
Cable
Cars, Old and New

San Francisco is, intentionally no doubt, one of the most
eccentric and mixed metropoli on the planet. The town is heavily
populated with residents strongly opposed to anything
commercial.
Yet, it is also home to corporate headquarters of one of the
world's largest banks (Bank of America) and several other
mega-companies. Nowhere is this split personality more evident
than, in of all places, the city's popular Cable Car rides.
Designated official landmarks by the National Park Service in
1964, the cable cars go back to San Francisco's heyday in the
1870's. Though long recognized as an inefficient means of
transportation, the cable cars have survived several attempts at
decommissioning. And, fortunate it is too. They're huge fun.
Expensive, they can
also be. Prices range from $25-$50 for a one to two hour
guided ride. Short trips for a few dollars are also
available. And they're crowded, too. All the cars carry
from 90 to 100 passengers and they pack them in. Lines are
long waiting to get on - anywhere from an hour to two hours
or more.
But despite the price, the cramped space and the wait, riding
them is an experience that more than makes up for the drawbacks.
Passing within a foot of one another as they make their way around
the city, the car's tours encompass Ghiradelli Square and Pier 39,
views of the bay at the Wharf and trips up and down the famed steep
hills.
It's those hills that, in part, gave birth to the unusual
device, legend has it. London-born engineer Andrew Hallidie is said
to have been watching horses haul a carriage up one when the lead
slipped. The unfortunate animal took several others with him on a
slide down the hill. Hallidie vowed to replace them and four years
later, in 1873, succeeded.
Visitors can get an idea of how the cars work by looking down
through the center of the street. They have no diesel engines and
no electrical motors. Just underneath the street is a cable that
runs at a steady 9.5 miles per hour (5.4kph). When the operator
pulls a lever that grabs the cable, off you go.
Those seeking a ride can hop on or off at Pier 41, Ghiradelli
Square and Union Square. During the trip, best experienced close to
the edge and standing on the platform, riders travel over a large
part of the city.
Rides move through Chinatown and North Beach, the waterfront,
downtown, the Palace of Fine Arts and near the Golden Gate Bridge
and many more spots. Seventeen miles of track still remain along
which the cars designated as 'moving historical landmarks'
move.
From their maiden run from the top of Clay Street in 1873 to
today when it shares space with 300-horsepower SUVs, San
Francisco's cable cars have added their own iconoclastic flavor to
this most colorful and diverse city.

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