- Eerie light – thinking about all those people up north [lawatt]
- For those not in direct line of fire, here are ways to help [@Scott_Wiener]
- There are mews in Noe Valley [@JoeNobodyCares]
- San Francisco properties, especially Noe Valley, boosted by the IPO wave [Financial Times]
- The price of cardboard has collapsed and is dragging local small businesses down with it [Hoodline]
- Halloween in Noe Valley [sffob]
Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts
October 27, 2019
This Week in Noe Valley: Fire Skies and Sadness, the IPO Wave and Halloween Arrives
December 31, 2018
This Year in Noe Valley: The Biggest Stories of 2018
2018 we hardly knew you. But boy did you flood the news headlines. Nationally this was the year of presidential lies (and felonies), tragic mass shootings, climate-change induced disasters, heartless immigration separations and epic Supreme Court battles. In California we saw impossibly sad firestorms. And in San Francisco, we saw history made with the first African-American woman mayor, a new transbay terminal that opened and then abruptly closed, plus outrage over a snarl of homelessness, a lack of new homes, and gentrification. In other words, this year was beyond exhausting.
Things in Noe Valley were a little less depressing but still a mirror of the world around us. Here were the biggest stories of 2018 in Noe Valley that preoccupied us, made us smile and that sometimes drove us crazy.
California Is Burning
Climate change is real y’all. We mourned with our fellow Californians in August when the Carr fire broke out and we choked on smoke and cried more for the people of Paradise and surrounding areas in November. Here’s hoping this is not the new abnormal.
Endings, Beginnings and Coming Soon
Lots and lots and lots of retail stores and restaurants closed this year in Noe Valley (and all of SF) and previously empty storefronts remained empty. Yes, there were new and welcome stores and restaurants in our little village this year (welcome Douglas, Seokyo, Sultan’s Kebab, Hi-Way Burger and Fry). But there were far more places that closed down or moved away (Podolls, Noe Valley Cyclery, Pete’s Cleaners, Hamlet, Mill, Contigo, Le Cupboard again… and the list goes on), and many more that vacated last year that are still empty (Pasta Gina, La Panotiq, Radio Shack, Fattoush…. and on and on). On a more upbeat note, Omnivore turned 10, Firefly turned 25 and the amazing Noe Valley Farmer’s Market turned 15. We’re also looking forward to the new Noe’s Cantina, a new Malaysian restaurant called Azalina and some new murals on 24th St. We are so lucky to have amazing local shops and restaurants – let’s keep it that way. #shoplocal
Housing Is (Still) Nuts
It’s insanely expensive to live here, and maybe with good reason: If you own a house in SF, it’s earning an average of $60/hour – or $125K per year – with no effort on your part. These crazy prices led one landlord to ask $19,500 a month for a 4 bedroom house on 26th St. Meanwhile, historic homes are being illegally demolished around the city, and one Noe entrepreneur decided to rent out a van to people (like Google employees) who are desperate to live here. The average cost of a home in Noe Valley was $2.5 million this year. Which makes this next item even more ridiculous...
Real Foods Is Finally, Maybe, Going to Become … Something
No, it’s not going to be housing. And it’s not going to become a Real Foods again either. 15 years on, the Real Foods building has new owners who are renovating the existing space and carving it into four small retail spaces of which we already have too many vacancies for on 24th St. #housingfail
People Behaving Badly
Noe Valley had its share of people behaving badly in other ways too. There was a drive-by shooting that injured 2 people (no suspects found), a road-rage bat attack that sent a man to the hospital, kids who got sick on edibles at James Lick and had to go to the hospital, and a mother was attacked with her baby at 28th St and Sanchez and endured a skull fracture. Scary. We also learned that one of the priests accused of sexually abusing children worked at St. Paul Catholic Parish and School in Noe Valley from 2006 to 2011. Yikes. But then there are the self-inflicted wounds – like the way the head of the NVMPA Rachel Swann is bringing ridicule to 24th St across from Whole Foods by opening Doggy Style: “a boutique, with unique dog furnishings and accessories. Members of the private club can relax in the owner’s lounge, mingle with other doggy moms and dads, drink Bernie’s coffee, all while the dogs play outside...” Ugh.
