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Mark your calendars: Virtual happenings & Neighborhood street openings

VIRTUAL HAPPENINGS

Healthy Living
Saturday, September 26th  |  Livable City Facebook page @ 11 AM | Set reminder

Healthy Living is our virtual wellness series on Saturdays.
Open to all levels and it does not require any equipment, except making time to take care of yourself!
Let’s take care of ourselves, and stay healthy. (Available in English, and Spanish)



We look forward to socially-distant see you all and get some much needed fresh air. This weekend’s Neighborhood Street Openings:

STREET OPENINGS

CHINATOWN
San Francisco Chinatown Walkway Weekends
— Extended through Dec. 2020
11 AM – 5 PM.
Grant Ave. between California and Washington | Facebook event page

San Francisco Chinatown’s iconic Grant Avenue will be closed off to traffic and cars for a pleasant open walkway every weekend from July through September. Enjoy a historic street stroll, outdoor dining, and an Asian shopping experience. Chinatown is open for business!
• Masks and social distancing requirements will be in place.


STREET OPENINGS

TENDERLOIN
PlayStreets Tenderloin
Saturdays 10 AM – 4 PM.
On Turk street, between Jones and Leavenworth.

Enjoy a safe and open space to play, stretch the legs, and have some fun at Play Streets this Saturday! See you at the 200 block of Turk (between Jones/ Leavenworth) from 10 AM – 4 PM.
• Masks and social distancing requirements will be in place.

https://www.facebook.com/TLCBD/posts/10157874957138090

STREET OPENINGS | COMING SOON: Sundays in October

EXCELSIOR
Sunday Streets Excelsior Pop-Up
Sundays in October, Starting Oct. 4th | 12 PM – 5 PM.
Onondaga Ave. b/t Alemany Blvd. & Mission St. | Facebook event page

Enjoy your lunch outside! Free Covid-19 Resources and open space for families.

• Masks and social distancing requirements will be in place.


STREET OPENINGS: COMING SOON (October)

SOMA
Sunday Streets SOMA Pop-Up
Starting Oct. 4th , 11 AM – 4 PM. | Facebook event page

We will turn Folsom Street between 6th and 8th Streets into a temporary car-free open space for residents and businesses to use every Sunday in October, from 11 AM – 4 PM.. Kultivate Lab’s joins Livable City on Folsom St with their popular program UNDISCOVERED.
• Masks and social distancing requirements will be in place.

The Best Parts of San Francisco: Excelsior District

When looking at the historical and cultural footprint of San Francisco, the focus is usually on places like Fisherman’s Wharf, the Painted Ladies, or the infamous crooked Lombard Street. From postcards to movies, magazines, and blogs, the city is portrayed as a playground for the wealthy. 

However, locals know that the best parts of San Francisco are not typically found in tourist destinations. Even before the pandemic hit, local merchants worked tirelessly to encourage people to pivot from spending their dollars at major department stores, chain restaurants, and corporate grocery stores. What local merchants want is for people to take a chance on their businesses. Among the best parts of San Francisco, where you can find around 500 small businesses within 5 miles, is the Excelsior District.

The Excelsior District is known for its authentic ethnic restaurants. It has the most service industry businesses in San Francisco, such as beauty salons and barbershops. Most of the companies are Latinx and Asian owned by locals. 

“When you walk into a locally owned store, you are walking into somebody’s dream, somebody’s talent, somebody who took a chance, said Maribel Ramirez, who is the Commercial Corridor Manager for Excelsior Action Group (EAG).” “I think as we move forward with this pandemic and while people are required to stay in their homes, the way to fill the void of feeling a real sense of community is through our small businesses. You’re not going to experience that in some of these larger chain businesses.” 

Ramirez has worked at EAG for over a year, but has been involved in community building initiatives in the Excelsior as residents for seven years. As a daughter of an immigrant who owned a business, entrepreneurship runs in her family. Ramirez’s passion is in development as she is known for helping launch the Westfield Shopping Center in downtown San Francisco. Her ability to translate major corporation goals into a local business strategy makes her an asset to the EAG. “I’ve always loved San Francisco, but for some reason, the Excelsior neighborhood really spoke to me, added Ramirez.” The stories, struggles, and successes are what reality speaks to me, and I feel a strong connection here.”

