As the 'loin turns

The Tenderloin is attracting artists, restaurants, clubs, and even condos. And so it begins.

Jaimal Yogis

Tenderloin

The Tenderloin is still the gritty home to homeless shelters, SROs, and a large immigrant population, but as of late, the neighborhood’s cheap rents are also drawing in a fresh surge of young artists and hipsters who are fleeing the pricier Mission district and staking their claim. The influx explains the trendy galleries, artsy boutiques, and candlelit wine bars, which have been sprouting up as fast as cheap Indian and Pakistani restaurants have in the past decade, as well as the neighborhood’s latest moniker, the Trendyloin. Bickering is already building over who has “real art” and who claimed the ’loin first. The area is historically no stranger to artists and subcultures: it is, after all, where speakeasies and gin joints flourished and the gay counterculture got its San Francisco start. “This will definitely be the new Mission,” says Gilberto Duncan, co-owner of Olive, an art bar on Larkin and one of the neighborhood’s first ritzy pioneers. “It almost already is.”

SHOP FRONTS
Rebecca Vandersteen may call the electro-clash clothing at Venus Superstar "vintage makeover," but with clothes by hip designers like I. Kohl and Tongue Cut Sparrow, this is no thrift shop. "I get lots of socialites and party girls coming in," says Vandersteen. "They like the one-of-a-kind thing." 1112 Sutter St.

Everything at the Splitculture Modern Design Studio—from the hip-hop artwork to the modern furniture—is limited edition, made exclusively for the store. 901 Post St.

When Dave Chappelle and Mos Def came to town, they visited Huf, where owner and professional skateboarder Keith Hufnagel stocks rare throwback Nike and Adidas sneakers. The guys behind the counter are as shoe obsessed as their clientele: "The prerequisite for working here is to give all your money away to Nike," jokes Asa, one of the shoe slingers. 808 Sutter St.

Camp filmmaker John Waters has spent hours browsing the collection of vintage pulp paperbacks like Sex by Bingo and Murder for the Holidays at Kayo Books. 814 Post St.

WHAT IT COSTS
...to rent: $795 for a studio apartment at 424 Jones St.
...to buy: $325,000 for a 520-square-foot condo at 631 O'Farrell St.

THE GRUB
Former Rubicon chef Dennis Leary brings high-end cuisine to an old-school diner at Canteen, where the revamped booths get booked months in advance. 817 Sutter St.

Shalimar has a cafeteria feel and a BYOB policy that invites brown-bagged 40-ouncers, but it also serves some of the best aloo paratha and paneer masala in town. 532 Jones St.

Even the TL's new trust-fund bohos are hoocked on the $3.60 burger-and-fries deal at the Golden Coffee diner. 901 Sutter St.

ONLY HERE
The monthly parties at Mila, celebrating the release of T-shirts by California artists like Ibi Oluwole and

  • PAGES
  • 1
  • 2

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass 2008

Editorial intern and bluegrass musician Brian Heffernan reviews the eighth annual festival's highlights.

ARTS

Treasure Island Music Festival 2008

The eyes at San Francisco magazine capture two days of good, clean, carnival-themed fun at the second annual festival.

START/ EDIT NOTES

Nellie's gotta go

Irascible, iconoclastic, infectious—what made Don Nelson this way?

PUB NOTES

Publisher's note

When you’re traveling, sometimes knowing what’s ahead is even more exciting than anticipating the unknown.

Slaughterhouse redux

In a follow up to San Francisco's August feature on the future of slaughterhouses, Incanto chef Chris Cosentino offers a view of the past with a look at his collection of vintage abattoir photos.

Readers' poll: Best restaurants 2008

Don't blame us—you said it.

BEST OF THE BAY

Best of the Bay readers' poll

Don't blame us—you said it.

REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK

The best investment advice you'll never get

For 35 years, Bay Area finance revolutionaries have been pushing a personal investing strategy that brokers despise and hope you ignore.

RESTAURANT SEARCH

SHOPPING GUIDE