Fillmore / Western Addition — San Francisco

A Neighborhood
That Built Itself
— and Was Taken Apart

The Fillmore Community Action Plan responds to one of the most documented cases of government-sanctioned displacement in American urban history. This site explains what happened, what the plan proposes, and why it matters.

883 Businesses closed by Urban Renewal
~17,000 Residents displaced, A-1 & A-2 combined
5.1% Black share of SF population, 2020 (from 13.5% in 1970)
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What Happened Here

The Fillmore Was the Harlem of the West

Before 1940, fewer than 5,000 Black residents lived in all of San Francisco. World War II changed that almost overnight. Federal war production drew tens of thousands of Black workers from the Deep South to Bay Area shipyards and munitions plants — families leaving behind sharecropping, tenant farming, and racial terror for the promise of stable wages on the West Coast.

Because most of San Francisco's housing was closed to Black residents by law, custom, and discrimination, the Western Addition became the one neighborhood where Black families could build. And build they did. By 1950, the neighborhood held 15,000 Black residents. By 1970, roughly 96,000 Black San Franciscans lived in the city — 13.5% of the population. The Fillmore corridor had 300 to 400 Black-owned businesses: jazz clubs, beauty schools, restaurants, bookstores, insurance companies, churches, hotels. Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, and John Coltrane performed here. The neighborhood had its own economy, its own civic life, and its own identity. People called it the Harlem of the West.

"We slowed the agency down, but in the end, urban renewal became what we feared it would: it became black removal."

— Activist Wade "Speedy" Woods, Western Addition Community Organization

Then the City Called It "Blighted"

In 1956, the city approved the Western Addition Redevelopment Project — the first federally funded urban renewal project in San Francisco. In 1959, Mayor George Christopher appointed M. Justin Herman to lead the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency. What followed was, by multiple historical accounts, the most devastating urban renewal program in United States history.

Two-lane Geary Street was widened into a four-lane boulevard that cut the neighborhood in two. Sixty city blocks were demolished. Approximately 13,000 residents were displaced in the second phase alone. 883 businesses were closed. 5,000 homes were destroyed. The displaced were offered Certificates of Preference — a formal acknowledgment that the city owed them a way back. Only 4% of those original certificates were ever used.

When the reconstruction was complete, the community was gone. The residents had moved — some to other neighborhoods, many out of the city. The businesses had closed for good. The intergenerational wealth that homeownership would have built was extinguished. And a neighborhood that had constructed something extraordinary under conditions of severe constraint was left as a corridor of parking lots and deferred promises.

80%
Western Addition was 80% Black in 1970. By 2000: 30%. By the mid-2010s: as low as 7%.
$30,235
Median Black household income in SF, 2019. The lowest of any racial group in the city.
3–6×
Higher cardiovascular hospitalization rate for Black San Franciscans vs. all other groups. (SF DPH)
50,000
Estimated descendants eligible for the Certificate of Preference in the Western Addition and Hunters Point alone.

The Fillmore Community Action Plan

The FCAP is a partnership between the City of San Francisco and community members — structured around a Steering Committee of community leaders, organized through public workshops, and grounded in the documented history of what was built here and what was taken. It covers four topic areas: Health, Housing, Economic & Workforce Development, and Placemaking, Arts & Culture. The draft strategies were developed through community workshops held between April and June 2026.

This is not the first plan proposed for the Fillmore. What distinguishes the FCAP is its explicit grounding in the community's history and its insistence on community self-determination rather than city-directed development. The plan frames the work as ongoing repair — not charity, not investment, not revitalization. Repair.

Section Two

What the Plan Proposes

Five strategy documents were developed through community workshops and agency consultation. Each one addresses a specific dimension of a harm that is interconnected. Select a topic area to see what the community is asking for.

The health disparities facing Black San Franciscans today are not random. They are the documented consequence of displacement, poverty, and chronic stress — conditions directly produced by Urban Renewal. Black San Franciscans are hospitalized for cardiovascular disease at 3–6 times the rate of all other groups. Diabetes hospitalization and death rates are 2–3 times higher. Black maternal health outcomes are among the worst in the city.

The Health strategies address this by moving care into the community rather than asking the community to come to institutions that have historically failed them. Barbershops, salons, faith organizations, and housing sites become health infrastructure. The food access strategies respond directly to the food desert the Fillmore became when its grocery ecosystem was destroyed by redevelopment — calling for a full-service grocery store with cooperative ownership, rather than simply recruiting a national chain.

Key Priorities

  • Community-based wellness in trusted spaces: barbershops, salons, faith institutions
  • Black and culturally responsive health providers
  • Cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and Black maternal health prevention
  • HIV prevention centered on Black residents
  • Full-service grocery store with cooperative ownership model
  • Expanded farmers market access and corner store upgrades

Why It Matters Historically

Urban Renewal didn't just take homes — it destroyed the community structures that supported health: the neighborhood economy that provided income, the social networks that reduced isolation, and the local food infrastructure that sustained families. Health strategy here is inseparable from economic and housing strategy.