EAG has partnered with Livable City for a program called What’s Open San Francisco, which markets businesses along the Excelsior Commercial Corridor that have safely reopened. There is a language barrier as many of the businesses are owned by immigrants. There is also a digital divide as some of the businesses do not have websites or an updated Yelp or Google Review page. Livable City has provided businesses assistance with everything from language translation to developing an online presence for dozens of Excelsior District businesses that are currently taking advantage of What’s Open SF. 

“I love this SF program, Ramirez noted.” A Lot of our businesses are not so tech-savvy, especially the immigrants that have been here for decades, she said.’ “It challenges them to think about online resources and is an excellent way for businesses to tell their stories and highlight the neighborhood. “

While it may be difficult to predict the fate of many locally-owned San Francisco businesses in these pandemic times, one certain thing is that EAG and Livable City will continue to work to make sure that there is an abundance of resources available. It starts with What’s Open SF. 


Follow @WhatsOpenSF on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.

Ten-minute neighborhoods, 30-minute cities, Covid-19, and the future of public transit

Livable cities are made up of ten-minute neighborhoods, where residents can access many of the needs of daily life within a short walk or cycle trip home – diverse housing, a grocery store, places to eat and drink, shops and services, quality transit, parks and playgrounds, libraries and recreation centers, schools and clinics.

Not all our daily needs can be within a short walk from home, so a livable city is also a 30-minute city. City dwellers should be within thirty minutes of other daily needs, including jobs, education, health care, arts and culture, and wild nature, by sustainable transportation – walking, cycling, and/or transit.

Sound good? We think so too. And a thirty-minute city of ten-minute neighborhoods is built on a foundation of good public transit. Public transit is essential to a healthy, sustainable, equitable, and livable city.

Market Street by Madeleine Savit

The Covid pandemic has had far-reaching effects on all our lives. It has precipitated the biggest crisis in the region’s public transit system since the mid-20th century. Decisions that governments make about public transit over the next few months will have profound consequences for both our near-term mobility and the region’s long-term livability, including whether we progress towards equity and sustainability, or slide further back. San Francisco’s plan to address climate change centers on getting to 80% of trips by sustainable transportation modes by 2030, from about 50% of trips immediately pre-covid.

Since quarantine began in March, ridership on BART has declined about 90% from the same time last year. Caltrain’s ridership also dropped by an even higher percentage. Muni’s ridership has declined by 14% since March.

Over 60% of BART’s and Caltrain’s operating budgets come from fares, so the ridership downturn has endangered both agencies’ ability to operate. Both agencies curtailed their service frequency and hours. Muni fares account for between 20 and 25% of the agency’s operating budget, so although it did not suffer as large an operating loss as BART and Caltrain, it slashed service in order to ensure worker and rider safety, reducing the number of routes from 79 pre-Covid to just 17 at the beginning of April. Muni has been gradually adding service back since then, but is still offering far less service than in March. Light rail service resumed for only a few days before it was closed again, when serious defects in its overhead wires were revealed.

For many of us, quarantine has either meant working from home, or meant we lost work. Some of us still need to travel to work every day. These essential workers – the people who provide us with health care, food, critical goods and services, and keep the complicated infrastructure of our civilization clean and in good repair – rely heavily on public transit. Their difficult and sometimes dangerous jobs have become harder as transit options have shrunk. People who rely on transit to access essential services, like groceries or health care, have also seen their mobility diminished. Many of us aren’t taking transit because the transit we depended on has disappeared. Some of us have abandoned transit because we perceive it as particularly risky – a perception that is mostly unwarranted.

Prior to the pandemic, our transit system was struggling to cope with booming ridership, increasing traffic congestion, and decades of under-investment in essential infrastructure and services. In recent years transit agencies did get started on some major essential projects. BART is replacing and expanding its fleet of railcars, and modernizing and earthquake-retrofitting its aging infrastructure. Caltrain is finally electrifying the railway, and also replacing and expanding its entire fleet with modern electric train sets. The Transbay Transit Center’s bus terminal is completed, and the future rail station is awaiting its downtown connection. Muni has been replacing its buses and light rail cars, and building the Central Subway to connect SoMa and Chinatown.

