The best things to do in San Francisco for an amazing trip.

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Union Square History – San Francisco

September 1st, 2011 · Union Square

union square san franciscoSan Francisco’s Union Square is a shopping mecca for luxury items and international goods from around the globe. The history of this area is a fascinating study of politics and economic development in California.

In 1850, John Geary (pronounced Gary) became San Francisco’s first mayor. He sold a one square-block pile of sand to the City for $1 on the condition it would always be a park. Kids began playing a popular new game called baseball here and on other sand lots throughout the City, and so we have the term sandlot baseball.

Prior to the Civil War, southerners dominated California politics. They wanted California to secede from the United States to become an independent republic or join the Confederacy. In 1860, minister Thomas Starr-King came from Boston to head the First Unitarian Church (located where Nieman Marcus is today). He was a spell-binding orator whose speeches on the square urging support for President Lincoln, a Republican legislature and the abolition of slavery drew thousands. The political tide turned. California remained in the Union – thus, Union Square.

By the 1880’s, Union Square was a park of trees, grass and park benches surrounded by a wealthy residential neighborhood of mansions, churches, synagogues, and social clubs.

In 1898, Commodore George Dewey led a Navy squadron to defeat the Spanish Armada in the Battle of Manila, Philippines in the Spanish American War. San Franciscans raised private funds to honor Dewey with the monument in the center of the square. President William McKinley broke ground for the monument in 1901. After McKinley’s assassination, President Theodore Roosevelt dedicated the monument to both Dewey and McKinley in 1903.

At 5:13 a.m. on April 18, 1906, the earth rumbled for 45 seconds like few people had ever felt before. Enrico Caruso, the greatest opera star of the day was at the Palace Hotel and said “Everything in the room was going round and round. The chandelier was trying to touch the ceiling, and the chairs were chasing each other. Crash! Crash! Crash! It was terrible. My God I thought it would never stop. ‘El of a town. I never come back!” He never did.
union square cable cars
All around the square was destroyed, with the exception of the St. Francis, which had opened only two years before. It served meals in Union Square to hundreds of earthquake refuges. The St. Francis represented San Francisco in the golden era of hotels through the 1960s, when men wore suits and ties, and women wore hats and gloves in public. It was traditional to say either “Meet me at the St. Francis,” or, “Meet me under the clock.” Everyone knew it was the clock in the St. Francis lobby, where it still stands.

Unwilling to wait until the rubble was removed, wealthy residents of Union Square moved west of Van Ness Avenue. Union Square evolved into a retail shopping district that, like New York, Chicago and Boston, was renowned for its own exclusive merchants, such as the City of Paris and I. Magnin. By the late 1980s, travel, mass media and the homogenization of our culture saw the evolution to the national brands that dominate Union Square today.

This post is written by Peter Moylan – one of San Francisco’s leading walking tour guides and historical authorities. Hear similar stories on Peter’s personal walking, historical San Francisco tours.

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Five Must See Downtown San Francisco Museums

August 31st, 2011 · Museums

San Francisco’s cold rainy summers and winters can thwart the best-intentioned visitor’s plans to tour the city by the bay. There may be a disappointing view out the window and a cancelled trip across the Golden Gate, but for the culturally inclined a quick walk can be rewarded with visits to these five must-see downtown museums. Between three blocks on Mission Street just south of Market, one can visit an architectural wonder, wander through the newspaper comic section of their youth, and feel the history and connection to all humans on Earth.

Contemporary Jewish Museum

Contemporary Jewish Museum

Contemporary Jewish Museum

A three-story high black cube juts out of the brick side of the Jewish Contemporary Museum. To the visitor looking from the ground floor up at this converted Pacific Gas and Electric power station it may seem confusing and contrasting to understand the significance. Inside the Daniel Libeskind-designed building find the “aha” moment about the big black cube by reading the story of the building’s revival.  Seen from above, the building’s sculptural form is in the shape of the Hebrew letter “chai” to capture the Jewish mantra “l’chaim” which means “To Life!” Go further inside to feel the life of the naturally-lit and high ceiling museum with exhibits that feature modern Jewish themes like Gertrude Stein’s life in five stories or a listening room to hear the combinations of African-American and Jewish music.

