Built for the Archbishop of San Francisco
in 1904, this French chateau mansion is now a grand bed and
breakfast located on charming Alamo Square Park. The mansion
is surrounded by San Francisco's most plentiful collection of
Victorian architecture including the famous "Painted Ladies".
Spectacularly crafted woodwork, antiques and a sweeping staircase
grace the varied common areas. Each of the 15 guestrooms and
suites are individually decorated and named after an opera.The
Archbishop's Mansion sits on the Northeast corner of historic
Alamo Square Park. It is just 1.5 miles from Golden Gate Park
and close to the Performing Arts facilities of the Civic Center.
Downtown, Union Square, Chinatown, and Fisherman's Wharf are
each a quick 10-minute drive from the mansion. PERCHED ON ALAMO
SQUARE, this French chateau mansion was the former home of the
Archbishop of San Francisco. Built in 1904, the mansion is now
a grand bed and breakfast surrounded by San Francisco's most
plentiful collection of Victorian architecture, including San
Francisco's famous "Painted Ladies." Spectacularly
crafted woodwork, antiques and a sweeping staircase grace the
varied common areas. Each of the 15 spectacular guestrooms and
suites are individually decorated and named after an opera.
All guestrooms feature either full or partial canopied beds,
period antiques, phone with dataport, VCRs, cable TV, CD players
and include a complimentary deluxe continental breakfast served
to your room.
Several rooms have whirlpool tubs, fireplaces and partial views
of downtown. The Mansion's location, on Alamo Square in the
south end of San Francisco, is one of the most photographed
areas in all San Francisco. From picture books to postcards
you’ll recognize Alamo Square's famous "postcard
row" at Hayes and Steiner Streets—a "must see"
section of the city for its colorful row houses and the trademark
doors of each home.
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