These big investments promise to deliver a safer, more reliable, greener, more resilient, and less crowded transit future for the region. One of the few positive outcomes of quarantine is that the reduced transit service has allowed some transit retrofit work to accelerate.

To get to a future where transit can support a greener and more equitable region, we need to act urgently to save transit. Our already wobbly system of funding transit is in deep trouble. Without an influx of funding we’ll see more savage cuts to transit service. We may even see Caltrain shut down altogether even as it completes billions of dollars in system upgrades. Most of the infrastructure improvements now underway will continue, but we need to plan, fund, and build the next set of transit investments. We need to make sure our enormous transit investments are maximizing benefit to the region by getting smarter about coordination, access, and land use. Here are our six strategies for getting from here to there.

  • Stabilize transit funding. We need to fund essential public transit services. City, regional, state, and federal governments must fund transit service, and close gaps in transit service provide mobility for essential workers and essential trips. Measure RR on the November ballot is a critical piece. Over the longer term, we need to reform how we fund transit to keep both transit service and essential investments in system maintenance, repair, and replacement stable through economic cycles, and make service more affordable for all.
  • Coordinate fares and services. The region’s transit fares, schedules, and connections have been poorly coordinated for too long, creating unnecessary hardships for most transit riders and excluding others. As transit service has been disrupted and reduced, those disconnects become more of a burden and impediment to mobility.
  • Improve transit speed and reliability. Transit service is many San Francisco neighborhoods is slow and unreliable. Sometimes that’s due to ageing or inadequate infrastructure, or shortages of personnel like drivers and mechanics. Much of it is due to delays from auto traffic; every Muni line operates mixed in traffic for at least part of its route. The quickest and cheapest way to improve transit speed and reliability to create more dedicated transit lanes, along with other transit-priority measures like prioritizing transit at traffic signals. Where San Francisco has prioritized transit speed and reliability on City streets, like the 5-Fulton rapid improvements, the improved service has attract significant increases in ridership at a low capital and operating cost. SFMTA is moving quickly to establish more transit priority lanes while there’s a lull in auto traffic, and we support these immediate steps. We need to put more resources towards faster and more reliable street transit in upcoming City, regional, and state budgets, while also planning and funding the next big investments in regional rapid transit.
  • Expand access. The region has invested billions to expand and improve transit, but we too often skimp on access. We’ll spent hundreds of millions of dollars per mile to extend BART, but then neglect to provide sidewalks and bike lanes to get people to the new stations. Every regional transit station should have safe, direct, and convenient walking and cycling access in all directions. Most, including most of San Francisco’s BART and Caltrain stations, are deficient. Every Muni stop ought to be fully accessible, which means extending curbs and building boarding islands, and transitioning to low-floor vehicles for street-running transit.
  • Expand the region’s frequent transit network. Service on many lines in the region is frequent only during commute hours, with infrequent service midday, evenings, and weekends. Late-night service is limited mostly to San Francisco and a few East Bay bus lines. Transit that only runs well during the commute, and then only to a few central office districts, doesn’t address the needs of car-free households and many essential workers.
  • Focus on centers, not corridors. Successful rapid transit lines and stations link walkable centers to one another. A ten-minute walk is rarely more than half a mile. A bicycle can extend the ten-minute radius out to two miles, perhaps a little more. Research shows that most people are willing to walk or cycle further on the home end of a trip than on the work end. Conventional transportation planning in the Bay Area frequently takes a corridor approach which ignores all this. Corridor planning typically defines a corridor a few miles wide and a several miles long, and a high-capacity transit line is planned for the corridor, often in the median of a freeway. Plans claiming to be ‘multimodal’ might add a few segments of bike lane or cycle path, along with a few pedestrian safety improvements. Housing, office, retail, and instutional developments are encouraged to land anywhere in the corridor. Corridor planning has the separate elements that make up a walkable and bikeable city, but they aren’t in the right proximity or relation to one another. Corridor plans have mostly failed to make good neighborhoods for living and working, and seldom make truly walkable and bikeable places. Our planning needs to focus on creating walkable centers, and connect them with corridors. Major regional destinations like office centers and universities should be clustered close to frequent transit. Transit stations stranded in freeway medians are unlikely to grow into walkable and livable places. We should do our best to connect the freeway median transit we have already built to adjacent communities, but avoid building new ones – let’s instead choose routes and station locations that connect centers to one another.

