San Francisco is home to the world’s first cable cars, and the last. Aaron Millar hops aboard for a city tour and discovers adding this icon to San Francisco vacations works brilliantly with kids.
If there was such a thing as a rollercoaster tour of a city, San Francisco’s cable cars would be it. They may only go at 9.5mph, but with the wind in your hair, bells ringing, track clattering, hanging on as you are pulled up and down the city’s infamously steep hills, it feels far more like an amusement park ride than a boring old bus tour.
Forget rollercoasters, San Francisco’s cable cars are the ride of your life
It’s also the one of the only antiques in the world you can actually ride on. Invented exactly 150 years ago this summer, when Andrew Halliday first laid cables here in 1873, people thought he was insane. But it transformed the city and the idea spread like wildfire. For a time. But while other cities abandoned them in favour of faster, more efficient means of transport, this one stood true. San Francisco’s is home to both the first cable cars in the world, and the last. If you want to ride this rollercoaster, you have to come here to do it.
And you should. San Francisco vacations are not only the jumping off point for many of California’s greatest adventures – the Pacific Coast Highway, Yosemite and Napa Valley are all on its doorstep – it’s also a fantastic city for families.
So, jump on board. The tracks are clattering, the bells are ringing, and this is the ultimate roller coaster tour of the City by the Bay.
Stop1: Cable Car Museum, big, noisy and a lot of fun for kids
You’ll be taking the Powell-Hyde line throughout and though this isn’t where it starts, it’s where you should begin. The Cable Car Museum is way more than just a museum. This is the Powerhouse, where six 14-foot diameter sheaves turn the cables on a constant loop around the city.
It’s big, it’s noisy and there’s lots of hands-on stuff to entertain the kids while they learn about the roller coaster they’re about to ride. Who needs theme parks on San Francisco vacations?
Stop 2: Chinatown, lantern-strung streets you don’t want to miss
Next up is Chinatown. Strolling through these lantern strung streets is an experience itself. Pagodas adorned in yellow and gold, tea shops and temples. You’ll hear more Mandarin than English. But a couple of stops can’t be missed.
At the Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory up to 10,000 cookies are made by hand, each day. Walk in the door and the scent alone will start little mouths watering. But the best part is you can write your own fortune. Scribble your wish on a little slip of white paper then watch it placed into fresh baked dough and folded into a finished cookie to take home.