So Much Greatness
That said, there was still so much to be grateful for in 2018. Magnolias were gorgeous this year, we saw rainbows and double rainbows, a meteor shower, and the super blood moon. New ultra quiet MUNI trains started rolling on the J Church line and the colorful historic trains are back too. And our neighborhood is so photogenic. With all the craziness in the world, we’re so lucky to live here where we can fight for a better neighborhood with vibrant retail and restaurants, better housing options and all that good stuff.
Phew. We made it. Happy New Year, Noe Valley! Here's to a safe, fun and prosperous 2019.
p.s.
This blog turned 10 this year too (whoa - how did that happen?!). Thanks for reading both here and on Twitter @NoeValleySF.
p.p.s.
Yearning for simpler times? Here were the top stories of 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013 and 2012.
November 17, 2018
This Week in Noe Valley: Smoke From Camp Fire in Far Away Butte County and How to Help Victims
- Contigo to close this weekend after nearly 10 years [SF Chronicle]
- Noe Valley seniors thwart Ellis Act evictors [BeyondChron]
- An interview with Amos Goldbaum who painted his first mural outside CardioTone in 2014 [SF Chronicle]
- Who knew? The Green Cross dispensary started in Noe Valley in 2004 [Dope Magazine]
- Drone’s eye view of the smoke from Noe Valley #nofilter [bertibenbanaste]
- Disappearing sutro [insidesfrealestate]
- Sign of the times [centerhardware]
- Making light of a sad reality [_qrispy]
- How you can help the Camp Fire victims [7x7]
- And how you can help the animals [SFSPCA]
August 26, 2018
This Week in Noe Valley: The View Then and Now, 110% Home Appreciation in 6 Years and Beautiful Vintage Trains
- The view from Noe Valley in 1980 and now [@smarchivist and damoport]
- One Medical, which started with one office in Noe Valley now 72 strong and raising $350 million [SF Business Times]
- Noe Valley home prices have appreciated 110% in 6 years [My San Antionio]
- Air quality is bad – which means this [@SFgov and ggraudins]
- We have beautiful vintage Muni trains on Church St [sideshowjess]
- A 24th St fixture [meg_the-moo]
- God sky [laly0021]
- Vintage van [trmack]
- Psychedelic St. Paul’s by local artist [folourbliss]
- Steep [pagiacomazzi]
August 12, 2018
This Week in Noe Valley: Tents in Noe Valley, Waterfall Fog and Fire Skies
- Tents in Noe Valley [@ErinMurray415]
- Video: Today’s Animal Fair in the Town Square featured kittens, bunnies, goats and pups [rentbuds]
- It’s August – here comes waterfall fog [kaz]
- These are fire skies [jrmuskie, ktpata, julimaorgach, bisignette]
- View of the downtown skyline from Noe Valley [@dasali]
- An interview with local author R.O. Kwon [SF Chronicle]
- Found: All the words [annieyanger]
- Beautiful house on the hill [sarvagabonds]
- Early AM tech bus traffic jam [adaecher]
- Slanted houses [miflatboy]
April 14, 2018
This Week in Noe Valley: Rabat Closing, a Home Then and Now, and Spoiled Brats
- Rabat is closing after 46 years in Noe Valley – 20% off all clothing [rabatshoes]
- Fire at 23rd and Church put out quickly thanks to SFFD [SFLocal798]
- A Victorian from June 2017 and what it looks like now [NVSF]
- Cool artist rendering [@dan_mchale1]
- Noted: “Noe Valley is the spoiled brat capital of San Francisco” [@mattmangels]
- If you own a house in SF, it’s earning an average of $60/hour – or $125K per year [NY Times]
- Noe Valley bakery makes a mean rye bread [KQED]
February 10, 2018
This Week in Noe Valley: Fire Box Mystery Revealed, Plum Trees Blooming and YIMBY Was Born Here
- SoCal based HealthySpot looks to open 13th location in old RadioShack – here’s how to support or oppose [NVSF]
- There are 3,448 vacant or abandoned commercial and residential properties in the city – including lots of vacant storefronts [SF Chronicle]
- The mystery of towels around San Francisco fire call boxes revealed: They need maintenance [ABC7]
- Noe Valley plum trees are already in bloom #warmwinter [nicholaspaul26]
- YIMBY action was born in Noe Valley [SF Streetsblog]
December 31, 2017
This Year in Noe Valley: The Big Stories of 2017
2017 - it’s time to GTFO. Nationally, this was the year of fake news, alternative facts, covfefe, rampant tribalism and #metoo to name just a few of the things that defined our zeitgeist. In California, 2017 is was a year of record-setting rains followed by devastating firestorms. In San Francisco, it was a year of the Warriors winning (again), Mayor Lee dying abruptly and #resist. In other words, this year was exhausting.