We’re working on an action plan that expands on these six strategies, sustaining transit service through the duration of the Covid crisis and getting us to our goal of 80% sustainable trips within the next decade.

Mark your calendars: Neighborhood street openings & Virtual happenings

#ThursdayThoughts
Thursday, September 17th  |  12 PM (PDT)
Join via: LivableCity Facebook page  
Join via: Zoom Webinar ID: 860 6665 1661 / Telephone: +1 669 900 6833

Mark your calendars for our weekly series #ThursdayThoughts: a lunchtime chat with local guests every week. We’ll be joined by Toby Leavitt and Rebecca J. Ennals of the SF Shakespeare Festival to talk about Shakespeare in the Park.

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ICYMI: Past #ThursdayThoughts videos are available here.

#FeatureFriday
Friday, September 18th  |  12 PM (PDT) 
Join via: SundayStreets Facebook page  
Find @WhatsOpenSF on: TwitterFacebook and Instagram.

Tune in to our weekly What’s Open SF and participate by commenting with your favorite small business for a chance to win a $25 gift card (sponsored by Sonic). A great way to find new favorite spots and support small businesses.

0918WOSF-FB-Prizes.jpg
ICYMI: Past #FeatureFriday What’s Open SF videos are available here.

Healthy Living
Saturday, September 19th  |  Livable City Facebook page @ 11 AM

Healthy Living is our virtual wellness series on Saturdays.
Open to all levels and it does not require any equipment, except making time to take care of yourself!
Let’s take care of ourselves, and stay healthy. (Available in English, and Spanish)

Healthy Living previous sessions are available for viewing here at any time.

Neighborhood Street Openings
Sessions will be cancelled if air quality reaches or exceeds Orange or an AQI above 101.

LC_events.jpg

Tenderloin: PlayStreets Tenderloin 
In the news: SF Examiner | SF Chronicle
Enjoy a safe and open space to play, stretch the legs, and have some fun at Play Streets this Saturday! See you at the 200 block of Turk (between Jones/ Leavenworth) from 10-4pm. Masks and social distancing requirements will be in place.

Chinatown: 
Walkway Weekends  |  Facebook event
San Francisco Chinatown’s iconic Grant Avenue will be closed off to traffic and cars for a pleasant open walkway every weekend from July through September 20th. Enjoy a historic street stroll, outdoor dining, and an Asian shopping experience. Chinatown is open for business!

SoMa: Sunday Streets SoMa Pop-Up | Postponed to October 4th

 Livable City Newsletter
Have you signed up for our Livable City newsletter?
We are getting ready to share our latest local stories and partnership updates with you.
Sign up today.

Sunday Streets SoMa Pop-Up has been moved to October 4th, 2020.

Sunday Streets Family;

The start for Sunday Streets SoMa Pop-Up has been moved to October 4th, 2020.
We made this decision in the face of the heartbreaking reality that the unprecedented wildfires, caused by climate change and unsustainable land use and management practices, will likely cause the air quality to be very unhealthy well into the month.

While we successfully opened Folsom Street for a few hours last weekend, the rapidly changing air quality and heat proved to be unhealthy for staff and a risk to attendees. Given the physical demands to our staff to set-up and breakdown for the Sunday Streets Pop-Up in SoMa, we will schedule to begin again October 4th on hopes the fires will be contained by then.

We (still) miss you and hope that we can be in community next month. Until then, please be well and listen to your body and check-in with those around you. These are strange times and heat stroke or smoke poisoning might feel or look different than what you expect. You can visit sf72.org for more info on how to take care during times of stress.

❤

— Katy Birnbaum & Livable City Team
See/Share/Like this post on Facebook • Twitter • Instagram 

Weekly Open Street Schedule & Updates

https://www.facebook.com/sundaystreets/posts/10158700041856894

Neighborhood Happenings
Sessions will be cancelled if air quality reaches or exceeds Orange or an AQI above 101.

