San Francisco teenager starts her own DIY take on Hardly Strictly
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Grooblen performs at a pop-up event hosted by Big Leap Collective and Cosmic Bloom booking.Big Leap Collective
Although the coronavirus pandemic has derailed almost all live performances, musicians and organizers have continued to pivot to digital versions of their events. Huge professional festivals like Hardly Strictly and Outside Lands have gone online, but the beautiful thing about the digital space is that you don t need to have the backing of a massive brand to get your voice out there.
The poster for Big Feb Fest, a streaming event featuring 26 bands taking place on Feb. 21, 2021 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.Big Leap Collective
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - Forge Development Partners (Forge) and the Architectural Foundation of San Francisco (AFSF) announced 10th grader Eva Nusbaum-Faust and 11th grader Sofia Regenbogen from the Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts (SOTA) as the winners of a community-based design competition for the permanent installation of the perforated, metal panel façades for Forge’s Essential Housing Development projects, known as TL 361 and TL 145 and located at 361 Turk Street and 145 Leavenworth Street in the Tenderloin neighborhood. As part of Forge’s ongoing mission to bring in the best minds to help innovate the future of Essential Housing, the developer sponsored the design competition where 11 students were given two weeks to study the interconnectivity of the Tenderloin community and to express that in a design for the skin of the two buildings. These students will work with Forge’s partner, world-renowned architecture firm Gensler, to transform the winning concepts into
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S.F. schools won t reopen in late January after teachers union, district fail to reach a deal
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John Muir Elementary School in San Francisco was going to be among the first to reopen in the city.Lance Iversen / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
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Glen Park Elementary School was to be one of the first to reopen in the city.Gabrielle Lurie / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
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The San Francisco school district and its teachers union failed to reach an agreement to start reopening classrooms by late January after months of tense negotiations, the union and district said Friday.
Skip to main content
S.F. schools won t reopen in late January after teachers union, district fail to reach a deal
FacebookTwitterEmail
1of2
John Muir Elementary School in San Francisco was going to be among the first to reopen in the city.Lance Iversen / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
2of2
Glen Park Elementary School was to be one of the first to reopen in the city.Gabrielle Lurie / The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
The San Francisco school district and its teachers union failed to reach an agreement to start reopening classrooms by late January after months of tense negotiations, the union and district said Friday.