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There’s an incredibly old fish in the Steinhart Aquarium The California Academy of Sciences complete with living roof seen from the Hamon Observation Tower at the de Young Museum in San Francisco.
#DISCOUNTS ON BOOK NAMED THE SECRETS OF UNDERGROUND MEDICINE FULL#
(Hear the full story on the tour and see the remains of Sweeny Observatory, still visible more than 115 years after its demise.) William Hammond Hall, one of the original park designers, was quoted in The Chronicle saying, “apparently a higher power has taken matters into his own hands.” The observatory on Strawberry Hill was destroyed by the 1906 earthquake, and park leaders were openly happy about the turn of events. Sweeny built Sweeny Observatory in 1891 at Golden Gate Park’s highest point near Stow Lake, paying in cash so no one could protest his fortress-like structure that ruined some of the best views in the park.
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Mother nature is the harshest architecture critic: Scroll down for a few highlights from Secrets of Golden Gate Park.Ī woman walks her dog past the site of the former Sweeny Observatory atop Strawberry Hill inside Golden Gate Park. To purchase the tour, visit For the best tour experience, you’ll need comfy shoes, a well-charged phone and a pair of headphones.
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Click here to access your discounted promo code before purchase. You can also check out The Chronicle’s other audio tour, Unfolding the Financial District: Design adventures in San Francisco’s Hub with Chronicle Urban Design Critic John King.Įach tour is available for $6.99 and exclusively $3.99 for all Chronicle subscribers. Share your photos from the tour with Hartlaub and Knight on social media, and follow the Total SF podcast to hear announcements for live events - where Hartlaub and Knight may show up on the tour route to offer more Golden Gate Park history and give away prizes. Your guides’ voices will be in your headphones, like they’re along for the hike, and as you move, the audio moves with you, so you’ll always know when to turn and where to go. Parkgoers ride a paddle boat at Stow Lake in Golden Gate Park. People taking the tour will hike 2.6 miles past the de Young Museum, California Academy of Sciences and Conservatory of Flowers - with stops at the AIDS Memorial Grove, atop scenic Strawberry Hill at Stow Lake and a few spots that aren’t in the guidebooks. Secrets of Golden Gate Park gets a boost from VoiceMap, an audio tour app that uses GPS so the narration moves with you as you walk.
#DISCOUNTS ON BOOK NAMED THE SECRETS OF UNDERGROUND MEDICINE ARCHIVE#
Join Culture Critic Peter Hartlaub and Columnist Heather Knight, the team behind Total SF, as they share their love for exploring San Francisco, while scouring the San Francisco Chronicle archive for the best stories that no one is talking about. It’s an entertaining hike through Golden Gate Park for natives, newcomers and tourists alike. You’ll find all of the above on Secrets of Golden Gate Park, one of The Chronicle’s new GPS based audio tours reported and hosted by Chronicle journalists and published on the VoiceMap app. The story of Golden Gate Park is also the story of arrogant tycoons humbled by natural disasters, gunfire and graft, a city that honors its fallen and one giant stuffed 150-year-old grizzly bear (that happens to be on the California flag). Golden Gate Park is a serene oasis in San Francisco, filled with museums, lakes, bison, a Ferris wheel and more than a thousand acres of meadows, redwood groves and curated gardens - all told 20% larger than New York’s Central Park.īut it didn’t get this way without some drama. Jessica Christian/The Chronicle Show More Show Less Kennedy Drive inside Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. Pedestrians and cyclists share car-free John F. Jessica Christian/The Chronicle Show More Show Less 3 of3 Runners make their way past the Conservatory of Flowers inside Golden Gate Park. Jessica Christian/The Chronicle Show More Show Less 2 of3 The view looking out from the Conservatory of Flowers steps toward Sutro Tower inside Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.