Our culture’s reliance on the automobile has compromised our personal health, community cohesion, and the local and global environment. San Francisco’s compact and walkable scale, its dense, urbane, and mixed-use neighborhoods, and its extensive public transit allow one-third of San Francisco households to live without an automobile. Livable City is dedicated to making San Francisco a better city to live in without a car by prioritizing pedestrians, cyclists, and transit riders, making San Francisco’s dense and transit-oriented neighborhoods greener and safer from traffic, and supporting the creation and revitalization of walkable neighborhoods with good public transit service, a range of housing choices that includes car-free housing, and neighborhood-serving businesses and services.

Critical Mass San Francisco 2005
Critical Mass San Francisco 2005

Past Successes

Downtown: In 2006 Livable City sponsored a groundbreaking Downtown planning reform that allows car-free housing, requires that downtown buildings line streets with active, pedestrian-oriented uses, and protected important pedestrian, bicycle, and transit streets in the downtown, including Market Street, from new driveways.

Bicycle parking and car sharing: Livable City sponsored legislation in 2006 that requires that all new residential buildings provide secure bicycle parking, and that all residential buildings over a certain size provide spaces for car-sharing.

Transbay and Rincon Hill: In 2005, The city adopted the Transbay and Rincon Hill plans, the first neighborhood plans no minimum parking requirements, provisions for bicycle parking and car-sharing in every large project, and plans bicycle-and pedestrian-friendly streets.

Support exemplary car-free projects: Livable City has supported car-free exemplary car-free projects, like 333 Grant Street and 25 Lusk Street, at the Planning Commission.

Current Campaigns

Complete neighborhoods
Livable City is engaged with planning efforts across the city, working to ensure that these plans include improved public transit, complete streets that support walking and cycling, parks, open spaces, and community facilities like schools, libraries, and childcare, and that they allow a range of affordable housing choices, including car-free housing.

Car-Free Spaces

Car-Free Culture

Join the Discussion

The CarFreeLiving listserv: We sponsor this unmoderated email discussion list to foster creative discussion and debate about the movement to reduce our dependence on cars. Email us to subscribe.

Future campaigns

Car-free living guide: Develop resource guide, online or in print, to promote car-free living, and emphasize benefits (health, environment, financial).

Get in Touch

Staff Directory

Darin Ow-Wing, Executive Director
[email protected]

Jessica Tovar, Program Director
[email protected]

Sally Chen, Deputy Director
[email protected]

Tom Radulovich, Senior Policy Fellow
[email protected]

Isaac Santiago, Sunday Streets Program Manager [email protected]

Reina Terry, Program & Development Associate, reina@livablecity.org