Wave Organ
A sound sculpture on a jetty in the Marina where PVC pipes and stone channels turn the tide into music. Best at high tide. Free, uncrowded, and unlike anything else in the city.
A sound sculpture on a jetty in the Marina where PVC pipes and stone channels turn the tide into music. Best at high tide. Free, uncrowded, and unlike anything else in the city.
The grassy slope in Golden Gate Park where the Summer of Love never really ended. Drum circles, casual vibes, and the best free people-watching in the park.
Two concrete slides in a tiny Castro park that are way faster than they look. Grab a piece of cardboard, sit down, and hold on. Free, fun, and an unexpectedly great time.
A tiny fortune cookie factory in a Chinatown alley where they’ve been hand-folding cookies on copper griddles since 1962. Free to watch. Bring quarters for a bag of warm rejects.
A neoclassical rotunda in the Inner Richmond where 8,500 urns rest in personalized niches decorated with Giants gear, whiskey bottles, and love letters. Free, quiet, and unlike any other building in the city.
A flock of wild parrots with bright red heads and green bodies lives on Telegraph Hill. Best spotted late afternoon near Coit Tower and the Filbert Steps during nesting season.
A peephole in a Bernal Heights storefront door that screens curated short films 24 hours a day. One viewer at a time. Free, weird, and very San Francisco.
The nonprofit behind the Wayback Machine runs out of a former church in the Inner Richmond. Servers where the pews used to be. Free tours and a public reading room.
The Pacific Heights Victorian used as the exterior in “Mrs. Doubtfire.” A photo stop on a beautiful block. It’s a private home, so stay on the sidewalk.
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