Things in Noe Valley were a little happier closer to home (hey, it’s still Noe Valley and we are soooooooo lucky to live here), but there was still a lot going on. Here were the biggest stories of 2017 in Noe Valley that preoccupied us, made us smile and that sometimes drove us crazy.
Nature Is Wild
In 2017 Noe Valleyeons spotted coyotes in the hood (including a dead one at Douglass park) and a wayward mountain lion was captured and relocated. We also had some pretty insane rain, heatwaves (115+ degrees reported, but more likely only 106) and lots of spare-the-air fallout from the NorCal and SoCal fires including spectacular sunrises and sunsets. The high point this year for natural phenomenon was the super cool eclipse. Just a little reminder that we’re just all just animals on a hot rock, folks. (Photo via hugitosf)
Monster Homes and the Ensuing Eviction Backlash
In case you missed it, it’s waaay expensive to live here. The new high mark was the record-setting T-House sold for $12.5 million (for reference, it sold for a record-setting $6.1 million in 2011). Many other $5 and $6 million dollar homes sold for all cash this year. And megahomes are still being built. The dark side of all this: David Talbot posited that the real estate madness in SF is killing off the elderly, including Carl Jensen on 26th Street. However, a Noe Valley woman was the first to beat an Ellis Act eviction in San Francisco - perhaps a sign that evicting the elderly is finally uncool.
Endings, Beginnings and Coming Soon
Lots and lots of retail stores and restaurants closed this year and previously empty storefronts remained empty. Among the departures this year were Good News, Cliché Noe, Pasta Gina, Green11, Bom Dia, Radio Shack, Caskhouse (which is soon turning into a new burger joint) and Cardio-Tone’s 24th St location. La Nebbia on Church closed but thankfully has been replaced by Ardiana pizzeria. Uma Casa replaced Incanto/Porcellino to rave reviews. Urban Remedy and LeCupboard opened as bougie TV dinner spots - with LeCupboard closing again in November. Overall, restaurants dominated the new business scene, with little pop-ups (like Rafe Mandelman’s campaign headquarters) and realtor offices filling in the rest. The oldest butcher shop in the West continued the tradition with the opening of Baron’s Quality Meats, in the old Drewe’s Meats space on Church. Also of note, Amazon ate Whole Foods this year, so we’ll see what that brings for our local grocery scene. Sadly, there are still around 15 empty storefronts and counting on 24th Street. But on a more upbeat note, the J Church turned 100 this year, Firefly turned 24, and Dorian D. Clair Clock Repair turned 30.
Real Foods Could Become Real Housing (Someday)
In August we got the good news that 14 years on, the Real Foods building has new owners who plan to sell it for housing. Of course, it still has to sell, there’s no clear path forward and it could take years for construction to start. But hey, at least it’s not locked down by the former absentee owners, Neutraceutical Corp. Here’s hoping it’s unblighted in our lifetime.
The Google Bus Is Here to Stay
Never mind that they’re too big for our little streets and very noisy (and this Noe Valley guy notwithstanding), San Francisco voted to make the tech commuter buses permanent. Get used to it. (Photo via photo_by_bill)
People Behaving Badly
Noe Valley was also home to some shenanigans this year like a massive meth bust (whaaa?!) and a racist White Supremacy note from a neighbor (no, it wasn’t on Nextdoor). Noe Valley was also ground zero for package thieves and car break-ins this year, judging from the volume of neighborhood police reports. One woman was so fed up with the package thief situation she wrapped her cat’s dirty kitty litter in boxes for the thieves to get back at them and made the national news for it (it’s come to this?!). The Raspberry of the Year for bad behavior, however, goes to Getzwell Pediatrics which covered up the historic Star Bakery sign with its own eyesore logo. Not cool. (Photo via @peephole)
New and Notable
This year we also saw some new stuff in Noe Valley - including duck art installations, lots of GoFord Bike stations and a regular pop-up sauna in the Noe Valley Town Square. Speaking of the Town Square, the space also hosted dozens of events this year including the amazing weekly Farmer’s Market, equinox drumming, dancing, movie nights, political rallies and more. Pretty amazing to see the space come to life so quickly. (Photo via leftcoastsauna)
Phew. We made it. Happy New Year, Noe Valley! Here's to a safe, fun and prosperous 2018.
