Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Street Shooting USA

Street Shooting USA

I went to San Francisco for the first time in 1990 1 month, the year after I arrived in new york. At that time, the plane ticket from new york to San Francisco was less than $200. At the invitation of a friend, I stayed in a star-rated hotel in downtown Noble Hill, and all my cash was stolen, leaving an indelible impression on San Francisco. It was very cold that winter, and it didn't seem to be the tourist season. The street crowds in San Francisco are sparse and depressing, and the scenic spots are desolate and a little bleak. Even so, the steep streets and historical buildings in San Francisco still attract my attention.

1996, I came to San Francisco when I first drove across the United States. It rained in Mao Mao that day. I wandered around the city for several hours under an umbrella, ate big crabs at Fisherman's Wharf and went to Chinatown. I was deeply impressed by the harbor-filled China City in San Francisco, which is bigger and better than the Chinatown in Manhattan, new york.

After more than 20 years, I came to San Francisco again, and things have changed. My two boys, both 16 and 17, are visiting San Francisco for the first time. When we rented a car from the airport and drove into the city, we immediately felt the prosperity and noise of San Francisco.

Find a boutique hotel at Union Square Hotel tonight and drive to the city center. Union Square is the commercial center of San Francisco. Surrounded by fashionable hotels and department stores, the corner space near high-rise buildings is dotted with high-end boutiques, restaurants, nightclubs and galleries. At the intersection of Powell Street and Market Street, it is one of the most attractive scenic spots in the city, the corner of the manual cable car.

Seeing the beautiful scenery of various historical buildings and sloping streets on the street, my boss and I got off the bus and walked quickly to browse all kinds of scenery that came into our eyes. The traffic in downtown San Francisco is far less than that in Manhattan, new york. Most of them are pedestrians and cyclists, struggling on steep streets.

A glimpse of the cable car jingling past, just aimed at the camera, passed in an instant.

Stockton Street and stockton Street caught my attention because they somehow reminded me of the streets of London. This street in the center of the city is very interesting. There is a tunnel connecting the streets on both sides, and there is a street bridge on the tunnel. On the street bridges on both sides, you can see the scenery of the lower street. This street is the north and south street of San Francisco. It starts from Market Street, crosses Union Square, the main shopping area of the city, then crosses two and a half streets under the Stockton Street Tunnel, and crosses Chinatown and North Beach (Little Italy) not far from Beach Street Shopping Center near Pier 39.