (Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive, Golden Gate Park) The Japanese Hagiwara family invented "Chinese" fortune cookies in the tea-garden
1510 284 165 232 245 421 220   City Hall The dome of SF's City Hall is almost a foot taller than that of the US Capitol Building. In 1954, Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe married at the Beaux Arts-style building.
1496 283 164 60 244 420 219 544 The Castro From 1910-1920 the Castro was called "Little Scandinavia" because of its high concentration of residents of Scandinavian ancestry.
1495 282 4 231 243 419 218 15 St. Peter & Paul's Church (666 Filbert Street, Washington Square) Exteriors of the church were used.
1494 281 93 230 242 418 217   Golden Gate National Recreation Area The size of the Recreation Area is over two and a half greater than that of the city and county of San Francisco.
1487 280 95 229 241 107 216   Palace of Fine Arts (3301 Lyon Street) The original Palace was built for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, and completely destroyed in 1964. It was rebuilt in 1965.
1488 280 95 229 241 107 216   The San Francisco Bay  
1489 280 95 229 241 107 216   New Russian Hill Market (1198 Pacific Avenue at Jones)  
1490 280 95 229 241 107 216   Fairmont Hotel (950 Mason Street, Nob Hill) In 1945 the Fairmont hosted the United Nations Conference on International Organization as delegates arrived to draft a charter for the organization. The U.S. Secretary of State, Edward Stettinius drafted the charter in the hotel's Garden Room.

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CREATE VIRTUAL TABLE "Film_Locations_in_San_Francisco_fts" USING FTS4 ("Title", "Production Company", "Director", "Writer", "Actor 1", "Actor 2", "Actor 3", "Locations", "Fun Facts", content="Film_Locations_in_San_Francisco");
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