PS_SS_Sept2020.jpg

Tenderloin: PlayStreets Tenderloin
In the news: SF Examiner  |  SF Chronicle
Enjoy a safe and open space to play, stretch the legs, and have some fun at Play Streets this Saturday! See you at the 200 block of Turk (between Jones/ Leavenworth) from 10-4pm. Masks and social distancing requirements will be in place.

SoMa: Sunday Streets SoMa Pop-Up
Press release  |  Facebook event  
Weekly Sunday Streets Pop-Up In SoMa Kicks Off To Support Residents and Small Business.
https://www.facebook.com/sundaystreets/posts/10158700041856894


Chinatown: Walkway Weekends
Facebook event
San Francisco Chinatown’s iconic Grant Avenue will be closed off to traffic and cars for a pleasant open walkway every weekend from July through September 20th. Enjoy a historic street stroll, outdoor dining, and an Asian shopping experience. Chinatown is open for business!

Virtual Happenings

Friday, September 11th  |  12 PM (PDT) 
For a chance to win, comment on this week’s SundayStreets FB-Live post.
You have until Monday 9/14 at Noon PDT to participate.

Tune in to our weekly What’s Open SF and participate by commenting with your favorite small business for a chance to win a $25 gift card (sponsored by Sonic). A great way to find new favorite spots and support small businesses. 

 Livable City Newsletter
Have you signed up for our LivableCity newsletter?
We are getting ready to share our latest local stories and partnership updates with you.Sign up today: → http://eepurl.com/desPdD

Join The Kickoff 9/6! — Weekly Sunday Streets Pop-Up In SoMa Kicks Off To Support Residents and Small Business

August 24th, 2020 | PRESS RELEASE

San Francisco — The nonprofit Livable City, will be transforming Folsom Street between 6th and 8th Streets into a temporary car-free open space for residents and businesses to use on a weekly basis from 11:00am – 4:00pm through the City’s Shared Spaces program starting August 30th through October 18th, 2020. Then on Sunday, September 6th until October 11th, Kultivate Lab’s joins Livable City on Folsom St with their popular program UNDISCOVERED.

“SoMa has a lot of families and residents who have been living in small houses without yards during Shelter-in-Place, a serious deficit in public parks, and most of our streets are high injury corridors,” notes Katy Birnbaum, Associate Director of Livable City. “That’s why we’ve been working for months with Kultivate Labs’s UNDISCOVERED to make this Shared Spaces site a reality and ensure it serves both residents and businesses safely during COVID-19.” 

District 6 Supervisor Matt Haney, who has been vocal about his frustrations on the lack of Slow Streets in his district, exclaimed “I love this project! Our residents need open space more than ever. We have to create lifelines for our food, beverage, and nightlife venues to stay alive. And we have to support the Filipino community who has been grinding for years to regain an economic foothold in this neighborhood to continue that work.” 

In the spirit of the original Sunday Streets, this weekly pop-up will provide open space for SoMa residents and a platform to reach vulnerable communities about essential resources while supporting local businesses. “Our community has been devastated by COVID-19,” said Desi Danganan, the Executive Director of Kultivate Labs. “Businesses are closing, and people are losing jobs. Shelter-in-Place has impacted the mental health of our community. At the same time SoMa has some of the densest housing, but the least amount of open space,” he continued. “We are teaming up with Livable City to try and resolve these issues in the safest manner possible.”

The weekly Sunday Streets SoMa Pop-Up will have expanded outdoor dining from neighborhood mainstays like Basil Thai offering dishes focused on brunch like ‘Kao Soi’ Northern Thai Style Curry Noodle With Braised Chicken. Some of SoMa’s nightlife venues and adult beverage shops that have been closed under the Public Health Order will be greeting customers again with outdoor dining made possible by food partnerships organized by UNDISCOVERED SF, like the partnership with Decant SF and SoMa restaurant, Mestiza Taqueria, who recently decided to close their brick & mortar and focus on catering.

From August 2019: Sunday Streets, on Folsom street. Photo by: Young Chau.

Sanitized and supervised public dining tables are being provided by SoMa West CBD every week. UNDISCOVERED will also host curbside pickup retail in support of SOMA Pilipinas Cultural Heritage District economic development goals on select dates.

