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Golden Gate Park
outdoor

Golden Gate Park

San Francisco, CA

Opened:1870
Location:San Francisco, CA

About Golden Gate Park

San Francisco’s 1,017-acre signature park stretches from the Haight to the Pacific. Its western Polo Field and Hellman Hollow host the Outside Lands music, food and wine festival each August.

  • Opened: 1870
  • Address: Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA
  • Architect: William Hammond Hall, John McLaren, Calvert Vaux
  • Operator: San Francisco Recreation & Park Department
  • Official site: goldengatepark.com
Fan Guide · Outside Lands

Outside Lands in Golden Gate Park

Golden Gate Park, San Francisco's vast green expanse stretching to the Pacific, is the home of the Outside Lands festival — music, food, wine and a famously foggy, fleece-and-flannel atmosphere among the eucalyptus on the Polo Field.

The park is laced with museums and gardens, near the Haight and the ocean.

Below are the San Francisco stays, restaurants and bars fans use around Golden Gate Park.

Fan tip: “Karl the Fog” keeps it cold even in August — bring layers, and the de Young museum and Japanese Tea Garden are in the park.

Where Fans Stay, Eat & Drink near Golden Gate Park

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Hotels, bars, restaurants and things to do near Golden Gate Park in San Francisco — every pick web-researched and source-cited, closest to the venue first.

Where to Stay

Bars & Pubs

Restaurants

Things to Do

Kezar Stadium — Attraction
Attraction

Kezar Stadium

Kezar Stadium in Golden Gate Park is where the San Francisco 49ers played for their first 24 seasons, a historic open-air stadium that still hosts high school football, soccer, and college events within walking distance of world-class museums and gardens. Football historians and 49ers fans make the trip to understand the team's origins in this intimate community stadium. The park setting and neighborhood location give it a charm that modern stadiums simply cannot replicate.

Haight-Ashbury Musical Heritage Walk — Things to Do
Things to Do

Haight-Ashbury Musical Heritage Walk

The Haight-Ashbury district's musical heritage is so concentrated that walking its streets is a continuous encounter with rock history, from the houses where the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane lived to the clubs and record stores that shaped the Summer of Love. The neighbourhood's surviving independent music stores, particularly Amoeba Music, continue to serve as pilgrimage destinations for fans who want to participate in the living tradition rather than merely observe its history. San Francisco's unique capacity to connect present-day fan culture to its transformative past makes this walk unlike any other music history tour on Earth.

Chase Center — Attraction
Attraction

Chase Center

The San Francisco Warriors' stunning new waterfront arena is one of America's most technologically advanced sports and entertainment venues, with concert programming that reflects the Bay Area's extraordinary cultural appetite and willingness to support artists at the highest level. The Mission Bay location provides dramatic bay views and easy transit access that make arriving for events a pleasure, and the surrounding entertainment district continues to develop around the arena's gravitational pull. Bay Area music fans are among America's most musically knowledgeable, making shows here among the most rewarding for artists.

The Fillmore — Attraction
Attraction

The Fillmore

Bill Graham's legendary Fillmore Auditorium is one of rock and roll's most sacred spaces, where Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and the Grateful Dead defined the psychedelic era in concerts that changed popular music forever. The tradition of giving every audience member a complimentary apple at the end of the night continues, connecting modern fans to a half-century of concert history through a simple gesture. The corridors lined with original poster art and photographs constitute a museum of rock history that fans can study for hours.

Oracle Park Splash Hit Zone — Attraction
Attraction

Oracle Park Splash Hit Zone

Oracle Park's location on McCovey Cove creates one of baseball's most unique traditions — the splash hit, where home run balls land in the water beyond the right-field wall and kayakers scramble to retrieve them. Even non-baseball fans gather in kayaks and on the promenade during Giants games to watch this extraordinary spectacle unfold. The combination of bay views, fog rolling in, and the crack of the bat makes this the most cinematically beautiful ballpark experience in the sport.

Plan Your Trip to Golden Gate Park

Golden Gate Park in San Francisco is tracked across 1 event. Here's how fans build a trip around it:

Events at Golden Gate Park

Series × Venue (All Years)

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Series × Venue × Year

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Sources & References

Structured facts on this page (capacity, opening year, architect, ownership) are compiled from public reference databases and verified against venue coordinates.

Frequently Asked Questions About Golden Gate Park

Check back for celebrity sighting reports from Golden Gate Park.

Capacity information for Golden Gate Park is not yet available.

Golden Gate Park opened in 1870. It was designed by William Hammond Hall, John McLaren, Calvert Vaux.

Outside Lands 2026 are among the events held at Golden Gate Park.