Cartoon Art Museum

Cartoon Art Museum

Cartoon Art Museum

The Cartoon Art Museum is only one of a few graphic art museums in the world and the only one in the United States. In this art gallery setting, cartoon and comic book aficionados from around the world find hundreds of cartoon panels and rare illustrations from all eras. For those who used to read the Sunday funnies as a child, the museum offers a nostalgic trip with framed panes of Blondie, Nancy and Sluggo, and Garfield. Temporary exhibits run from the classical like “70 Years of Archie” to the daring illustrated version of Allen Ginsburg’s HOWL. With over 6000 works of cartoon art, the museum displays how the vast appeal of fun and sophisticated cartoon art.

Museum of Africa Diaspora (MoAD)

Museum of African Diaspora

Museum of African Diaspora

A three-story tall young Ghanaian’s portrait by Chester Higgins Jr. looks out on Mission Street and greets visitors through the museums’ glass façade. It is the symbol of the Museum of Africa Diaspora and includes 2700 photos sourced from around the world. The pictures and museum tell the story of African influence around the world as a result of recent centuries’ of African dispersal. Dance and hum along in the Celebration Circle where stories of food family and movement are shared from around the world. Follow up with a visit to the hands-on multimedia display of how Africa influences these aspects of culture.  Before moving onto one of the temporary exhibits, feel the words of African Slave freedom stories in the somber and Maya Angelou narrated Slavery Passages room.

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)

 

 

 

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

 

 

 

At this expansive modern art museum one can marvel at over 27,000 works of art – you may see paintings by Matisse, sculpture by Duchamp, and photography by Avedon. The Art in the Atrium hosts a stunning Calder mobile and modern murals. The building’s unique black and white architecture pulls in the visitor with a focused staircase and draws the eye up to look at the fifth-floor gangplank – all at the same time. If a visit to SFMOMA just happens to occur on a sunny day, then climb up the black staircase for a visit to the rooftop garden for the too-big-for-inside installations and most immersive view of the city.  The nearby Rooftop Coffee Bar serves snacks in a creative way – offering cakes and ice cream in the shape of showcased art. Try a Mondrian cake with that locally brewed Blue Bottle espresso.

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

Although not technically a museum, the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts is an art space and one that invites the same reflection and provocation. The YBCA brings the “now” to “here” with a gallery that hosts changing programs. It’s edgy performance and visual art interprets topics like San Francisco’s smut revolution from the 60s and 70s and cannabis reform. The vibe of this institution is seen in a welcoming quote to one of the exhibits, “Art deserves your full openness and presence. Leave your world behind. Chill. Focus. Energize.” If the rain breaks, the surrounding Yerba Buena Gardens is a unique place for picnic with large art installations and a wall of waterfalls.

All this cultural infusion in a few blocks in San Francisco may make a visitor pray for that rainy day. Since museums are typically closed one day a week, check the museum’s web sites for hours and visitor information. Get the full guide to all of San Francisco’s excellent museums at SFTravel.

By Kristin Zibell, editor and author of travel blog Takeyourbigtrip.com. After two years of traveling around the world, she is currently traveling locally in the city of San Francisco.

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Fisherman’s Wharf Love Story

August 12th, 2011 · Fisherman's Wharf

Fisherman’s Wharf is an area of San Francisco that we have to warn visitors as a “tourist trap” despite its immense popularity. However, this amazing story of love blossoming right at Fisherman’s Wharf truly touched our hearts. It’s a beautiful story of two people coming together interwoven with the heart and history of San Francisco. We hope it touches you in the same way and dedicate this story to Ali and Luc….

CC flickr.com/shuttermonster - Graham Lee

….I have to admit to a bias for Fisherman’s Wharf. My intro to Fisherman’s Wharf came when our daughter, Ali Immel, attended a program aboard the CA Thayer historic sailing ship in which kids spend 24 hours in the role of a seaman in the Age of Sail. She was a homeschooler, and she and her best friend took this very seriously and prepared for weeks, learning everything they could about life aboard a tall ship. Ali even began reading her father’s collection of Patrick O’Brien’s literary classics about the great sea battles of the Napoleonic wars.