Some of the most proactive COVID-19 safety measures will be enacted. Social distancing and face-covering orders will be strictly enforced by trained staff, along with all relevant public health orders for outdoor recreation and business activities. Sanitation stations will be at every entrance, along with COVID-19 information and basic health screenings being provided by SFSU’s School of Nursing. A COVID-19 pop-up testing site partnership is also in the works with hopes to bring free testing to the community by late September. 

For more information visit undiscoveredsf.com.


About Livable City
Livable City is a San Francisco-based 501(c)3 nonprofit dedicated to increasing affordable housing, improving transportation, land use, open space, and environmental policies, and supporting grassroots initiatives to make San Francisco a safer, healthier, and more accessible city. For more information, visit: livablecity.org

About Kultivate Labs & UNDISCOVERED SF
UNDISCOVERED SF is a non-profit venture designed to jump-start economic activity and public awareness of SOMA Pilipinas Cultural Heritage District. UNDISCOVERED SF is part of a multi-prong strategy to build a thriving new commercial corridor in the SOMA Pilipinas cultural district. For more information, visit undiscoveredsf.com or kultivatelabs.org

Helping San Francisco’s Chinatown Pivot To Success

Chinatown is notably one of San Francisco’s most densely populated neighborhoods, full of rich history, art, and locally owned businesses. On any given day, people travel from far and wide to the intersection of Bush Street and Grant Avenue and enter the Dragon’s Gate, a San Francisco landmark, and one of the most photographed gateways in the city. 

“Grant Avenue is probably one of the most picturesque streets in San Francisco, said Eva Lee, who runs the Chinatown Merchants Association. “How many places do you see with this type of architecture? said Eva.” From the Pagoda topped building, to the red lanterns – even the Old St. Mary’s Cathedral is just very historic along this open walkway. Grant Street used to be called Dupont, and then they changed it to Ulysses Grant after the president”.

Eva, whose father Sinclaire Louie started businesses in Chinatown in the ’50s, had eight stores along Grant street. “He was ahead of his time because he used to buy wholesale to cut out the middle man, Eve added.” Eva’s mother, May Louie, founded the Chinatown Merchants Association in 1988, owned one of the most prominent gift shops in Chinatown, and started the Autumn Moon Festival in 1991. Eva keeps both her parents’ legacies alive by managing the merchants association and organizing the festival. 

COVID-19 has forced a significant amount of Chinatowns beloved shops and restaurants to close those doors indefinitely, and dozens of businesses that rely on that tourism and foot traffic are battling an economic crisis.

Livable City has repurposed our efforts from hosting our usual Sunday Streets and directed some of our resources to support economic growth in Chinatown. On August 1st, we supported the launch of San Francisco’s first “Chinatown Walkway Weekends,” which happens every Saturday and Sunday from 11 am-5 pm and closes off Grant Ave, from Bush Street to California Street to car traffic. This activation will continue until September 20th. 

“We’re using this as an experiment to kickstart and see if we can draw more of the locals to come and see what is in their own backyard, said Eva.” 

The street closure is also part of the City’s Shared Spaces program, which is geared towards the economic recovery of our locally owned small businesses. The program allows for outdoor dining, retail. Other benefits include increased space for pedestrians and cyclists to move more safely through neighborhoods. 

Now when visiting Chinatown on Saturdays and Sundays, you notice a handful of restaurants have taken over Grant Avenue, and businesses have brought their merchandise to the sidewalk. Foot traffic has also increased. It’s looking good right now, and it’s great to see the businesses open, see a little foot traffic, and hopefully, this will encourage more to open. “We want to keep up the legacy of supporting Chinatown and help revitalize the businesses.”  

Cultural Art organizations such as the ‘LionDanceMe‘ Company are also taking advantage of Chinatown Walkway Weekends. Executive Director Norman Lau, who was born and raised in San Francisco, spent most of his childhood in Chinatown. “As a young kid, this was like my playground, said Norman.” LionDanceMe specializes in LionDanceME Elementary Program currently offers classes on Chinese lion dance surrounding Chinese culture to middle and elementary school students. 

Last year Normans LionDanceMe performed over 400 shows, some of which took place at tech companies like Google and Microsoft. The company has also performed overseas in Spain and Dubai. This year Norman was hoping to surpass the company’s numbers of performances. “I had to find another source of income because my business has come to a complete stop, Norman said.” “All the school programs are closed, and the entertainment industry has shut down. All of our shows were about weddings, grand openings, parades, company parties, he added,” Now LionDanceMe has taken the company back to Grant Avenue- where it started. 

