Golden Fire Hydrant

📍 💰 Free

The Verdict

"At the corner of 20th and Church in the Mission. Painted gold and repainted every April 18th at 5:12 AM. A quick look on a neighborhood walk. The ceremony is the real event if you're in town mid-April."

What you need to know

The Hydrant That Saved the Mission in 1906

A single fire hydrant at the corner of 20th and Church Streets is painted gold every year on April 18th, the anniversary of the 1906 earthquake. When the earthquake shattered San Francisco’s water mains and fires consumed most of the city, this hydrant reportedly still had water pressure. Firefighters used it to create a firebreak that saved a large section of the Mission District from burning.

What Makes It Worth It

It’s a fire hydrant. Painted gold. On a sidewalk corner. The entire visit takes about 15 seconds.

What makes it worth a glance is the story. The 1906 earthquake and the three-day fire that followed destroyed 80% of San Francisco. Most fire hydrants were useless because the water mains were broken. This one worked, and the neighborhood behind it survived. Every April 18th at 5:12 AM (the time the earthquake struck), neighbors gather to repaint the hydrant gold and remember what happened here.

A quick photo-stop if you’re in the Mission. It’s two blocks uphill from Dolores Park, so it pairs naturally with a park visit.

Skip this if you need more than a painted fire hydrant to justify a walk up Church Street.

Visiting

Address: Corner of 20th Street and Church Street, Mission District

Hours: Always visible (it’s a fire hydrant on a public sidewalk)

Cost: Free

Best time to go: April 18th at 5:12 AM for the annual painting ceremony. Otherwise, anytime.

What to know: The hydrant is small and easy to miss. It’s gold, but it’s still just a fire hydrant. Look at the corner of 20th and Church.

Getting There

Transit: Muni J-Church to 20th Street stop. The hydrant is right there. BART to 16th Street Mission, then a 10-minute walk.

Parking: Street parking on Church and 20th. Metered.

Walking: Two blocks uphill from Dolores Park. Near Mission Dolores and the 18th Street corridor.

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