49-Mile Scenic Drive
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The 49-Mile Scenic Drive (also known as 49-Mile Drive) in and around San Francisco highlights many of the city's major attractions and historic structures.
Opened on September 14, 1938 as a promotion for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition, it features views of the then-newly-built Golden Gate Bridge (opened May 1937) and the Bay Bridge (opened November 1936). Then it terminated at the fairgrounds on Treasure Island. Originally the drive measured 50 miles (80 km) but that was quickly changed to 49 (79 km), a more meaningful number for a city of 49 square miles (130 km2) that owes its early prominence to the gold rush of 1849.
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[edit] Points of interest
The Drive is marked by blue and white signs that lead one through the city. It all begins at the intersection of Hayes Street and Van Ness Avenue, near City Hall:
- Civic Center
- Asian Art Museum
- Museum of Modern Art (MOMA)
- Japantown
- Union Square
- Chinatown
- Nob Hill
- Cable Car Barn
- Transamerica Pyramid
- North Beach
- Pier 39
- Fisherman's Wharf
- Alcatraz
- The Cannery
- Ghirardelli Square
- Aquatic Park
- Lombard Street
- Marina Green
- Crissy Field
- Palace of Fine Arts - (Exploratorium)
- The Presidio
- Golden Gate Bridge
- Fort Point
- Baker Beach
- Legion of Honor
- Richmond District
- Lincoln Park
- Sutro Baths (ruins)
- Great Highway
- San Francisco State University
- Golden Gate Park
- Haight-Ashbury
- Twin Peaks
- Castro District
- Mission Dolores
- AT&T Park
- Bay Bridge
- The Embarcadero
- Financial District
- Moscone Center
[edit] In popular culture
In the movie Quick Change, Randy Quaid is driving Geena Davis and Bill Murray through one of the boroughs of New York City. They get completely lost and begin looking for any type of sign that may help them find out where they are. Quaid's character eventually does discover one, a "49-Mile Scenic Drive" sign, which doesn't help him or his passengers find out where they are at all.
[edit] Maintenance of the Route
Since 1955, seagull-emblazoned '49-Mile Scenic Drive' signs are meant to guide travelers through the entire route, but signs for many turns are missing presumably due to theft.
[edit] External links
- Official Route of 49-Mile Drive
- Map of 49-Mile Drive (PDF - 21MB)
- Map of original 1938 route
- More detailed driving map from Google
- Slightly modified version of 49-Mile Drive, motorcycle-centric, with various mapping files.
- Article in The SF Chronicle on the history of the 49 Mile Drive.