The Age of Sail captured her so completely that she subsequently went sailing on tall ships, rebuilt a sailboat for herself and volunteered at Hyde Street

Creative Commons - flickr.com/AgentAkit

Pier the rest of her growing up, along with the boy she met at a chanty sing early on. They became boyfriend and girlfriend at 14 and 15. Now he, a graduate of the Maritime Academy, is a seaman and she, a graduate of Mills College, has a job on the Pier putting the tall ships maintenance and restoration skills she learned during her volunteer years to work on all the ships there. They bought their own 55ft wooden schooner, a replica of an historic fishing vessel that was something of an outlaw in the waters off Nova Scotia. They’ve restored it and won an award last year for their work.

Creative Commons - flickr.com/www78


On August 20, they’ll be married at the Fisherman’s and Seaman’s Chapel and afterwards we’ll all progress to Balclutha, historic sailing ship for the reception. And the rehearsal dinner will be at Pompeii’s Restaurant, which has been in the Pompeii family for decades. It isn’t haute cuisine, but it’s good neighborhood Italian restaurant fare and I’ve loved dealing with Nancy Pompeii, whose grandfather was actually a seaman aboard Balclutha when she was a working ship, then known as the Star of Alaska, traversing the waters between Alaska and San Francisco.

We used to take our Ali and Luc there for dinner after their volunteer days before they got their drivers’ licenses, which is why they’ve chosen it for the rehearsal dinner. So for us the Wharf is about its history, about an age whose extraordinary hand skills only survive through those who learn them and carry them on, and of course now about our daughter’s and her fiance’s personal histories.

Balclutha via Creative Commons - flickr.com/ToastyKen


The exhibit center across the street from Hyde St Pier will soon feature a traditional seaman’s chest with hand woven rope handles, Ali just finished. She’s also made traditional sailor’s clothing near the Maritime Museum, a full size sail for an sailing skiff “Coot” (by hand), and taught ditty bag construction while her fiance taught traditional rope work, for the Museum. Those are the kinds of things I wish more tourists would take an interest in and seek out.

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SOMArts Day of the Dead Exhibit – October 2011

August 12th, 2011 · Art

If you are interested in unique and original art in San Francisco, El Día de los Muertos, the
Day of the Dead, provides a way for people to embrace the beauty
of life and to honor the spirits of the dead. Intricate, traditional altars
and complex art installations will be on display in Illuminations: Dia de
los Muertos 2011 from Saturday,
October 8 through Saturday, November 5 at SOMArts Cultural
Center
, 934 Brannan Street, San Francisco.

The theme “Illuminations” was chosen by curators René and Rio
Yañez to symbolize a source of light for spiritual and intellectual
reflection. This year’s exhibition is dedicated to community pillar and
Mission District business owner Marta Sanchez and renowned artist
Pablo Picasso. Each year, more than 80 Bay Area artists from a
breadth of cultural backgrounds participate, examining local issues
and global disasters such as 2011’s devastating earthquake,
tsunami and nuclear meltdown in Japan. The 30+ altars and
installations range from deeply personal to political and many invite
contribution or interaction from the viewer.

“Illuminations presents the old and the new side by side,” says
curator René Yañez. “Traditional folk art altars will appear alongside
high-tech, experimental installations using 3-D images and
projections.”

Highlights of Illuminations include local artists Susana Aragon,
Adrian Arias, Carla Oden, and Elizabeth Addison’s multimedia
installations, which utilize the theme by incorporating light and
projections in unique environmental spaces. Longtime contributing
artist Victor Mario Zaballa will present a traditional Mexican Day of
the Dead altar. Architect Nick Gomez will create a material aesthetic
and layout for the installations, inspired by the theme. 2

“We continue to examine the ways technology shapes how we
celebrate Day of the Dead. Once again, our Flickr group enables us
to accept digital photos as offerings to those who people want to
honor,” says curator Rio Yañez. The public can upload their digital
contributions to flickr.com/groups/digitalofferings/. Selected images
will be printed and displayed as part of the exhibit.

