Lombard Street (San Francisco, California)
USA /
California /
San Francisco /
San Francisco, California
World
/ USA
/ California
/ San Francisco
World / United States / California
street, interesting place, tourist attraction
San Francisco famously boasts some of the steepest streets in the country. Whether you’re walking or driving, the varying gradient of the road is sure to catch your attention and give your heart rate a healthy boost. Lombard Street is one of the most unique of the vertically endowed roads and is a great stop to add to any itinerary.
Lombard Street in San Francisco is one of America's crookedest streets and found on many tours. The steep, hilly street was created with sharp curves to switchback down the one-way hill past beautiful Victorian mansions. If not for the byzantine curves, easing out this treacherous slope, people could be killed rolling down. For an idea of how steep this street really is, go two blocks up, to Filbert Street and peer down over the ridge. Lombard is even steeper.
Some of San Francisco’s most expensive real estate sits on Lombard Street. This Russian Hill neighborhood possesses stately mansions even with the endless array of tourists pouring down the street every day. In the spring and through the entire summer, Lombard Street is alive with color, as the many beautiful flowers are in bloom.
People are often puzzled as to why this street is so crooked. The answer is safety. The naturally steep grade of the street posed a severe safety hazard. In the 1920’s a property owner in the area suggested the scenic switchbacks to add aesthetic appeal while increasing safety for pedestrians.
See also, Vermont Street wikimapia.org/#y=37758419&x=-122403866&z=18&l=0&m=a
Vermont St. (below 20th St.) has 7 turns while Lombard St. (below Hyde St.) has 8 turns.
Lombard Street in San Francisco is one of America's crookedest streets and found on many tours. The steep, hilly street was created with sharp curves to switchback down the one-way hill past beautiful Victorian mansions. If not for the byzantine curves, easing out this treacherous slope, people could be killed rolling down. For an idea of how steep this street really is, go two blocks up, to Filbert Street and peer down over the ridge. Lombard is even steeper.
Some of San Francisco’s most expensive real estate sits on Lombard Street. This Russian Hill neighborhood possesses stately mansions even with the endless array of tourists pouring down the street every day. In the spring and through the entire summer, Lombard Street is alive with color, as the many beautiful flowers are in bloom.
People are often puzzled as to why this street is so crooked. The answer is safety. The naturally steep grade of the street posed a severe safety hazard. In the 1920’s a property owner in the area suggested the scenic switchbacks to add aesthetic appeal while increasing safety for pedestrians.
See also, Vermont Street wikimapia.org/#y=37758419&x=-122403866&z=18&l=0&m=a
Vermont St. (below 20th St.) has 7 turns while Lombard St. (below Hyde St.) has 8 turns.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lombard_Street,_San_Francisco
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 37°48'7"N 122°25'7"W
- 7th Street 10 km
- Boulevard Lane 1073 km
- The Lettered Streets 1220 km
- 0 (zero) Avenue 1247 km
- Robson Street 1280 km
- 8th Street business district 2011 km
- Meridian/K-96/I-235 Interchange 2196 km
- Lázaro Cárdenas 2511 km
- Magazine Street 3093 km
- Canal Street 3096 km
- Russian Hill 0.2 km
- George Sterling Park 0.2 km
- North Beach Place 0.5 km
- Broadway Tunnel 0.7 km
- Fisherman's Wharf 0.7 km
- North Beach 0.9 km
- Polk Gulch 1.1 km
- Telegraph Hill 1.1 km
- Chinatown 1.4 km
- San Francisco Bay 16 km
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