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| Lombard Street | |||||||||
| Maintained by S.F. D.P.W. | |||||||||
| West end: | Presidio Boulevard | ||||||||
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| Major junctions: |
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| East end: | The Embarcadero | ||||||||
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Lombard Street is an east-west street in San Francisco, California. It is famous for having a steep, one-block section that consists of tight hairpin turns.
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Route description
Lombard Street begins at Presidio Boulevard inside The Presidio and runs east through the Cow Hollow neighborhood. For 12 blocks between Broderick Street and Van Ness Avenue, it is a principal arterial road that is co-signed as U.S. Route 101. Lombard Street then continues through the Russian Hill and Telegraph Hill neighborhoods, breaks off at a point becoming Telegraph Hill Boulevard. That leads to Pioneer Park and Coit Tower. Lombard Street starts again at Winthrop Street and finally terminates at The Embarcadero as a collector road.[2]
Lombard Street is best known for the one-way[3] section on Russian Hill between Hyde and Leavenworth Streets, in which the roadway has eight sharp turns (or switchbacks) that have earned the street the distinction of being "the crookedest [most winding] street in the world" (though this title is contested - see below). The switchbacks design, first suggested by property owner Carl Henry[citation needed] and instituted in 1922,[4] was born out of necessity in order to reduce the hill's natural 27% grade,[citation needed] which was too steep for most vehicles to climb. It is also a serious hazard to pedestrians, who are accustomed to a more reasonable sixteen-degree incline. The crooked section of the street, which is about 1/4 mile (400 m) long, is reserved for one-way traffic traveling east (downhill) and is paved with red bricks. The speed limit in this section is a mere 5 mph (8 km/h).
In 1999, a Crooked Street Task Force was created to try to solve traffic problems in the neighborhoods around the winding section of Lombard Street. In 2001, the Task Force decided that it would not be legal to permanently close the block to vehicular traffic. Instead, the Task Force decided to institute a summer parking ban in the area, to bar eastbound traffic on major holidays, and to increase fines for parking in the area. The Task Force also proposed the idea of using minibuses to ferry sightseers to the famous block, although residents debated the efficiency of such a solution, since one of the attractions of touring the area is driving along the twisting section of the street.
The Powell-Hyde cable car line stops at the top of this block.
Famous past residents of Lombard Street include Rowena Meeks Abdy[citation needed], an early California painter who worked in the style of Impressionism.
In his film Vertigo (1958), Alfred Hitchcock chose to make 900 Lombard Street the home of John "Scottie" Ferguson.
The street, and the difficulty of driving it, is parodied in the Bill Cosby sketch "Driving in San Francisco" on the album Why Is There Air? (recorded in Las Vegas):
- "They built a street up there called Lombard Street that goes straight down, and they're not satisfied with you killing yourself that way—they put grooves and curves and everything in it, and they put flowers there where they've buried the people that have killed themselves. Lombard Street, wonderful street." (audience reacts with knowing cheers and applause).
It was also included in the comic car chase scene in Peter Bogdanovich's film What's Up, Doc? (1972) starring Barbra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal.
In the Monk episode "Mr. Monk and the Garbage Strike" in which Adrian Monk proposes burning down all of San Francisco due to a garbage strike, he suggests that "we can even straighten up Lombard Street while we're at it."
See also
- 49-Mile Scenic Drive
- Lombard banking, after which the street was named
- Other streets claimed to be the crookedest in the world:
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- Vermont Street, between 20th and 22nd Streets in the Potrero Hill neighborhood and near San Francisco General Hospital[5]. It has seven turns instead of eight, but its hill is steeper than Lombard's. Vermont Street is in a much less picturesque area than Lombard Street.
- Snake Alley in Burlington, Iowa, once recognized by Ripley's Believe It or Not! as "The Crookedest Street in the World".
Major intersections
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This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this section if you can. (August 2008) |
| This section contains a table that is missing mileposts for one or more junctions. Please help by adding the missing mileposts. |
- Note: Except where prefixed with a letter, postmiles were measured in 1964, based on the alignment as it existed at that time, and do not necessarily reflect current mileage.
The entire route is in San Francisco.
| Postmile [6][7][8] |
Destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Presidio Boulevard | ||
| West end of US 101 overlap | ||
| East end of US 101 overlap | ||
| Gap in route | ||
| The Embarcadero | Former SR 480 | |
References
- ^ a b Saperstein, Susan. "Lombard Street". http://www.sfcityguides.org/public_guidelines.html?article=1012&submitted=TRUE&srch_text=&submitted2=&topic=Neighborhoods. Retrieved 2009-12-06.
- ^ The location of Lombard Street in San Francisco, Google Maps.
- ^ Lombard Street, AOL local.
- ^ An Honestly Crooked Street, via Magazine, September 2001.
- ^ "Lombard Street at aviewoncities.com". http://www.aviewoncities.com/sf/lombardstreet.htm. Retrieved 2009-08-27.
- ^ California Department of Transportation, State Truck Route List (XLS file), accessed February 2008
- ^ California Department of Transportation, Log of Bridges on State Highways, July 2007
- ^ California Department of Transportation, All Traffic Volumes on CSHS, 2005 and 2006
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Lombard Street |
- Lombard Street view from Telegraph Hill, with Candyland promotional striping, August 2009
- http://www.sfcityguides.org/public_guidelines.html?article=1012&submitted=TRUE&srch_text=&submitted2=&topic=Neighborhoods
Coordinates: 37°48′07″N 122°25′08″W / 37.802°N 122.419°W
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