03/25/12 10:49am

The Untapped Web Bites are editor picks of the best online reads of the week from each of our cities and the most Untapped places across the globe.

NYC Next Idea’s new batch of wild and crazy New York startup ideas. [Beta Beat]

New York’s burgeoning tech industry, as seen on 568 Broadway. [Crain's New York]

You may be able to purchase a domain name with a .nyc suffix in the near future. NYC is seeking a contract with a company based in . . . Virginia. [NY Times]

Muni turns 100. [Market Street Railway]

Community Gallery on Ames Alley. [Mission Mission]

Is this yours? Police post slideshow of stolen property recovered from alleged serial burglar. [SF Appeal]

An ode to urban exploration: The Paris Metro. [Sleepy City]

Urban decay from around the globe, a hauntingly beautiful sight. [Noupe]

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09/19/11 12:37pm

It’s packed with tourists on their way to Fisherman’s Wharf. It doesn’t run through the normal underground stations downtown. After going out of service, it sails down Church Street toward its Muni storage facility, teasing you with its approaching lights as you wait for the arrival of the elusive J.

Yes, the Muni F line is more for visitors than commuters, but it’s also a lot of fun. Instead of the regular grey Muni cars, the F is made up of a fleet of historic streetcars from around the world. The colorful cars brighten up Market Street and the Embarcadero, with designs hailing from Milan, Philadelphia and Birmingham, just to name a few.

How did these historic streetcars become fixtures on modern-day SF streets? You can thank the Market Street Railway, a non-profit organization that acquires and restores vintage streetcars along with the city’s iconic cable cars (whose underground cables differ from the overhead wires used to power streetcars). Back in 1976, the group was formed by three passionate individuals fighting to protect a historic trolley car facing destruction. Over the next several years, the group grew in size and influence. They became key supporters of the annual Historic Trolley Festivals, which brought vintage streetcars to Market Street every summer for more than 10 years.

The surroundings have changed on Market Street, but streetcars like these can still be seen every day on the F line.  [Source: 1937 photo from the San Francisco History Center/San Francisco Public Library]  

 In 1995, the popularity of the streetcars led to the official opening of the F line on Market Street. It expanded to serve the Embarcadero and Fisherman’s Wharf in 2000. Now, around 20 streetcars-kept clean and shiny with the help of Market Street Railway volunteers-run every day on the F line.

Many cars running on the line today have been restored and painted in tribute to original streetcar lines  throughout  the United States. This  car, built in Minneapolis in 1946, was restored in D.C. Transit colors and debuted on Francisco streets this year:

One  streetcar painted in the historic SF color scheme made it to the big screen in 2008’s Milk. The film took place in 1978, when some of these original green and cream cars were still in operation. This car is now dedicated to the memory of Harvey Milk:

             

Several Italian streetcars also make appearances on the F line, including this 1928 car from Milan-one of several  in  the F line fleet:

To learn more about the historic cars currently running on the F line right now, see the Market Street Railway  website or be a tourist for a day and experience the real thing. (One more option: if you find yourself waiting for the J at night in the pouring rain, look particularly cold and wet as an out-of-service F approaches. It just might take pity on you, as it did for me, and take you safely home!)

09/02/11 10:49am

The Untapped Web Bites are editor picks of the best online reads of the week from each of our cities and the most Untapped places across the globe.  

Copyright: Robert Vizzini

 

 

The Tribute in Light returns to Ground Zero. [Metropolis Mag]

Muni-Meter Patrollers crop up on the Lower East Side. Motorists, you’ve been warned. [Bowery Boogie]

Call to subway aficionados, HBO drama Boardwalk Empire is bringing back authentic nostalgia trains to the subway.[Gothamist]


 

Artist Andy Stattmiller cultivates the unique Muni experience that every SF traveler can attest to. [Muni Diaries]

Rogue Muni riders, (let it be noted that Untapped Cities does not condone these actions). [Muni Diaries]


 

David Lynch fans: ever want to experience Mulholland Drive? Perhaps not, either way though, enter Silencio. [Hollywood Reporter]

The varied, emotive faces of France. [France 24]


 

The Beer Buddha takes a taste of NOLA Brewing’s new seasonal beer, Smoky Mary – a smoked Oktoberfest-style ale. [The Beer Buddha]


 

Pop-up placemaking is allowing cities and urban designers to reconceive the urban center. [Sustainable Cities Collective]

Brevity is conquering convolution; Twitter is pervading academia. [The Next Web]

 

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