Although San Francisco's 1960s counterculture fizzled out, its spirit is alive and well at the Hippie Hill drum circle.
Hearst is under contract to acquire a downtown San Francisco office tower as part of a rejiggering that will allow the second ...
The big question in San Francisco’s cultural and philanthropy circles this month was whether to go to the San Francisco Ballet gala at City Hall or the Fog Design + Art fair opening night at Fort ...
By TERRY TANG Charles Phan, the San Francisco chef credited as an innovator for bringing Vietnamese food to fine dining at his Slanted Door restaurant, has died. The restaurant announced his death ...
UCSF abruptly canceled a two-day anti-racism class for doctors and nurses that was to be taught in February by a consultant who was targeted by right-wing groups that called his provocative content ...
The San Francisco Giants headed into free agency with the thought around the league that they would try to bring in some more starting pitching. With Blake Snell hitting the open market and really ...
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Dozens of families were forced from their homes in San Francisco Saturday when a gas pipe was ruptured in the area of 47th Avenue and Balboa Street. Those neighborhood ...
LATEST Jan. 4, 3:47 p.m. The evacuation order caused by a gas leak in San Francisco’s Outer Richmond district has been lifted, the SF Fire Department announced Saturday afternoon.
Dianne de Guzman is the regional editor for Eater's Northern California/Pacific Northwest sites, writing about restaurant and bar trends, upcoming openings, and pop-ups for the San Francisco Bay ...
Kanaga was one of the first women photographers for The San Francisco Chronicle — in the 1910s. The New York Times reviews the installation here, writing that Walker “is highlighting the superhuman ...
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- The quarter-mile stretch of 6th Street in San Francisco's South of Market neighborhood has long struggled with open air drug usage, but Supervisor Matt Dorsey says it's only ...
What no one predicted was “the seismic change in the nature of newspapers,” said John King, the longtime urban design critic and San Francisco Chronicle columnist. “Originally, it was a program to ...