Yearning for simpler times? Here were the top stories of 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013 and 2012.
(Top photo via sam.a.miller)
Nature Is Wild
In 2017 Noe Valleyeons spotted coyotes in the hood (including a dead one at Douglass park) and a wayward mountain lion was captured and relocated. We also had some pretty insane rain, heatwaves (115+ degrees reported, but more likely only 106) and lots of spare-the-air fallout from the NorCal and SoCal fires including spectacular sunrises and sunsets. The high point this year for natural phenomenon was the super cool eclipse. Just a little reminder that we’re just all just animals on a hot rock, folks. (Photo via hugitosf)
Monster Homes and the Ensuing Eviction Backlash
In case you missed it, it’s waaay expensive to live here. The new high mark was the record-setting T-House sold for $12.5 million (for reference, it sold for a record-setting $6.1 million in 2011). Many other $5 and $6 million dollar homes sold for all cash this year. And megahomes are still being built. The dark side of all this: David Talbot posited that the real estate madness in SF is killing off the elderly, including Carl Jensen on 26th Street. However, a Noe Valley woman was the first to beat an Ellis Act eviction in San Francisco - perhaps a sign that evicting the elderly is finally uncool.
Endings, Beginnings and Coming Soon
Lots and lots of retail stores and restaurants closed this year and previously empty storefronts remained empty. Among the departures this year were Good News, Cliché Noe, Pasta Gina, Green11, Bom Dia, Radio Shack, Caskhouse (which is soon turning into a new burger joint) and Cardio-Tone’s 24th St location. La Nebbia on Church closed but thankfully has been replaced by Ardiana pizzeria. Uma Casa replaced Incanto/Porcellino to rave reviews. Urban Remedy and LeCupboard opened as bougie TV dinner spots - with LeCupboard closing again in November. Overall, restaurants dominated the new business scene, with little pop-ups (like Rafe Mandelman’s campaign headquarters) and realtor offices filling in the rest. The oldest butcher shop in the West continued the tradition with the opening of Baron’s Quality Meats, in the old Drewe’s Meats space on Church. Also of note, Amazon ate Whole Foods this year, so we’ll see what that brings for our local grocery scene. Sadly, there are still around 15 empty storefronts and counting on 24th Street. But on a more upbeat note, the J Church turned 100 this year, Firefly turned 24, and Dorian D. Clair Clock Repair turned 30.
Real Foods Could Become Real Housing (Someday)
In August we got the good news that 14 years on, the Real Foods building has new owners who plan to sell it for housing. Of course, it still has to sell, there’s no clear path forward and it could take years for construction to start. But hey, at least it’s not locked down by the former absentee owners, Neutraceutical Corp. Here’s hoping it’s unblighted in our lifetime.
The Google Bus Is Here to Stay
Never mind that they’re too big for our little streets and very noisy (and this Noe Valley guy notwithstanding), San Francisco voted to make the tech commuter buses permanent. Get used to it. (Photo via photo_by_bill)
People Behaving Badly
Noe Valley was also home to some shenanigans this year like a massive meth bust (whaaa?!) and a racist White Supremacy note from a neighbor (no, it wasn’t on Nextdoor). Noe Valley was also ground zero for package thieves and car break-ins this year, judging from the volume of neighborhood police reports. One woman was so fed up with the package thief situation she wrapped her cat’s dirty kitty litter in boxes for the thieves to get back at them and made the national news for it (it’s come to this?!). The Raspberry of the Year for bad behavior, however, goes to Getzwell Pediatrics which covered up the historic Star Bakery sign with its own eyesore logo. Not cool. (Photo via @peephole)
New and Notable
This year we also saw some new stuff in Noe Valley - including duck art installations, lots of GoFord Bike stations and a regular pop-up sauna in the Noe Valley Town Square. Speaking of the Town Square, the space also hosted dozens of events this year including the amazing weekly Farmer’s Market, equinox drumming, dancing, movie nights, political rallies and more. Pretty amazing to see the space come to life so quickly. (Photo via leftcoastsauna)
Phew. We made it. Happy New Year, Noe Valley! Here's to a safe, fun and prosperous 2018.