“Now we’re testing out the closures on Saturday, said Norman.” “I had meetings with parents and started small with a class of eight to see how it will work out; he continued.” “There’s an uneasy feeling with Covid-19 being around, but we are taking a chance.”

You can catch Norman and the LionDanceMe crew practicing on Saturdays during Chinatown Walkway Weekends. “We are practicing and staying in a confined area,” said Norman.” It also is an opportunity to try and show that we can do something safely if we follow the guidelines.


Walkway Weekends via its Facebook page event.

The Spirit of Sunday Streets Lives On

We have some bittersweet news to share from the Sunday Streets program.

The sad news
Based on current health directives and capacity constraints across the board with city, private, and nonprofit partners, Livable City is cancelling all previously planned Sunday Streets events for the 2020 calendar year.

The good news
We are directing remaining resources to create a series of regularly occurring street closures in neighborhoods that need more access to open space and have historic need for economic development resources. While these street closures will be missing the pizazz and sheer volume of activities of Sunday Streets, they will provide needed breathing room and opportunities for local businesses.

Walkway Weekends on Grant Ave. between California and Washington streets.

We’ve already assisted Chinatown in launching street openings on Grant Ave every Saturday and Sunday through Sept 20. In addition, we are working with partners in SoMa, the Tenderloin, the Excelsior, and Bayview to reveal community serving street programs there soon. And we’ve also launched “What’s Open SF” to help small businesses to improve their online visibility!

Follow What’s Open SF on TwitterFacebook and Instagram.

Though the pandemic has upset our plans to host 11 Sunday Streets this year, we are proud to continue the work of supporting our most vulnerable communities with community building, regularly occurring access to street openings and small business support.

Please stay tuned for updates, and feel free to contact us with questions or just to say hello.

Thank you for caring about the health and vitality of our neighborhoods.

Regards,
Katy Birnbaum

This week’s events

Here are our virtual happenings this week, in addition to Walkway Weekends on Grant Ave. in Chinatown. 
Our weekly lunchtime Facebook-Live features this week include Zoom info when available, for those outside of Facebook.

If you are on social media, our channels are updated weekly, so feel free to share in the platform of your choice (FacebookInstagram, and Twitter)

See you there!

ICYMI: Past #ThursdayThoughts videos are available here.

Thursday, August 13th
12 PM @ LivableCity Facebook page  •  Set Reminder
Mark your calendars for our weekly series #ThursdayThoughts: a lunchtime chat with local guests every week. Join the conversation!

Not on Facebook? Join us via Zoom:
Aug 13th, 2020 12 PM PDT (US/CAN)
Meeting ID: 817 0196 7196
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/81701967196
☎︎ Phone dial: +1 669 900 6833
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ICYMI: Past #FeatureFriday What’s Open SF videos are available here.

Friday, August 14th
12 PM @ SundayStreets Facebook page  •  Set Reminder
Tune in to our weekly What’s Open SF and participate by commenting with your favorite small business for a chance to win a $25 gift card (sponsored by Sonic). A great way to find new favorite spots and support small businesses!

Not on Facebook? Join us via Zoom:
Aug 14th, 2020 12 PM PDT (US/CAN)
Meeting ID: 829 1752 0007
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82917520007
☎︎ Phone dial: +1 669 900 6833

❤️ What’s Open SF is on TwitterFacebook and Instagram.
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ICYMI: Healthy Living videos are available for later viewing here.

Saturday, August 15th 
11 AM  LivableCity Facebook page

Join us for Healthy Living, our virtual wellness sessions on Saturdays. Open to all levels and it does not require any equipment, except making time to take care of yourself! Let’s take care of ourselves, and stay healthy. (Available in English, and Spanish).
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San Francisco Chinatown Walkway Weekends 
Every weekend through September 20th
11 AM – 5 PM  •  Facebook event page

San Francisco Chinatown’s iconic Grant Avenue will be closed off to traffic and cars for a pleasant open walkway every weekend from July through September. Enjoy a historic street stroll, outdoor dining, and an Asian shopping experience. Chinatown is open for business!

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