Diamond Heights, San Francisco

Diamond Heights is a neighborhood in central San Francisco, California, roughly bordered by Diamond Heights Boulevard and Noe Valley to the north and east and Glen Canyon Park to the south and west.

Diamond Heights
Neighborhood of San Francisco
Diamond Heights and Glen Canyon Park
Diamond Heights
Location within Central San Francisco
Coordinates: 37.7457639°N 122.4416379°W / 37.7457639; -122.4416379
Government
  SupervisorRafael Mandelman[1]
  AssemblymemberDavid Chiu (D)[2]
  State SenatorScott Wiener (D)[2]
  U.S. HouseNancy Pelosi (D)[3]
Area
  Total1.13 km2 (0.436 sq mi)
  Land1.13 km2 (0.436 sq mi)
Population
  Total2,332
  Density2,064/km2 (5,345/sq mi)
 2008
ZIP Code
94131
Area codes415/628
[5]
Diamond Heights looking southeast

History

Diamond Heights was the first project of the San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association, intended to use its redevelopment powers for land on the hills in the center of the city to be developed with, rather than against, the topography. Few existing residents needed to be relocated for the redevelopment program, which included housing for a range of incomes, churches, schools, parks, and a commercial center.

This type of redevelopment came under the Community Redevelopment Law, passed in 1951, a codified version of the California Redevelopment Act that had passed in 1941.[6] Redevelopment in California ended on February 1, 2012, after the State Supreme Court ruled the Legislature could end the program on December 29, 2011.[7]

The Water Department appropriated more than $500,000 for a water system for the redevelopment.[8] The Board of Supervisors and Diamond Heights Property Owners' Association debated the "Diamond Heights Redevelopment Project Area B-1" plan. In 1955, alternative proposals to the supervisors' plan were presented in an effort to protect the property rights of existing property owners, and to give them preference to exchange their property for other sites. The Board rejected the motion to add these alternative plans to the legislation. The final plan was approved on October 24, 1955.[8]

1895 house at 70 Gold Mine Dr.

Some houses survived the redevelopment. A wood-frame house with separate garage stands at 70 Gold Mine Drive, just downhill from Diamond Heights Boulevard. According to the San Francisco Office of the Assessor, this house was built in 1895.[9]

Attractions and characteristics

Notable features of Diamond Heights include Diamond Heights Shopping Center on Diamond Heights Boulevard between Duncan Street and Gold Mine Drive and the San Francisco Police Department's police academy on Amber Drive between Turquoise Way and Duncan Street. St. Nicholas Orthodox Christian Church is at the top of Diamond Heights Boulevard, at the corner of Duncan Street. George Christopher Playground is located behind the shopping center, and Walter Haas Playground is at the intersection of Diamond Heights Boulevard and Addison Street.

Ruth Asawa School of the Arts high school and the San Francisco Juvenile Probation Department's Juvenile Justice Center are both just northwest of Diamond Heights, at the intersection of Portola and Woodside.

Public transportation in Diamond Heights is provided by Muni's 35 Eureka, 48 Quintara, and 52 Excelsior lines. All connect to the Muni Metro system; the 35 goes to Castro Street Station, the 48 goes to West Portal Station, and the 52 goes to Forest Hill Station. Additionally, the 35 and 52 connect to the Bay Area Rapid Transit system at the Glen Park Station.

gollark: Wyvern mostly does that too, except *this was an edge case*.
gollark: Turtlegistics is still in common use.
gollark: Besides, it is probably faster than most storage systems would be in the same situation. Except Artist, which is much better optimized.
gollark: 1. for some reason, it was turned on several times2. there were lots of NBT-having items so display name caching didn't work very well
gollark: It only lags lots in bizarre edge cases.

References

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