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Candlestick Point Neighborhood, San Francisco CA

About Candlestick Point Neighborhood

Candlestick Point State Recreation Area (or simply Candlestick Point) is a state park unit of California, United States, providing an urban protected area on San Francisco Bay. The park is located at the southeastern tip of San Francisco immediately south of Hunters Point and 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Sierra Point in Brisbane. This 170-acre (69 ha) landfilled area was intended to be used during World War II as a shipyard by the United States Navy. However it was abandoned as the war ended.

Candlestick Park, the former stadium of the San Francisco Giants and San Francisco 49ers, was also located next to Candlestick Point.

History of Candlestick Point Neighborhood

March 4, 1959 - Fifty years ago today on a busy news day for The Chronicle, readers learned the name of the city's new $15 million baseball stadium for the Giants - Candlestick Park. The sports editors of San Francisco's four daily newspapers at the time chose the name from more than 20,000 entries.

The winning entry took the name of the stadium's site, Candlestick Point, which in turn was named because the rocks on the hill behind the stadium resembled candlesticks. The editors rejected proposals such as Argonaut Arena and Zephyr Cove, which would have been appropriate given the breezes that would long bedevil "The 'Stick." The name changed four times between 1995 and 2008 - 3Com Park, 3Com Park at Candlestick Point, Monster Park and finally back to Candlestick Park.

Demographics of Candlestick Point Neighborhood

There are 35,747 residents in Candlestick Point, with a median age of 37.2. Of this, 48.15% are males and 51.85% are females. US-born citizens make up 57.52% of the resident pool in Candlestick Point, while non-US-born citizens account for 27.94%. Additionally, 14.54% of the population is represented by non-citizens.

Transportation in Candlestick Point Neighborhood

There are 5 ways to get from San Francisco to Candlestick Park by train, bus, tram, taxi or car

Car. Definitely a car. There are a couple of Muni bus lines that skirt the edges of this neighborhood, but most homes have parking for at least one car and often more. Future development in the area will likely bring increased public transportation options, but for now, you’ll need a car to get to work and shopping.
The SFMTA led the development of the Project’s Transportation Plan, which prioritizes walking, bicycling, and transit travel, links the new neighborhood with the existing adjacent ones, improves access to the entire Southeast portion of San Francisco, and ensures direct, immediate links to regional transit and traffic corridors.

The project transit improvements include: the Hunters Point Transit Center, bus rapid transit connecting to Caltrain and likely BART, new downtown express bus routes from both Candlestick Point and Hunters Point and other service expansions. Street improvements will include transit preferential signaling and streetscape improvements.An extensive pedestrian and bicycle network includes a cycletrack connecting Candlestick Point with Hunters Point and connecting both areas to regional transit.

Politics in Candlestick Point Neighborhood

Candlestick Point residents aim for better future and development specially in their neighborhood, so they also aim for clean politics. Residents are voters and would like to exercise their right to vote.

Lifestyle in Candlestick Point Neighborhood

Until recently, the neighborhood was most noted for the 49ers stadium. It’s been demolished to make way for future development, leaving several large condo developments, an office park, and the Candlestick recreation area.

As south as you can go and still be in San Francisco. Once home to Candlestick Park, now home to office parks and several condominium developments. While the Candlestick Recreation Area may be windswept and solitary today, the future for this neighborhood calls for thousands of homes and a new neighborhood core.

Schools in Candlestick Point Neighborhood

Though Candlestick Point is currently redeveloping and paving its way through a new community, offering San Franciscans a fresh destination to work, play outdoors, watch films and experience theater, shop, eat local cuisine, and live, schools in the vicinity are big help for the community especially the children. Some of the schools here are Candlestick Cove School, KIPP San Francisco College Preparatory, Five Keys Charter School and Golden Bridges School.

Real estate in Candlestick Point Neighborhood

With only a few streets and lots of open space, Candlestick Point is mainly home to condos and just a handful of single-family homes. The condos are newer — midrises built in the early 2000s, while the single-family homes date mainly to the 1960s.

NEW! What are the real estate investment opportunities in San Francisco?

City of San Francisco has committed to make it easy for homeowners and developers to build more in the city. Learn what are the investment opportunities in the articles below. Next, look up an address for its Development Score that tells you if that property has any development potential and if this is an opportunity you should not miss.

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