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Metro Theatre (San Francisco, California)

Art Deco architecture in CaliforniaArt Deco cinemas and movie theatersCinemas and movie theaters in the San Francisco Bay AreaSan Francisco Designated LandmarksSpanish Colonial Revival architecture in California
Spanish Colonial Revival cinemas and movie theatersTheatres completed in 1924Theatres in San Francisco
San Francisco Metro Theatre 2005
San Francisco Metro Theatre 2005

The Metro Theatre is a historic 1924 building and former single screen theatre in the Cow Hollow neighborhood of San Francisco, California, U.S.. The building was listed by the city as a San Francisco Designated Landmark in June 21, 2009; and has a historic marker. It is also known as the Metro Theater, and the Metropolitan Theater. The building is now used as a private gym.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Metro Theatre (San Francisco, California) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Metro Theatre (San Francisco, California)
Union Street, San Francisco

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.797304 ° E -122.433134 °
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Metro Theatre

Union Street 2055
94123 San Francisco
California, United States
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San Francisco Metro Theatre 2005
San Francisco Metro Theatre 2005
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Convent of the Sacred Heart High School (California)

Convent of the Sacred Heart High School is a private, independent high school in the city of San Francisco, rooted in the Catholic tradition. It is located at 2222 Broadway. The school offers its students the rigorous International Baccalaureate program (IB) as well as an array of Advanced Placement courses (AP). As of 2019, the annual tuition for grades 9–12 is $45,900. Admission is selective and approximately 30% of the student body receives some form of financial aid. The school was originally founded by Mother Mary Keating on August 16, 1887 as the first Schools of the Sacred Heart Academy west of the Rockies. The first year enrolled 30 young women operating in two rented Victorians at the corner of Bush and Octavia. The founding organization is known as the Schools of the Sacred Heart, San Francisco. In 1888, they purchased a larger building at Franklin and Ellis for $10 in gold coin. They stayed there until the 1906 Earthquake when the building was heavily damaged. Renting another Victorian at the corner of Washington and Octavia, they were one of the first institutions to reopen after the earthquake. In 1909, the school purchased the Van Arsdale house on Jackson Street where the school remained until 1939. In June 1939, Maud Lee Flood donated the home she had shared with her deceased husband at 2222 Broadway. During WWII, boys were allowed to join the lower school. By 1948 they needed more room to expand, they courted a deal to purchase the Grant house for $150,000, well below market value. The lower school, grades 1-8 split to the new location, while the upper school remained at the Flood Mansion. But what to do with the boys? In 1956, they purchased the Hammond House for $165,000 to open Stuart Hall for Boys.The school now operates in partnership with the all boy's Stuart Hall High School located at 1715 Octavia Street. Typically the first two years, freshmen and sophomore year, are spent single sex but then become co-ed by junior year and higher level courses. The unique partnership allows both schools to operate both single-sex and coeducational classes. Coed classes are held on both campuses and student shuttle buses operate between the two. The partnership is referred to as Convent & Stuart Hall.