SoMa: Difference between revisions

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== Reserve #2 ==
== Reserve #2 ==
The city’s second M-T Sector is in SoMa, short for
South of Market (Street), which runs along the northwestern
side. The sector also borders 2nd and 8th streets to the
northeast and southwest and Brannan to the northwest and
southeast. It includes the Greyhound bus station, Moscone
Convention Center and many hotels, theaters and other
amusements to keep potential vessels passing through.
Historically, the SoMa neighborhood was industrial
rather than residential, and its history manifests in the
building facades along its streets. Unlike the Victorian
row houses characterizing most other San Francisco
neighborhoods, SoMa’ s streets are cluttered by enormous,
featureless warehouses and rehabbed factory buildings.
While SoMa hasn’t actually been an industrial area in
decades, it still maintains that feel. In recent years, many
of the district’s buildings became nightclubs, sex clubs
and offices for the dot-com boom. Since the Internet
frenzy went bust, however, many of these buildings sit
vacant, providing fertile incubating grounds for the city’s
social ills: drug manufacture and distribution, snuff film
production and assorted gang-related crimes.


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Revision as of 00:45, 15 July 2022

Neighborhoods of San Francisco

SF - SoMa.png

Reserve #2

The city’s second M-T Sector is in SoMa, short for South of Market (Street), which runs along the northwestern side. The sector also borders 2nd and 8th streets to the northeast and southwest and Brannan to the northwest and southeast. It includes the Greyhound bus station, Moscone Convention Center and many hotels, theaters and other amusements to keep potential vessels passing through.

Historically, the SoMa neighborhood was industrial rather than residential, and its history manifests in the building facades along its streets. Unlike the Victorian row houses characterizing most other San Francisco neighborhoods, SoMa’ s streets are cluttered by enormous, featureless warehouses and rehabbed factory buildings.

While SoMa hasn’t actually been an industrial area in decades, it still maintains that feel. In recent years, many

of the district’s buildings became nightclubs, sex clubs and offices for the dot-com boom. Since the Internet frenzy went bust, however, many of these buildings sit vacant, providing fertile incubating grounds for the city’s social ills: drug manufacture and distribution, snuff film production and assorted gang-related crimes.