Memo to City: Our Coke Sign Is “Vintage Commercial Art”

Vintage Coke Sign
This would be funny, but for the fact that it’s also so sadly emblematic of the entire farce…

During a meeting yesterday to discuss Supervisor David Campos’s proposal to save Bernalwood’s historic Coca-Cola sign, our City bureaucrats ran up against a very difficult challenge: What should these kind of signs be called?????

The stoic Will Kane from the San Francisco Chronicle attended the meeting, and he manages to tell the tale while more or less maintaining a straight face:

At their meeting Thursday, planning commissioners were stuck trying to find words besides “commemorative” and “historic” to describe, well, historic, commemorative signs.

The sign in question was the infamous vintage Coca-Cola sign in Bernal Heights. Estimated to have been painted in the 1930s, the city determined in February that it was actually an “unpermitted general advertising sign” and required it be painted over.

The outcry from neighbors and local bloggers caused Supervisor David Campos, whose district includes the sign, to introduce legislation to protect historic – er, commemorative, er special – signs in San Francisco.

That legislation was approved unanimously Thursday, but not before a discussion about the best way to describe the sign. City staff said they wanted to avoid the word “historic” because that suggested the sign was a landmark with a capital L, like the iconic City Lights Bookstore.

But commissioners said they didn’t really like commemorative, either.

“That sounds like the Washington Mall and commemorative plaques and monuments et cetera,” said Commissioner Kathrin Moore. “This is more about honoring a period piece or whatever the proper word is. But it is not commemorative. I am not commemorating Coca Cola. It is really the role this piece plays as an expression of a particular place and time. Is there a better word? It is too serious, that word.”

HINT FOR CITY BUREAUCRATS: Here in Bernalwood, we view our Coke mural as “vintage commercial artwork.” We feel this phrasing affords such historic resources the proper respect they deserve. But if you’re feeling lazy, or worried about making all that fit in your Tweets, then “vintage sign” will certainly suffice. Knock yourself out.

On the bright side, the Planning Commission did approve Campos’s plan and passed it along to the Board of Supervisors, so we hope they will have better luck with this.

Okay… next agenda item?

PHOTO: Telstar Logistics

New Mobile Photo Blog Co-Stars Bernalwood’s Troy Holden

Regular readers of Bernalwood might have noticed a beautiful trend: Folks are taking some amazing pictures these days, using nothing more than their mobile phones (and a pocket-sized arsenal of photo editing apps). A few shutterbugs are pushing the envelope with this technology, and Bernalwood contributor Troy Holden happens to be one of them.

Troy is also contributing to a new blog called Objective Scenes that’s devoted exclusively to iPhone photography. (“We knew him when…”) Here’s a snippet from the mission statement:

When I bought my first iPhone, I quickly became obsessed with documenting everything around me, but it wasn’t until Instagram came around that I started to think more aesthetically about my photos. I loved seeing great shots that other folks were taking with their mobile phones and got inspired to improve my skills. When I decided to start a photoblog, I knew I wanted to work with other photographers whose shots I was digging on Instagram.

So welcome to Objective Scenes, a group blog dedicated to mobile photography (aka iPhoneography). I’m excited to watch the blog grow and can’t wait to see the work my co-contributors (Troy, Tyson, and Victoria) post in coming weeks.

It’s great stuff, and there’s obviously lots more great stuff to come. Check out Objective Scenes!

Oh, and that photo at the very top? Troy took that one here in Bernalwood:

Seen early this morning in Bernal Heights while waiting for the bus, a neighbor waters her plants.

Here’s some more goodness from Objective Scenes:

PS: If you’re using Instagram, Troy is @troy and I am @telstarlogistics. And don’t forget to share your favorite Bernal Heights photos with Bernalwood right here.

PHOTOS: From Top: Troy Holden, NicoleTBN, Victoria LeBlanc, DocPop

RIP: Firefighter Vincent Perez, Raised in Bernal Heights

SFFD centennial edition
This is heartbreaking. SFFD firefighter Lt. Vincent Perez perished yesterday while battling a residential blaze on Berkeley Way in Diamond Heights. Two other firefighters were also injured in the incident. According to the SF Chronicle, Perez grew up in Bernal Heights:

A sudden flash of 1,000-degree heat at a house fire Thursday claimed the life of a veteran San Francisco firefighter who was trapped with his colleagues in the hillside home.

Lt. Vincent Perez, 48, died trying to extinguish a fire at the four-story home in Diamond Heights. He was caught in a “flashover” – an unexpected explosion caused when temperatures rise so high the contents of a room spontaneously ignite, Fire Department spokeswoman Mindy Talmadge said. […]

Perez was a San Francisco firefighter for 21 years. He was born and raised in the Mission District and Bernal Heights, and was known for his courage and sense of humor, said Tom O’Connor, head of the firefighters union.

“He was always the first guy in a fire and the last guy out,” O’Connor said. “He lightened up the mood at the firehouse. … He was a firefighter’s firefighter.”

The flag flew at half-staff in front of Fire Station 26 in Diamond Heights, where a station crew member said two of the three firefighters were based.

UPDATE 6/4/11 o8:39:

In a follow-up article, the Chronicle tells us that Perez was raised on Wool Street, dined often at the Old Clam House, and complained about its recent remodel:

Perez, the second-oldest of five children, was raised on Wool Street in Bernal Heights. He knew the neighboring Mission District so well he could tell other firefighters which streets had overhead wires so they knew whether they could raise their ladders, colleagues said.

He spent his teenage years cruising Mission Street in a two-tone 1951 Lincoln. Even after attending City College of San Francisco, serving in the Marine Corps, being a deputy sheriff and then a firefighter, Perez maintained his childhood friendships and his taste for vintage cars.