Illuminations also features collaboration with actor and visual artist
Herbert Siguenza of Culture Clash fame. Siguenza has been touring
the U.S. in a one-person show called “A Weekend with Pablo
Picasso.” In addition to contributing an altar, Siguenza will perform
and paint as Picasso during the opening reception on Friday
October 7, 2011.

Photo Credits:
Altar by Victor Mario Zaballa
Altar by Alicia Cruz-Hunt
Altar by Jos Sances
All Photos by Rio Yanez

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Interview with San Francisco’s Newest Designer Boutique at Union Square

June 15th, 2011 · Shopping

We’ve interviewed the team from San Francisco’s newest designer boutique in San Francisco’s Union Square, the Downtown Shop. The team shared how their store is different and a spot to check out on a trip.

How did you get the idea to open the store and what is the team’s background in the fashion business?
The idea came from the fact that over the years, many women have shopped for themselves at my men’s store, The Archive, and asked when a women’s store would open. That told me that an entire audience was being missed. My background, as the owner, stretches back nearly 30 years in retail. I learned the business from the bottom up, stockroom to sales to buying at many of the top independent boutiques. My team previously worked in top sales and merchandising positions at Barneys, Fred Segal, Neiman Marcus, to name a few.

How is it different from other boutiques in the area?
In every way possible. The ambiance is much edgier, the designers are not available at any other store in San Francisco (and often not in the U.S.), we have a full bar to serve complimentary drinks to our clients, iPads are available for our clients to use while in the store. My team is trained to make the shopping experience the most welcoming and fun one possible – nothing intimidating about coming into Downtown.

What is your “typical” shopper looking for?
Clothes, shoes, jewelry, bags that they cannot find anywhere else. A level of old-world craftmanship that is missing from even very expensive designer collections.

Have you owned other similar stores?
Yes, The Archive on Sutter St. and a private buying service for women called Clothing Ventures, both since 2005.

What store was formerly in the space that you now occupy?
It was vacant for ten years and prior to that was the Iron Horse Bar and Restaurant.

What is your vision on how to interact with the community in the long term?
By providing a completely unique shopping experience and offering the world’s most interesting fashions, the community (those of a fashion mind) will have a true destination right at their doorstep.

Do you ever have seasonal sales – when and what are they like?
We have two sales each year, at the close of each season (spring/summer sales in June and July; fall/winter sales in December and January). Most of our collections are marked down from 30-70% during this time.

Is there an international flair to the store, and what region does it emphasize?
Only three of my designers are Americans, everyone else hails from around the world with a focus on Japan (Downtown is known globally as the store for hard to find Japanese designers). There are also many from France and Italy.

You can find the Downtown Shop at 55 Maiden Lane in San Francisco’s Union Square area. (415) 975-4400

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Golden Gate Bridge Facts

June 9th, 2011 · Golden Gate Bridge

San Francisco is abuzz with the nearing completion of 11 years of construction for the new Bay Bridge East Span. With increased safety from flaws seen in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, the Bay Bridge improvements are critical for safety.

We’ve built an educational poster summarizing all of the facts to compare the Golden Gate Bridge facts and Bay Bridge in size, weight, cost, construction and more. Let us know what you think and please feel free to use the poster in classroom education and science projects.

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Vote on your Favorite San Francisco Activities

June 8th, 2011 · Activities

A Seattle-based startup has created a new way to “battle” between different topics. As part of our monthly startup focus post, we are featuring Crowdsort.me – a piece of technology that grew out of a frantic startup weekend in Seattle where teams compete to deliver the best technology business over many coffees and beers in just 72 hours. Try out crowdsort and vote on your favorite San Francisco activities or just see which ones people like the best.

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Embrace Your Inner Hippie on San Francisco’s “Magic Bus”

May 16th, 2011 · Activities

Magic Bus San Francisco Psychedelic What do you get when you take a straightforward city bus tour and throw in beatniks, music, politics and drug references? Not your average daytrip, that’s for sure. The Magic Bus will fill you with nostalgia for the sixties, whether you were there at the time or simply co-opted mom’s record collection and stole her bellbottoms. This ride may not show you all of San Francisco, but it does give riders a firsthand glimpse into history, and that makes it something very special indeed.