Read the Draft Health Strategies ↗

Housing is where the harm is most directly documented — and where the city has the clearest legal and moral obligation. The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency displaced thousands of Black families, seized property at below-market rates, and offered a Certificate of Preference as remedy. Only 4% of original certificates were ever used. Today, an estimated 50,000 descendants of displaced Western Addition and Hunters Point families are potentially eligible — but only a few hundred have been reached.

The Housing strategies address this through five areas: anti-displacement, access and navigation, homeownership and intergenerational wealth-building, preservation of existing affordable housing, and equitable new production. The COP Descendant Program expansion is one of the most direct remedies proposed anywhere in the plan — it connects the present directly to the documented obligation created in 1967.

Key Priorities

  • Support Black-led tenant protection and housing stabilization organizations
  • Expand the Certificate of Preference Descendant Program with culturally competent outreach
  • Home repair, estate planning, and intergenerational transfer for legacy homeowners
  • Community land trusts and community acquisition of at-risk rental housing
  • New affordable housing production intentionally targeted to displaced Black families

Why It Matters Historically

When Lynette Mackey's family was displaced from two Fillmore homes in 1975, they received $28,000 — displacing more than 18 people. Those homes today would be worth several million dollars. The intergenerational wealth loss is not hypothetical. It is measurable, and it is ongoing.

Read the Draft Housing Strategies ↗

The Fillmore had 300–400 Black-owned businesses before Urban Renewal. Urban Renewal closed 883 businesses across both phases. The community that had built a self-sustaining local economy — one where residents spent money with each other, where young people found work and training in neighborhood establishments, where wealth circulated locally — was dismantled in less than two decades.

The Economic Development strategies focus on the Fillmore corridor: filling commercial vacancies with businesses that have cultural relevance and community roots, providing technical assistance and capital access across the full business cycle, and building toward cooperative economic governance through merchant associations and community benefit districts. The explicit prioritization of Black-owned businesses is not incidental — it is the plan's acknowledgment of who was displaced and who the investment is for.

Key Priorities

  • Corridor events and activations anchored in cultural identity
  • Broker and leasing services prioritizing Black-owned business attraction
  • Technical assistance: legal, accounting, marketing, e-commerce, real estate
  • Grants and loans across startup, scale-up, and expansion stages
  • Cooperative economic models and community-led corridor governance

Why It Matters Historically

The pre-redevelopment Fillmore economy wasn't a corridor — it was a neighborhood ecosystem of interdependent businesses, mutual patronage, and community ownership. The question the plan is implicitly asking is whether that ecosystem can be rebuilt, and at what scale.

Read the Draft Economic Development Strategies ↗

When Urban Renewal closed the Fillmore's businesses, it eliminated an entire informal employment and apprenticeship system. The jazz clubs, barbershops, beauty schools, and restaurants were not just cultural institutions — they were employers and training grounds. The young people who would have learned a trade or built a career in that neighborhood economy instead faced a labor market with no pathways built for them.

The Workforce strategies take a broad view of who needs support, naming foster youth, justice-involved youth, undocumented youth, and disconnected transitional-age youth as specific populations — a recognition that workforce barriers in the Western Addition compound in particular ways for particular people. The strategies also explicitly address barriers to City employment and civil service pathways, which have historically been a route to the Black middle class but have become increasingly inaccessible.

Key Priorities

  • Paid work-based learning for in-school and out-of-school youth
  • Specific support for foster youth, justice-involved youth, and disconnected TAY
  • Neighborhood-based employment services with City hiring pathway support
  • Sector training: construction, healthcare, hospitality, tech, and the arts
  • Local hiring requirements and employer partnerships for equitable recruitment

Why It Matters Historically

Arts workforce pathways are explicitly included — a recognition that the Fillmore's cultural economy was a real employment system, not just a backdrop. Musicians, promoters, venue operators, and sound technicians were workers. Rebuilding that system requires investment, not just programming.

Read the Draft Workforce Development Strategies ↗

Urban Renewal didn't only destroy buildings. It destroyed the physical expression of a community's identity — the spaces where people gathered, performed, mourned, organized, and passed culture to the next generation. The Victorian houses demolished, the jazz clubs bulldozed, the churches relocated: these were the architecture of Black civic life in San Francisco, and they were gone within a generation.

The Placemaking strategies are the most expansive of the five documents, covering arts and culture, neighborhood identity, public space, transit, public safety, and the activation of key sites. The framing of Black art as an economic driver — not just a cultural amenity — is a deliberate distinction. Memory walks, interpretive signage, and community murals address the physical erasure of cultural memory. The public safety section is notably community-centered: ambassadors, conflict mediation, and mental health responders rather than expanded policing.