Yearning for simpler times? Here were the top stories of 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013 and 2012.
October 14, 2017
This Week in Noe Valley: North Bay Fire Sadness and How to Help
- How to help people affected by the fires [SF Chronicle]
- Omnivore is collecting donations of pet supplies for Sonoma animal shelters [@omnivorebooks]
- Local chef Richie Nakano is raising money, buying food and helping to deliver meals to evacuees and rescue workers. [@linecook]
- More SF businesses pitching in to help [Eater]
- Local artists supporting relief efforts [7x7]
- So many eerie pictures of all the orange smoke and ash in the air [ariawave, mystarpower, @ssgeek , sfgrecia, surfseafamily, bestbayareatours, peaceofhair]
- Bay Area experiencing worst air quality ever [SFGate]
- Police investigating Noe Valley armed vehicle robbery [Hoodline]
- Noe Valley’s Contigo gets a rave from SF Chronicle's Michael Bauer [@michaelbauer1]
- Ardiana is the pizza church [SF Weekly]
July 16, 2016
This Week in Noe Valley: Pocket Monsters Everywhere, Fire Fallout and Renting in the 94114
- Interview with Cole Hardware’s founder including details about rebuilding after the recent Mission Cole fire [Hoodline]
- ICYMI: Noe Valley is a Pokemon Go sanctuary [heronramos]
- A luxe Noe Valley remodel gets the Dwell treatment [Dwell]
- Another $4.4 million home hits the market [Curbed]
- An attic fire breaks out at 25th and Grandview and is quickly contained (no injuries)[@abc7newsbayarea]
- Now open: New trail connecting Billy Goat Hill to Walter Haas Park [@Scott_Wiener]
- Bistro SF Grill is open for dinner [@NoeValleySF]
CrowsRavens in Noe Valley [@Siliconlaw]- Omnivore’s summer book events look amazing (as always) [Omnivore Books]
- 94114 is the city’s most competitive rental zip code [SFGate]
- A Noe Valley woman is leading the fight to get tech companies like Uber and Airbnb to pay for what they’ve done to SF’s housing market [Good]
- Artifact from the past on 24th Street [ranivision]
June 18, 2016
This Week in Noe Valley: Hamlet and Bistro SF Changes, Mission Fire and a Poignant Memorial
- Profile of an "ingenious" Noe Valley resident who evicted a tenant to put the home on Airbnb [NY Times]
- Hamlet gets a new chef and menu with some Japanese twists [Eater]
- More details on the Bistro SF move into the former Hahn’s Hibachi space [Hoodline]
- Skeeter Jones has been working for decades to restore Victorians in Noe and beyond [SF Chronicle]
- Girlz for Hillary in Noe Valley [@mikkelsvane]
- ICYMI today was Summerfest on 24th St [@SFEnvironment]
- Multi-floor fire at 29th and Mission this afternoon takes out Cole Hardware [SFist]
April 23, 2016
This Week in Noe Valley: High End Homes Languish, More Bar Robberies & Fires, Gentrification 1977 Style
- 24th Street Luxe townhouses not selling [Curbed]
- More SF homes sit unsold as inventory grows [SFGate]
- Revamped and modern Little Chihuahua reopens [Hoodline]
- More bar robberies in the Mission - which sound a lot like the recent Noe Valley incidents [Mission Local]
- The helicopters you heard this week were for a fire at 24th and Valencia [Hoodline]
- Don't let the inactivity fool you: New beverage director named at Uma Casa (in the former Incanto space) [Eater]
- By 1977, Mission gentrification was framed as middle class spillover from Castro & Noe Valley [@enf]
- A good start: 60 news-rack pedestals will be removed from San Francisco sidewalks within the next month [SFGate]
- Cool old maps of SF [Curbed]
August 1, 2015
This Week In Noe Valley: High Hopes for Hamlet, Patxi's Parklet Commentary & Dining Out With Kids In The Hood
- Hamlet will modernize an intriguing corner of Noe Valley [SF Weekly]
- Fire on Castro at 29th destroys a house under construction, damages a building - no one hurt but cause still unknown [KTVU]
- Scott Wiener’s legislation legalizing new in-law units in District 8 passes [Bay City News]
- Patxi’s is applying for a parklet on 24th Street – lots of neighbors weigh in [NVSF]
