The annual parol lantern festival and parade is a must-see Filipino community event in San Francisco during the holiday season.
Read MoreIn 2018, the Gerbode Foundation in partnership with the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation awarded Panis $50,000 to create her new dance, “Man@ng Is Deity.” After a long and enriching pandemic journey, the final work — part film screening, part live dance performance — premieres Friday, Dec. 3, at ODC Theater.
Read MoreWhat is currently a parking lot owned by Nordstrom’s at Sixth and Stevenson Streets was slated to become a residential high-rise, but was denied on appeal as supervisors did not trust the geotechnical review.
Read MoreThree hundred banners were installed to highlight the diversity of the community and to celebrate their strength amid the pandemic and spike in Asian hate crimes.
Read MoreA new streetscape project, a collaboration between city departments, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Yerba Buena Community Benefit District plans to turn about 800 feet of Minna and Natoma Streets into an arts corridor, with help from designs by five local artists.
Read More[people. power. media] lays out a revolutionary framework to achieve equity in city planning.
Read MoreAfter more than 50 years of moving around, West Bay will soon have its own permanent home in the neighborhood it has long served.
Read MoreBusinesses in San Francisco’s Filipino Cultural District were hit hard by the pandemic. But the cultural district is there to help the recovery start where it’s needed most.
Read MoreMembers of the Asian American community are signing up for self-defense thanks to San Francisco community leaders.
Read MoreThe SOMA Pilipinas Filipino Cultural Heritage District celebrates their five-year anniversary with plans for racial equity programming and a brand new garden in the heart of the South of Market neighborhood.
Read MoreHella calamansi trees, a revamped school bus painted with a giant bird’s head and flowing curls of colorful feathers, and turquoise-purple everything—that’s what you’ll find at 967 Mission Street in San Francisco, an old parking lot turned art and wellness pop-up.
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