Hotel VIA
Modern boutique hotel directly across King Street from Oracle Park, with a rooftop bar overlooking the ballpark.
San Francisco, CA · Capacity: 1,315
Built 1912 as Majestic Hall. Became the Fillmore Auditorium in 1954 under promoter Charles Sullivan. After Sullivan's 1966 death, Bill Graham took over and transformed it into the epicenter of San Francisco's psychedelic counterculture. Reopened 1994 after earthquake damage; Live Nation has operated since 2007.
The Fillmore is where Bill Graham staged the 1960s psychedelic-rock explosion — the Dead, Joplin and Hendrix among them — and it still hands out free apples at the door and lines its walls with the era's legendary poster art beneath the chandeliers.
It's in San Francisco's Fillmore District, the historic heart of the city's jazz and counterculture.
Below are the San Francisco stays, restaurants and bars fans use around the Fillmore.
Hotels, bars, restaurants and things to do near The Fillmore in San Francisco — every pick web-researched and source-cited, closest to the venue first.
Modern boutique hotel directly across King Street from Oracle Park, with a rooftop bar overlooking the ballpark.
Contemporary hotel about a two-minute walk from the ballpark in the SoMa district.
Upscale hotel in nearby Mission Bay, a short walk south of Oracle Park, with a rooftop bar.
Nob Hill crown jewel where Tony Bennett first sang "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" in 1961. Barack Obama, Mick Jagger.
Luxury waterfront hotel in San Francisco's Embarcadero district with stunning Bay Bridge views. A favorite of celebrities visiting for Super Bowl and tech industry events. Features a world-class spa, rooftop pool, and proximity to the Ferry Building food hall.
Sustainable luxury hotel on the Embarcadero waterfront with Bay Bridge views, a rooftop terrace, and farm-to-table restaurant. Minutes from Chase Center (Warriors) and Oracle Park (Giants). Tech CEOs and visiting athletes stay here for the views and eco-conscious design.
Waterfront tavern with a large bay-view patio and daily happy hour, a short walk from the park.
Longtime waterfront dive bar along the Embarcadero with bay views, beers and fish tacos.
SoMa neighborhood gastropub near Oracle Park known for beer-and-shot combos and a lodge-style room.
The taproom of America's first craft brewery, Anchor Brewing has been a San Francisco icon since 1896. Its Steam Beer is synonymous with the city, and the taproom in the Potrero Hill neighborhood offers tastings and tours just minutes from Chase Center and Oracle Park.
James Beard Award-winning tiki bar with 400+ rums and a three-story shipwreck interior. Anthony Bourdain, Stephen Curry.
Housed inside the Long Now Foundation at Fort Mason with extraordinary bay views, The Interval is the bar that visiting tech billionaires, athletes with intellectual curiosity, and anyone who wants something genuinely different from a sports bar choose for post-game drinks. The cocktail menu is thoughtfully constructed, the book collection is extraordinary, and the 10,000-Year Clock prototype behind the bar is a conversation piece unlike any other. Warriors players have been spotted here on off nights.
Casual Japanese cafe near the ballpark known for katsu chicken sandwiches and curry.
New American bar and grill directly across the street from Oracle Park, open since 1998, with a patio.
Historic, no-frills waterfront shack serving burgers and beer with Bay Bridge views.
Chef Dominique Crenn's three-Michelin-starred restaurant in San Francisco's Cow Hollow neighborhood. The only female chef in the US to earn three Michelin stars, Crenn serves a poetic, multi-course tasting menu that pushes the boundaries of contemporary cuisine. A bucket-list restaurant for food lovers and celebrities alike.
San Francisco's iconic bayside marketplace features Cowgirl Creamery, Hog Island Oysters, and Blue Bottle Coffee — where Giants fans feast before walking to Oracle Park.
Perched inside the Ferry Building with waterfront views of the Bay Bridge, Hog Island serves sustainably farmed oysters from Tomales Bay alongside local wines and craft beers. Its location near Chase Center makes it an ideal pre-game seafood stop for Warriors fans arriving via the Embarcadero.
Located inside Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, the 49ers Museum showcases the franchise's five Super Bowl trophies, interactive exhibits, and memorabilia spanning decades of NFL history. The 20,000-square-foot museum features rotating exhibits and the Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. 49ers Hall of Fame.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
The Fillmore in San Francisco is tracked across 0 events and seats 1,315 fans. Here's how fans build a trip around it:
Structured facts on this page (capacity, opening year, architect, ownership) are compiled from public reference databases and verified against venue coordinates.
Check back for celebrity sighting reports from The Fillmore.
The Fillmore has a capacity of 1,315 people.
The Fillmore opened in 1912.
Check our events page for upcoming events at The Fillmore.