“To this day, he hung out with the guys he grew up with,” Rivera said.

Perez even kept his youthful nickname – nearly everyone called him “Creature.

“When he was a kid … he had super-long arms and legs,” Rivera said. “When he used to run, he was kind of clumsy, and they used to call him ‘the Creature from the Black Lagoon.’ … He just shortened it to Creature.”

One of Perez’s favorite hangouts was the Old Clam House on Bayshore Boulevard, even though he groused when it was remodeled.

“He was one of those guys, a native San Franciscan,” Rivera said.

PHOTOS: Telstar Logistics and Bay City News

Last Call for 2011 Bernal Heights Outdoor Cinema Submissions

Hey Filmmakers!

Bernal Heights Outdoor Cinema has extended the deadline until June 15 for submission of short films/videos for its 8th annual end-of-summer film screenings, August 31- September 4, 2011. Local filmmakers and artists who have participated in the production, promotion or distribution of a film are encouraged to submit their work to the five-day showcase of local, independently produced content shown to city-wide audiences in parks, playgrounds and open spaces.

Shorts in all genres are accepted:

–       Animation
–       Narrative
–       Art/experimental
–       Documentary
–       Children’s
–       Music videos
–       Works-in-progress
–       Trailers

Requirements call for programming and language to be appropriate for general audiences.
A complete Submission package including DVD preview, contact info, bio, press kit is requested. Visit www.bhoutdoorcine.org for details or call (415) 641-0324. No entry fee necessary.

Awards are given to filmmakers in the categories of:

  • Best of Bernal Award
  • Spirit of Bernal Award
  • Audience Award

A Rare Eye-to-Eye Encounter with Bernal Hill

Bernal Hill from the blue water tower

The citizens of Bernalwood are used to looking down on the rest of the City — quite literally. Our exalted altitude gives us a lofty perspective, so this fab photo is pretty unique: It’s an eye-to-eye view of Bernal’s southern face, taken from the big blue water tower in McLaren Park.

It’s rare to see Bernal Hill set against a backdrop of downtown high-rises, but I must say, this view is quite flattering to our profile.

UPDATE 1:04 pm

Photographer Jean Pedigo writes:

Just saw the great shot on the blog of the city and beyond with the hill from McLaren…reminded me of this one I took last Spring with my point and shoot while driving through the park for the first time.  It was so cool to see our hill from that vantage point!

PHOTO: Top, scathac1961. Below, Jean Pedigo

Microsoft’s Maps Create Bernal Heights for Cubists

So, Google Maps Street View continues to treat Bernal Heights as an Island of Invisibility (or, the best-kept secret on the Interwebs).

But things are very different over at Microsoft’s Bing, where the streets of Bernalwood are well represented. Here’s Bing’s coverage area:

Comprehensive! And as an added bonus, Bing offers a clever(ish) system called Streetside that compiles street-level imagery into a continuous collage that sort-of, kind-of replicates the experience of walking down the street… if you happened to be walking down the street with a Robotic Cubist.

For example, this is Alabama, looking at the eastern end of Precita Park (click to embiggen):

And here is College Ave. near Murray:

Pretty neat. Try it yourself.

Bernal Succulent Thief Really Sucks

Keep an eye on your yards, everyone. A western slope resident reports that someone recently hacked off a number of the large succulents she had been lovingly tending in her front yard for the past five years.

“This reminded me of when I lived in the Mission and my next-door neighbors had chained and padlocked their front doormat to their house,” she said. “I can relate now.”

It’s not the first time Bernalwood has been hit by larcenous pruning. Seven months ago, flyers were posted around the neighborhood by another horticulturist victim. As Joe Eskenazi reported in SF Weekly’s blog The Snitch, Ingleside Police Station Captain Louis Cassenego noted succulent thefts in both Bernal and the Excelsior in his “Captain’s Message” to the public:

“If you see a stranger in your or your neighbor’s front yard in the middle of the night, it would be advisable to call the police and have an officer check it out,” writes Cassanego. “Many residents take pride in their yards and put in many hours of hard work, so let’s help them out.”

Still true now.

PHOTO: Bronwyn Ximm

House Portrait: Big Pink on Brewster

Brewster at Macedonia

This very big, very pink house at the corner of Brewster and Macedonia is from the late 1950s or early 1960s. It almost looks like a birthday cake; so much so that I find myself wanting to eat all the icing.

But as always with Bernalwood Style, it’s the meticulous attention to detail that really pulls the whole thing together:

Brewster at Macedonia

PHOTOS: Telstar Logistics

Dude, Share My Car

Need a car? Live in Bernalwood? Maybe you should take my neighbor’s Scion xD, which is currently parked on Virginia Avenue near Winfield. It’ll run you just eight bucks an hour, which includes gas, insurance, and 20 miles/hour.

Such transactions used to be illegal, but no more, thanks to a recent state law. As a result, companies like RelayRides, which facilitate peer-to-peer car sharing, are sprouting up like daisies (or, rather, goldfields) this year. Similar outfits include Spride Share and Getaround (which even has a Tesla Roadster available).

It’s a great way to use four wheels when you need them, without actually owning a car—a win for both you and the environment! Or, if you have a vehicle but you bike to work from Bernal, leaving your ride parked for hours at a time, it’s potentially a great way to offset some of the costs of ownership.

I say “potentially” because peer-to-peer car sharing is still a relatively new phenemenon, and things could get hairy when it comes to owners’ liability for losses that occur when others use their car.

For more on that, as well as more details on how peer-to-peer car sharing works, read my post on Wallet Mouth.

PHOTO: Bronwyn Ximm