
Hidden Gems in San Francisco: Secret Spots, Quiet Corners and Local Favourites
Hidden Gems in San Francisco: Secret Spots, Quiet Corners and Local Favourites
Start your day not with the Bridge or the Wharf, but in the Inner Sunset. Climb the 16th Avenue Tiled Steps; a vibrant, community-built mosaic staircase that rises between houses with almost no signage to lead you there. At the top, Grandview Park offers one of the most underrated panoramic views in the city. You’ll see the Pacific, the downtown skyline, and Golden Gate Park stretched out like a soft green carpet, all without the crowds or selfie sticks.
The Streets Less Travelled
Start your day not with the Bridge or the Wharf, but in the Inner Sunset. Climb the 16th Avenue Tiled Steps; a vibrant, community-built mosaic staircase that rises between houses with almost no signage to lead you there. At the top, Grandview Park offers one of the most underrated panoramic views in the city. You’ll see the Pacific, the downtown skyline, and Golden Gate Park stretched out like a soft green carpet, all without the crowds or selfie sticks.
From there, drift east into the Mission District; but skip the main drag. Balmy Alley, far smaller and less photographed than Clarion, tells the real story of this neighbourhood. Its murals speak to decades of protest, identity, and memory. The alley is quiet, but the walls are loud. Each one layered with meaning and history, asking you to slow down and look closely.
Hidden in Plain Sight
Out in the Marina District, tucked behind the paved walkways and waterfront cafés, the Wave Organ sits quietly at the end of a rock jetty. It’s a sculpture that plays the ocean; literally. Made from salvaged materials and designed with acoustic chambers, it captures the movement of the tide and turns it into sound - subtle, strange, and a little hypnotic. Most people walk right past it. But if you sit, you’ll hear something few others ever do.
And then there’s the lesser-known approach to Coit Tower. Instead of driving or catching a ride, take the Filbert Steps... a winding wooden staircase that climbs through lush gardens and ivy-covered houses. It’s a hidden world carved into Telegraph Hill, and if you're lucky, you’ll spot the city’s famed wild parrots flitting overhead.
History You Can Walk Through
On the edge of the Pacific, where the city meets the sea, the Sutro Baths are slowly being reclaimed by nature. Once a massive bathhouse filled with saltwater pools, now it’s a place for watching waves crash against ruined walls and sea mist roll in over the cliffs. Go at sunset. Bring something warm. It feels like a scene from another era.
Closer to the heart of the city, tucked between bookstores and low-key brunch spots in the Richmond, is Green Apple Books. A San Francisco classic. The kind of bookstore with handwritten staff picks, crowded shelves, and aisles that don’t care about space. It's not a destination, it’s a pause. A moment where the city quiets down just enough to let you sink into a page.
A City That Hides Its Best Side
Some of the best food in San Francisco isn’t in guidebooks. It’s on Clement Street. A few blocks from the quiet avenues of the Richmond, you’ll find Burmese noodle joints, Russian bakeries, Vietnamese delis, and Chinese vegetable markets. No fanfare. No gimmicks. Just locals, regulars, and kitchens that have been doing things the same way for decades.