- Bitter signs of anti-gentrification in Noe Valley [blitzpop]
- For $7,500 a month you can rent this Noe Valley 3 bedroom ... with a pool! [Craigslist]
- Former owners of Carroll’s Books in Noe Valley now run the San Francisco Book Co. in Paris [SF Gate]
- Restaurant etiquette for parents dining out with kids in San Francisco (esp Noe Valley) [The Mommy Files]
January 31, 2015
This Week In Noe Valley: Hipster Coffee Battles, Debating Stanford Douchebags, And Other Signs of the Times
News from, about and for Noe Valley from around the interwebs:
- Fun with yard art: No more Barbies. A dinosaur lives here now [merrij]
- The windows at the Peaks were smashed on Friday night by a drunk customer [@karlsf]
- And the stereo store was also broken into [@shaketini]
- Noe Valley median real estate prices - SRHs up 21% to $1015 per square foot in 2014 [Downing & Co.]
- The modern new Noe Valley Ministry stained glass [Coda Worx]
- Noe Valley fixer in prime location lists for $850,000 – will probably sell for $1.28 and then be flipped for $4.3 million (that's our guess) [SocketSite]
- With fewer seats at the new Philz post-remodel the hipster table battles are on #changeishard [@breyeschow]
- Signs of Noe Valley [joodyjoods]
- Are Stanford douchebags ruining San Francisco (and especially Noe Valley)? [SF Gate]
- Yes, says David Talbot, founder of Salon… [48HillsOnline]
- So does this Noe Valley resident [SF Gate]
- Investment company Ivanhoé Cambridge is spending $190 million to snap up multi-family dwellings around the city, including in Noe Valley [MultifamilyBiz]
- For all those wondering about the helicopters this week – scenes from the scary fire in the Mission [CrowdAlbum]
- Good news for local MUNI riders: Supervisor Scott Wiener is elected chair of SF Transportation Authority [@Scott_Wiener]
January 24, 2015
This Week In Noe Valley: Real Foods Redo, Fire At 23rd At Douglass And A Memorial For Greg Gutknecht
- View of the blackout in Noe Valley Friday night [@brianhollinger]
- One alarm fire at 23rd and Douglass corner market – everyone’s ok [@esbale]
- Supervisor Scott Wiener’s January 2015 Newsletter [Scott Wiener]
- ICYMI: Notes from this week’s community meeting about the future of Real Foods [NVSF]
- The Wizard of Oz comes to James Lick Middle School [NVSF]
- Six reasons to shop local in Noe Valley [SF Gate]
- A well-maintained sidewalk garden on Sanchez [insidesfrealestate]
- Bummer: It will take 600 years to underground all the wires in San Francisco [ABC7]
- Sobering: A map of all the Airbnb and VRBO units in SF [Bold Italic]
- Suspected Castro arsonist (and your basic nut job) in custody [SF Appeal]
- Streetlight Records is leaving Castro too, after leaving Noe Valley in 2008 [Hoodline]
- Memorial and potluck for Greg Gutknecht at Valley Tavern 3pm Sunday 1/25 [NVSF]
September 6, 2014
This Week In Noe Valley: A Bank Robbery, Bagel Fights, And Other Mischief You May Have Missed
- A writer’s favorite dish at Bacco [Inside Scoop SF]
- Suspect sought in Sterling Bank robbery earlier this week [SFist]
- Best bagel in SF? In the comments, a native New Yorker vouches for Holy Bagel [Eater]
- Noe Valley: there’s an app for that [neighbrhds.com]
- Coming in Oct: L'Atelier - a collective of Bay Area designers and artists [Racked]
- Not everyone is excited to have Tacolicious HQ in the hood [@aepiv]
- Another stuck commuter bus [@karlsf]
- The helicopters you heard? Massive 5 alarm fire on Mission at 22nd [SF Gate]
- A photo of the fire from Noe Valley [@ksherwood]
- Armistead Maupin popped into Omnivore Books for some munchies [@omnivorebooks]
March 5, 2013
NVV March 2013: We Read It So You Don't Have To

The Noe Valley Voice is published ten times a year and has been a neighborhood fixture since 1977. Here are notable highlights from the latest issue. Links are to stories we've covered here on NVSF or outside sources as the Voice doesn't post stories online until the middle of the month.