The tour is split between observations of modern life in the city and a multimedia show on the retractable window shades of the bus. Sure, you miss some of the sights along the way while the movie plays – but then again, how many street musicians can outperform the Beatles?

Three Reasons to Jump On the Magic Bus

1. You hit the hot spots in San Francisco. As you roll through some of the city’s most notorious neighborhoods – Chinatown, North Beach, Haight-Ashbury and Golden Gate Park – the shades are raised and you can drink up the scene. Instead of a one-liner about every building and bump in the road as you whiz through, you’ll get a personal feel for the places that defined a decade.

2. It’s more fun than your high school history lesson. When you want to be transported to another time and place, no one does it better than a trained crew of actors and performers. Founder Chris Hardman tells the sixties story through news clips, classic music and a focus on the feeling of the era. It’s a Ken Burns Disney ride. It’s time travel. These guys believe that passing around fake acid (candy) and flowers is a lot more fun than bombarding you with dates or subjecting you to a dry presentation about the significance of the people mentioned in the videos. They couldn’t be more right.

3. It’s not a tour, it’s an experience. The tour appeals to many San Francisco first timers, but even locals will get a kick out of this trip. The Magic Bus is about more than seeing the city. It’s a theatrical experiment brought to you by Antenna Theater, the same people who popularized Walkman tours way back in the 1980s. Who knows – 20 years from now you could find yourself saying that you that were there, that you took one of the first truly avant-garde city tours in the country. Or, at the very least, you‘ll have an interesting story to tell your friends back home about that time you took a bubble-blowing bus tour.

Admission to The Magic Bus will run you $40 ($35 for students and seniors), but feel free to wax poetic about what that sum of money could have purchased back in the good old days. You can purchase advance tickets at www.brownpapertickets.com and then catch the Magic Bus at San Francisco’s Union Square at Geary Street (across from Macy’s). Enjoy a day of peace, love and history on the time-traveling Magic Bus!

The Magic Bus operates:
Friday: 12:00pm & 2:00pm
Saturday: 1:00pm & 3:00pm
(Although be warned: the psychedelic sixties aren’t always known to arrive promptly)

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Hotel Luca Brings Charm to Napa Valley

March 20th, 2011 · Napa Valley Wineries

Quaint yet luxurious, this is a rare combination when it comes to finding that ideal getaway. Yet the staff at Napa Valley’s newest gem, Hotel Luca, have struck that balance of old-world charm and comfortable modern amenities. While no hotel is without idiosyncrasies, it’s apparent that the Monterey-based Mirabel Hotel and Restaurant Group attempted to painstakingly pour through every detail before breaking ground on this unique, Italian inspired resort in 2009. For the most part, they succeeded brilliantly.
Hotel Luca Napa Valley

Just over an hour north of San Francisco, this establishment is quickly gaining a well-deserved reputation as the premier place to enjoy a relaxing escape in picturesque Yountville, California. While the rooms may not be quite as spacious as some local competitors like Bardessono or Vintage Inn, Luca’s rates are slightly lower. Countless satisfied guests have gushed about the wonderful treatment, delicious cuisine and ideal wine country setting.

The rustic architecture, towering stone facade and lush landscaping immediately transport the wary traveller into a paradise that rivals a holiday in the Italian countryside. While boasting about importing 200-year-old European tiles may come off as a novelty for the brochures, one walk through the elegantly designed courtyard should convince even jaded skeptics that such details are a sincere attempt to bring authentic Italia to the traveler (a far more affordable alternative than the vice versa).
Hotel Luca Napa Valley
Once escorted to one of twenty unique rooms, guests are delighted by contemporary comforts like heated tile floors, flat screen televisions and state of the art sound systems to dial in that perfect ambiance. At the same time, the rustic charm that many seek in a Napa getaway is also provided in abundance. Balconies or patios offer outdoor enjoyment while several rooms include a fireplace for a more intimate place to sample the region’s wine. Spacious bathrooms with his and hers sinks, soothing tubs and separate showers offer the perfect place to unwind after a full day of wine tasting and shopping in the warm California sun.

