Financial District | |
---|---|
Nicknames: "FiDi",[1] "Downtown" | |
Coordinates: 37°47′43″N 122°24′10″W / 37.7952°N 122.4029°W | |
Country | United States |
State | California |
City-county | San Francisco |
Government | |
• Supervisor | Julie Christensen |
• Assemblymember | Matt Haney (D)[2] |
• State senator | Scott Wiener (D)[2] |
• U.S. rep. | Nancy Pelosi (D)[3] |
Area | |
• Total | 0.460 sq mi (1.19 km2) |
• Land | 0.460 sq mi (1.19 km2) |
Population | |
• Total | 9,447 |
• Density | 21,000/sq mi (7,900/km2) |
Time zone | UTC−8 (Pacific) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−7 (PDT) |
ZIP codes | 94104, 94108, 94111, 94133 |
Area codes | 415/6 28 |
The Financial District is a neighborhood in San Francisco, California, United States, that serves as its main central business district and had 372,829 jobs according to U.S. census tracts as of 2012-2016.[5] It is home to the city's largest concentration of corporate headquarters, law firms, insurance companies, real estate firms, savings and loan banks, and other financial institutions. Multiple Fortune 500 companies headquartered in San Francisco have their offices in the Financial District, including Wells Fargo, Salesforce, and Gap.[6]
Since the 1980s, restrictions on high-rise construction have shifted new development to the adjacent South of Market (SoMa) area surrounding the Transbay Transit Center. This area is sometimes called the South Financial District by real estate developers, or simply included as part of the Financial District itself.[7][8]
The early 2020s have seen high office vacancy rates in the Financial District, driven by remote work since the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly among tech companies.[9][10][11] Several owners of office buildings and hotels have defaulted on their loans,[12][13] raising concerns about the effect on San Francisco's tax revenues and the financial stability of local government services.[14] Many retailers have also cited high levels of crime, open-air drug use, homelessness, doubts about San Francisco's viability as a relevant commercial center, and closed storefronts in the areas in and around the adjacent Union Square.[15][16]
The area is marked by a cluster of high-rise towers in the triangular area east of Kearny Street,[17] south of Washington Street, west of the Embarcadero that rings the waterfront, and north of Market Street. The district includes Northern California's two tallest buildings, the Salesforce Tower and the Transamerica Pyramid. Montgomery Street (sometimes called "Wall Street of the West") is considered the traditional heart of the district.
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).On any given week in San Francisco, office buildings are at about 40 percent of their prepandemic occupancy.
The store's closure follows that of several retail establishments around Union Square, including Express, Anthropologie, Gap and CB2.