March 2013
Front Page: A 3-page profile of the wacky and colorful Sheila Ash, owner of Noe's Nest (a B&B at 1257 Guerrero); Bliss Bar plans to rebuild - but it may take awhile; Word Week starts on March 16; the community garden behind Sally Brunn Library is full of shoots, plants and leaves.
Letters: The Noe Valley Democratic Club asks dems of all stripes to join the dialogue; a supporter of the Noe Valley Town Square urges Noe Valleyans not to sound so entitled by claiming we're under-served as a community; another neighbor urges Scott Weiner not to force seismic upgrades for homeowners and renters - and Scott Wiener replies.
Farewell: "The highest ranking woman in the history of Judo" and Noe Valley dojo owner Keiko Fukuda died last month.
Cost of Living in Noe: A 1904 Victorian on 22nd St. at Sanchez that sold for $2.89 million in 14 days was one of only 5 single-family homes to close in January. No condos sold (a first in many years).
Store Trek: Caskhouse (caskhousesf.com), Spark Creativity (sparkcreativitysf.com).
Rumors: Scott Weiner celebrates the team championing the Noe Valley Town Square (pledges are nearing $500,000); @CookieTimeTruck is no longer in the Ministry parking lot; Ed Lee pays a visit to the parklet in front of Just for Fun to congratulate our community benefit district; Mark Zuckerberg owns a home close by and has been spotted on 24th St (and at the Saturday Farmer's Market); Elisa's Health Spa is for sale; the 6th annual Easter egg hunt has been cancelled; Umpqua Bank has nearly $10k in grants available; Opes Advisers is expanding into the former Children's Playhouse; and winners of the Tech Search Party announced.
[The Noe Valley Voice]
March 1, 2013
This Week In Noe Valley: Bliss Bar To Rebuild, Church St. Renaissance, Top Restaurants Revisted
News from, about and for Noe Valley from around the interwebs:
- Bliss Bar to rebuild after investigators rule out arson [SF Appeal]
- East Bay writers/parents know that Church St is for kids, kids, kids, and kids [510 Families]
- Sanchez St remodel seeks LEED status - and bids in the $3M range [Socketsite]
- Contigo and La Ciccia make 7x7's Best-Of list [7x7]
- OTOH, Bauer says Incanto has slipped [SFGate]
- Pre-order your Philz Coffee online [@OrderAhead]
February 5, 2013
Aftermath: Bliss Bar Fire
We've updated yesterday's posts to include more info, but here's a summary in case you missed it:
- SFFD had to respond to Bliss Bar again last night when the fire reignited.
- The Red Cross was able to temporarily house all displaced persons, but is requesting help relocating some people for the long term.
Bliss Bar the day after double burn. Preliminary assessment: electrical. #noevalley twitter.com/mbd2/status/29…
— mbd2 (@mbd2) February 5, 2013
[Photo: @saranoh]
February 4, 2013
Attention Bliss Bar Fire Displaced Tenants
A reader with an available in-law apartment has offered shelter for the a night or so while you get your bearings. The unit is around the corner from the fire. Send us an email if you need it (or if you don't, frankly) and we'll hook you up.
Update 2/5:
Update 2/5:
My name is Billy - I am a volunteer for the Red Cross San Francisco. I responded to the Bliss Bar fire last night (the second time it went up), and I used to hang out there fairly often. I saw your post regarding the resident with the in-law. Red Cross took care of the residents affected by the fire by putting them up in hotels until the 7th, so a short term stay shouldn't be necessary.Billy added that there are tenants who will need help with longer term housing. Please contact us if you have an apartment to rent and we'll put you in touch.
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