Small-town values

If you think cities are alienating, you’ve never lived in Glen Park.

Jeff Katz

glen park

For city dwellers craving a small-town vibe, Glen Park might be an ideal place to settle. Eleven minutes from downtown by BART, it has never been a destination for the cooler-than-thou; its charms remain known largely to residents, and it’s the kind of place where families feel comfortable raising kids. But on its quaint, down-home streets live folks who fight like pit bulls to keep Glen Park lovable. Take the couple who stopped waiting for the city to clean up graffiti-riddled buildings and got busy themselves. That effort has spawned monthly work parties of some 15 to 20 villagers out to defy taggers.

Commitment to this hood south of the Mission doesn’t stop with aesthetics, either. When big business and the San Francisco Planning Department started poking around in the late 1990s, locals showed up at meetings in droves to look out for their small town in the middle of the city. It’s not that they object to anything new—the recently built Glen Park Market Place, a mixed residential and retail development, doesn’t have them up in arms—it’s just that they think oldies are goodies, too. As Michael Rice, Glen Park Association president, puts it, “Our com­munity isn’t totally opposed to development, but we’re fond of our old downtown. God knows we have plenty of our own coffeehouses; we don’t need Starbucks.”

HANGOUTS
One of the few natural spots in the city that isn’t overrun by tourists, beautiful, serene Glen Canyon Park draws climbing enthusiasts and locals alike. Stretch­ing from the foot of Twin Peaks for some 100 acres, it features hiking trails, hidden tire swings, massive boulders, and a playground. BOSWORTH AND ELK STS.

At Eggettes, patrons snack on goodies like Filipino chicken-rice porridge and Hong Kong–style coconut or honeydew mini-waffles as they enjoy plasma TV and free Internet access. 2810 DIAMOND ST.

SHOP FRONTS
Vanessa Viray and her family opened Paragraph in 2004 after falling in love with the hood, and shoppers soon fell for their one-room clothing boutique. Viray’s trunk shows attract local designers looking to showcase their one-of-a-kind styles, which pays off for men, women, and kids seeking affordable fashion. 654 CHENERY ST.

Even little ones calm down at Kiki Yo, where a variety of classes keep yogis of all ages healthy. From Baby and Me to Kiki for Kids, instructors gear each class to the age group’s abilities and attention spans. Moms-to-be can stay centered, too, with the studio’s new prenatal hatha
and vinyasa classes. 605B CHENERY ST.

Avid readers and music lovers alike showed up by the hundreds for a pancake-breakfast benefit last summer to keep the neighborhood staple Bird & Beckett Books and Records  alive. Owner Eric Whittington says shoppers often pick up an extra book or two to help bolster the store’s bottom line, and live jazz here on Friday nights is a village tradition. 2788 DIAMOND ST.

ONLY HERE
There’s playing in the park, and then there’s playing in the middle of a huge canyon. At Glenridge Cooperative Nursery School, which doesn’t even have a street address, things

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