Cesar Chavez Street runs roughly east-west from Third Street near the bay, through Hunters Point and Bayview, crossing Highway 280 and Highway 101, running through Potrero Hill, the Mission and Bernal Heights, and then uphill to Noe Street, where it dead-ends and re-appears — and again at Castro and Diamond streets.
This street has been well known as a place for day laborers to get work, since at least 1990.
In the 1950s, neighborhood anti-highway activism stopped a street-widening and house demolition project at Guerrero Street.
The underpass at Highway 101 and Cesar Chavez is a camping spot for homeless people.
The street was named after the Chicano civil rights activist who spearheaded efforts among agricultural laborers and helped form what eventually turned into the
United Farm Workers union. More information about César Chávez can be found
here.
Bike-Friendliness
Local bike groups and a neighborhood organization called CC Puede are working on making Cesar Chavez Street a safe, bike-friendly corridor. (See
http://www.sfbike.org/?cesarchavez.) But right now, it's not very bike-friendly.
Accessibility
The sidewalks along Cesar Chavez Street in the Mission are fairly accessible for manual wheelchairs, with curb cuts. But they're nothing fancy. Crossing this street where it's 6 lanes of traffic, between 101 and Guerrero, is quite difficult even at the lights. There's heavy traffic.
Public Transportation
While no buses travel the length of Cesar Chavez Street, the 27 bus spans several blocks of it on its loop to and from Bryant Street. The J-Church and T-Third Muni rail lines transverse it at Church and Third streets, respectively. The nearest BART station is at 24th and Mission. The ["22nd Street Caltrain station" is not too far away.
Landmarks
Major Intersections
Restaurants and Shopping
Services
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