Potrero Hill Rec Center: Difference between revisions

(added Potrero Hill Views into navigational loop)
mNo edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 16: Line 16:


Potrero Hill Recreation Center in the mid 1990s.
Potrero Hill Recreation Center in the mid 1990s.
adapted from [http://www.sfgate.com/offbeat/whome.html Dr. Weirde's Guide to Weirde San Francisco]


[[Image:Pothill-projects-with-big-southern-view1228.jpg]]
[[Image:Pothill-projects-with-big-southern-view1228.jpg]]
Line 26: Line 24:




[[Arctic Oil Works |Prev. Document]]  [[Potrero Hill Views |Next Document]]
[[The Largest Whaling Port on the West Coast, 1880s |Prev. Document]]  [[Potrero Hill Views |Next Document]]


[[category:Potrero Hill]] [[category:1990s]] [[category:2000s]] [[category:Famous characters]]
[[category:Potrero Hill]] [[category:1990s]] [[category:2000s]] [[category:Famous characters]]

Latest revision as of 21:23, 23 September 2024

Unfinished History

Oj-at-pothill-rec-ctr-1970s.jpg

O.J. Simpson returns to his original stomping grounds at the Potrero Hill Recreation Center in the late 1970s.

Photo: Potrero Hill Archive Project

Pothill$pot-hill-rec-ctr-view.jpg

Potrero Hill Rec Center, 23rd and Arkansas Streets, with a view of downtown. Mid 1990s.

This is the best place in the City to play pickup basketball; the excellent indoor courts were built partly with money donated by O.J. Simpson, who grew up in the neighborhood and hung out here as a kid. (An interesting 2004 novel, Winners, by Eric Martin passes through this site too, and gives an unusually insightful account of life in San Francisco's Sunset district and the Potrero Hill projects during the dot-com boom of 1999-2001.)

Pothill$pot-hill-rec-ctr.jpg

Potrero Hill Recreation Center in the mid 1990s.

Pothill-projects-with-big-southern-view1228.jpg

Southerly view from back of Potrero Hill Rec Center field, over the Potrero Hill Housing Projects, Bayview Hill (with Candlestick Park in upper left corner) and San Bruno Mountain in distance, beyond the freeways.

Photos by Chris Carlsson


Prev. Document Next Document