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We hated all those lists of the weirdest places in SF. So we made our own. FacebookTwitterEmail DianeBentleyRaymond/Getty Images San Francisco is a weird city. Built on the backs of 300,000 adventurers, speculators and grifters seeking gold, it’s probably no surprise that the city has always inhabited a space on the edge of American life. Walking the city today there are a hundred spots of intrigue that tell stories of its bizarre past, but they’re not always easy to find. Searching Google for a list of “the weirdest things in San Francisco” yields some pretty tired results (sorry wave organ and pretty staircases), so we decided to make our own. ....
S.F. supe wants new large buildings to recycle, use less water By J.D. Morris As California struggles with an intensifying drought, new San Francisco legislation would seek to make large buildings consume less water after they’re occupied. Supervisor Rafael Mandelman introduced an ordinance Tuesday that would expand the types of buildings subject to city requirements for treating and reusing wastewater, lowering the threshold from 250,0000 square feet to 100,000 square feet or more. Starting Jan. 1, the ordinance would also make new large commercial developments treat more types of wastewater and make new large residential developments reuse the wastewater they would already be required to collect for additional purposes. ....
Amid drought concerns, S.F. supervisor wants new large buildings to recycle and use less water FacebookTwitterEmail 1of2 Pipes in the control room of the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission building return treated toilet water to irrigate plants on the exterior and interior of the building. A new ordinance would expand the use of recycled water in some new buildings in the city.Brant Ward/The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less 2of2 Senior stationary engineer Maurice Harper checks a sample of the treated water for purity in the basement control room of the San Francisco Public Utilities building in 2015. The building uses treated sewage water from about 1,000 employees to flush the toilets and irrigate some of the landscaping. A proposed ordinance would require more buildings in the city to do the same.Brant Ward/The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less ....
S.F. supe wants new large buildings to recycle, use less water By J.D. Morris As California struggles with an intensifying drought, new San Francisco legislation would seek to make large buildings consume less water after they’re occupied. Supervisor Rafael Mandelman introduced an ordinance Tuesday that would expand the types of buildings subject to city requirements for treating and reusing wastewater, lowering the threshold from 250,0000 square feet to 100,000 square feet or more. Starting Jan. 1, the ordinance would also make new large commercial developments treat more types of wastewater and make new large residential developments reuse the wastewater they would already be required to collect for additional purposes. ....
The secrets of the San Francisco Columbarium FacebookTwitterEmail The Columbarium, 1 Loraine Court, San Francisco.Andrew Chamings Most Bay Area folk know the oft-repeated fact that the Colma has more dead bodies than living ones it s true and it s not even close. The town, formed in 1924 as one of America s only necropolises, has a living population of about 1,700, but entombs about 1.5 million bodies. The reason that the little town a few miles south of San Francisco is one big graveyard is the mass (and pretty gruesome) movement of bodies that occurred a century ago. But one beautiful building in San Francisco, hidden down the end of a dead end street just north of Golden Gate Park, still stands as a vestige to a time when the city was covered in graves. ....