Railroads & Locomotives History Saving the San Francisco Belt Railroad

Saving the San Francisco Belt Railroad

By David Lustig | November 27, 2023

| Last updated on January 15, 2024


After a railroad disappears, sometimes city planners find ways to preserve its memory

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San Francisco Belt Railroad

A former five-stall roundhouse is now an glass-fronted office building flanked by trees
The San Francisco Belt Railroad’s five-stall roundhouse in its namesake city has been preserved. David Lustig

For those of us lucky enough to chase trains on the San Francisco peninsula when it was served by many railroads, life was good.

Besides being able to see Southern Pacific, Santa Fe, and Western Pacific, there was the San Francisco Belt Railroad, a local switching operation that vigorously served the many waterfront docks alongside the eastern side of the city and as far west as the Presidio in the west. Nobody had heard of Union Pacific.

Today it is UP all the way except for a few truncated miles of right-of-way subsequently renamed the San Francisco Bay Railroad. The Belt railroad is history, too.

But thanks to a little creative architectural planning, traces of the city’s own were saved for future use, exemplified by the Belt’s five-stall concrete roundhouse at the intersection of Sansome and Lombard on the Embarcadero across from Pier 29. Converted to private offices, the building, erected in the 1910s, and the adjacent sandhouse, have even been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Most of the line in downtown San Franciso was paved over after the railroad quit the area in the 1990s and today light rail, in the form of San Francisco’s Municipal Railway runs on the former right of way.

An orange streetcar rolls past trees planted along a city street in the foreground is the corner of a gray office building
Now an office building, the preserved roundhouse is located at the intersection of Sansome and Lombard on San Francisco’s Embarcadero, across from Pier 29. David Lustig

Today

While the sights and sounds of freight railroading no longer are an integral part of the area, if you look carefully at what was the roundhouse, details of its heritage have been carefully woven into the repurposed building.

The stall doors have been replaced with non-moving facsimiles, with the center door now the entrance. While rails have been embedded into what is now a courtyard just outside the entrance, the switches, and switch points are absent, and there is no room for the flanged wheels that will never tread them again. Even the appearance of smokestacks has been preserved.

The purists among us may be aghast, but for the rest of us, to still be able to see an image of a railroading past is most welcome.

With a tree-lined street in the background a green and cream streetcar passes by under a clear sky
Most of the Belt Line in downtown San Franciso was paved over after the railroad quit the area in the 1990s and today light rail, in the form of San Francisco’s Municipal Railway runs on the former right of way. David Lustig

3 thoughts on “Saving the San Francisco Belt Railroad

  1. It’s neat that this engine house is still standing and has been re-purposed. This and the wrecked SP Bayshore roundhouse are the only ones left in the SF Bayarea out of the close to 10 engine houses and roundhouses that where around the Bayarea.

  2. Having grown up in San Francisco I had the opportunity to ride along with the crews on a number of occasions. An image that has stuck in my mind all these years later are of a hospital train running along Marina Boulevard on its way to the Presidio.

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