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This beautifully designed, centrally located, city home offers great style, quality, and flexibility. Located on a private, gated street, this remarkable townhouse is an oasis in the city. The main level of the home has newly refinished hardwood floors, soaring ceilings, abundant natural light, an open floor plan, and a wood burning fireplace. This bright living area is open to the dining space and the adjacent kitchen with granite counters and all the modern conveniences. Overlooking the living space is a flexible loft, an ideal space for guests, or a home office. The bedroom with a built-in window seat and a walk-in closet is a comfortable retreat. The full bath has a shower over the tub, and is conveniently located next to the bedroom. Complementing this level is a deck, where you might have your morning coffee and enjoy your outdoor space. Laundry and extra storage are conveniently located in the one car garage. Easy access to freeways, Bart, & Caltrain. With an impressive Walk Score of 98, and a Transit Score of 100, you have ready access to the best restaurants and shops the city has to offer.
Light industry once ruled this quiet backwater district; printing presses, welders, motorcycle repair, with a few dance spots thrown in for good measure. That is until city planners laid out a future more akin to New Your City's SOHO, where galleries and artist lofts might dominate the picture. That vision didn't quite materialize, though big changes remained just over the horizon for this centrally located enclave.
San Francisco had its dot-com explosion in the 90's and suddenly it was hip to live and work in SOMA. 3rd street saw the introduction of a major SF MOMA location, followed by Yerba Buena, and the Jewish Museum. Things very quickly shifted as multimillionaire tech-heads began populating the office spaces and lunchtime eateries, shifting the neighborhood's economic fortunes forever.
Once unremarkable warehouses were transformed into offices that boasted the latest Internet connectivity. Old printing factories now became the city's hottest luxury lofts. Folks began taking note of the Victorian cottages nestled in the modest alleys between the broad thoroughfares. This period also saw the rebirth of the Ferry Building at the end of Market. This classic historic structure morphed quickly into an exceptional food emporium and farmer market location without rival. SOMA remains today an urban district where dreams are made, in a comfortable setting unlike any other. And all within biking or walking distance.