The grounds include a swimming pool, heated indoor saltwater soaking pool and a full-service spa to pamper visitors with a menu of revitalizing massage options. Speaking of menus, Luca also houses the magnificent Cantinetta Piero. Focusing more on fun and flavor than elegance, this lively, vaulted-ceiling eatery offers everything from pizzas fresh out of the wood-burning oven to an array of Tuscany flavored seasonal pasta dishes. This restaurant has become a popular destination in its own right.

Not every patron will favor the built-in gratuity, but most feel it’s a simpler, more comfortable and fair alternative than carrying around a wad of bills and figuring out what to tip every staffer that offers their service (and there are plenty). With such an impressive assortment of amenities, Hotel Luca rivals the higher-priced, “stuffy” facilities. In a town with so many inns vying for the patronage of the discerning Napa Valley vacationer, Luca has etched out a winning niche by providing comfort and luxury within a friendly, inviting atmosphere.

Hotel Luca is worth checking out on your next trip or day-trip to Napa Valley wineries.

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San Francisco’s Experience of a Lifetime…

February 24th, 2011 · san francisco, Travel News, Travel StartUps

Fitness Boot CampFor years, tour bus companies have driven a rut through the same San Francisco attractions. From the Golden Gate Bridge, to Muir Woods and Napa Valley – commoditized, often boring tours have become the norm. For visitors to San Francisco looking for something different with a personal touch – a new service called Skyara is breaking new ground. Skyara has created a review-based marketplace for travel “experience” offerings – ranging from personalized tours of popular attractions to very unique services such as glamour photography and shadowing an executive chef as they choose the finest fresh, local produce.

The service was originally conceived as a more mundane tour booking service. However, the team realized that Skyara could focus on a totally different type of tours. By allowing independent providers– “regular folks”– to create visitor experiences – it opened up a whole new market for memorable experiences in San Francisco travel.

On a recent visit to San Francisco, we had an amazing tour of vineyards, markets, and restaurants with a wonderful personal guide. The guide knew every trick, tip, and brought us to her favorite vendors. The small tour was radically different than the throngs of tourists we saw pouring out of buses at the sites. Skyara can allow San Francisco visitors to find exactly the experience they want to maximize their own memorable trip to the City. What are some of the experiences you can sometimes find?Dating for Dummies

Here are examples of some of the unusual and personal experiences that Skyara offers:

Dating for Dummies”: Two attractive women meet up with you at a bar to assess your skills and make recommendations. For the best candidates, match-making opportunities may be available…?

Sausalito by Kayak: An experienced Kayak guide takes you around the shores of Sausalito including nighttime tours, sunset tours, and detailed information about the area. Reviewers show the trip as being both “spectacular and unforgettable”…

Create Art with Glass: Use hot, molded glass to create your own personal art with an expert in the glass-blowing craft. The class includes all materials, training, and firing of your glass art piece. Dancing Lessons in San Francisco

Actors Makeup Workshop: A professional makeup artist teaches you how to look your best including a professional makeover (just like on Oprah!) , and tips for hairstyling, skin-tone, plus photo-shoot secrets and photographer referrals.

You can see that Skyara allows visitors (and locals) to connect with San Francisco in a much more meaningful way than a bland tour bus ride. The service is linked into Facebook and for many service providers, you can see reviews from past customers. Like the fast growing AirBnB which matches empty homes and rooms with travelers – Skyara is developing a new marketplace for travel engagement. While it’s not perfect for every business traveler or family, check it out to see if you can spend a day trying out an activity of a lifetime.

Skyara is the innovative service of three New York consultants, who left high-powered banking and consulting careers to pursue their dreams. The team is a combination of self-taught programming skills and business / marketing management focused on innovative travel products. The company is funded by I/O Ventures and located in the innovative Summit Café offices in San Francisco’s vibrant “start-up” district South of Market.
sftravel
About sfTravel Startup Voice: Each month – sfTravel highlights a Bay Area startup focused on the travel industry. Our analysis brings home how startups can assist travelers and builds a link into the San Francisco travel business scene. To suggest story ideas, contact sfTravel here.

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