Key Priorities

  • Black art funded as an economic engine; dedicated spaces for Black creatives
  • Memory walks, murals, and interpretive signage honoring displaced communities
  • Protection and restoration of legacy Black businesses and cultural institutions
  • Community-led safety: ambassadors, mediation, mental health responders
  • Community-identified activation of underutilized and vacant sites

Why It Matters Historically

The Fillmore Heritage Center — built as a cultural anchor after redevelopment — has operated for years with chronic underfunding and institutional instability. This plan's call to invest in cultural infrastructure is not aspirational. It is a response to what already exists and has been left to struggle.

Read the Draft Placemaking, Arts & Culture Strategies ↗
What This Plan Gets Right — and What It's Up Against

Key Findings

The five strategy documents represent a serious, historically grounded effort to address documented harm. Several things stand out across the full plan — and several realities about scale and structure deserve honest acknowledgment.

Strong Alignment

The plan names who it is for

Racially specific language — Black-owned businesses, Black cultural institutions, Black households — appears throughout. Racially neutral framing in community development has historically allowed resources to flow away from the communities that need them most. This plan resists that pattern.

Strong Alignment

The COP connects past to present

The Certificate of Preference appears across Housing and Economic Development as a thread between the redevelopment era and today. It is the city's formal acknowledgment that it owes a specific remedy to a specific population — and anchoring the FCAP to that obligation grounds it in something the city has already accepted.

Strong Alignment

Culture is treated as economics

Framing Black art as an economic driver — not a charitable investment in culture — reflects a historically accurate understanding of what the Fillmore was. The jazz economy, the cultural businesses, the community institutions: these were economic infrastructure, and rebuilding them requires economic investment.

Watch Carefully

These strategies need each other

Health outcomes cannot improve without housing stability. Economic development cannot take root without workforce pathways. The five documents were developed through separate workshops — the community will need to hold them together as a system, not as five independent programs.

Watch Carefully

Scale is the open question

The 2023 AARAC Reparations Report called for multi-million dollar investments in Black business ownership and community infrastructure. The FCAP strategies are directionally correct — but corridor activation and technical assistance alone cannot close the gap between what was taken and what is being offered.

Critical to Address

The COP affordability gap is structural

An estimated 50,000 people are eligible for the Certificate of Preference. Only a few hundred have been reached. And approximately 67% of available COP-eligible units require incomes that most eligible families don't have. Better outreach can't fix a remedy that leads to a door most people can't open.

Read More

The Fillmore has been the subject of planning efforts, redevelopment projects, and community investment proposals for decades. What distinguishes the FCAP is its grounding in an explicit healing framework — shaped by a Steering Committee of community members with lived connection to the neighborhood — and its insistence on community self-determination rather than city-led development.

Previous efforts, including the original Redevelopment Agency's reconstruction of the Fillmore corridor in the 1990s, produced physical infrastructure without the community that was supposed to inhabit it. The FCAP's design attempts to reverse that sequence: ground the plan in community need, build the strategy around community governance, and hold the city accountable for new investment rather than repackaging existing programs as wins.

Urban Renewal produced the initial rupture — displacement, business closure, community dissolution. But the decline continued long after the bulldozers stopped, driven by a second set of forces: the tech-driven housing cost escalation of the 1990s and 2000s, persistent racial discrimination in mortgage lending (SF HRC documented Black mortgage rejection rates "far above any other group" as late as 2009), and the loss of the neighborhood's economic base that left Black residents with less cushion against rising costs than any other demographic group in the city.

By 2020, the Black population had fallen from a peak of 96,000 to approximately 45,000 — 5.1% of the city. The Black population is the only racial group in San Francisco that has declined in every census count since 1970. A 2019 UC Berkeley poll found that 58% of remaining Black San Franciscans were considering leaving the state.

In July 2023, the San Francisco African American Reparations Advisory Committee (AARAC) submitted a Reparations Plan to the SF Human Rights Commission, the Mayor, and the Board of Supervisors. The report — produced after two years of research and community engagement — documented in detail the policies, institutional choices, and corporate advocacy that produced and perpetuated harm against Black San Franciscans. In December 2025, Mayor Daniel Lurie signed an ordinance creating a reparations fund. The ordinance was created without an initial funding allocation, given the city's $1 billion budget deficit.

The FCAP is not a reparations mechanism — it is a neighborhood planning process. But it operates in the same moral and policy context: a city that has formally acknowledged it owes repair to its Black community, and is still working out what repair actually looks like at scale. The AARAC report and the Stanford Law School's companion disinvestment study are cited throughout the FCAP's strategy documents as foundational references.

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More Coming Soon

The full analysis — including historical context, detailed strategy summaries, comparative findings, and guiding questions for the committee — is available to FCAP Steering Committee members and invited stakeholders.

Coming Soon