Looking for $600 cardigans or $220 bee venom-infused face serum? Head to this San Francisco street, where expensive everyday items are the norm.
Advertisement
Dec 22, 2019, 20:03 IST
Fillmore Street runs north to south from the water's edge in the Marina neighborhood through the Fillmore District and into the Lower Haight.
Advertisement
The Fillmore District south of Pac Heights has a long-standing reputation for its music scene, with the annual Fillmore Jazz fest specifically being a city favorite. Banners for the event are strewn up and down the street.
Advertisement
The hills on the north side of Fillmore street were once home to the city's working-class citizens. Then the 1906 earthquake hit, and the wealthy took the neighborhood for their own and never looked back.
Pac Heights has been a hotspot for old-moneyed families and tech bigwigs ever since.
Advertisement
Apple's former design chief Jony Ive and Oracle CEO Larry Ellison are just some of the industry's big names that call the neighborhood home.
The median real-estate value for the Pac Heights 'hood is $2.02 million, according to Zillow.
Advertisement
There's even what's known as "Billionaire's Row," a block from which a $27 million mansion currently sits for sale.
And so the residents in those homes have some cash to burn, which is something retailers are most likely aware of.
Advertisement
There's a growing trend in San Francisco that's seeing retailers skipping over Union Square — what has historically been the hot place to set up a brick-and-mortar store — and instead snagging space in elite neighborhoods.
The controversial Gwyneth Paltrow-founded Goop is the latest example of that.
Advertisement
The wellness titan recently opened its fourth retail location in the country on Fillmore between Sacramento and California Streets.
The brand has been known to sell products that critics say skirt the realm of pseudoscience. And yet, wealthy self-care members of Goop's loyal following continuously eat them up.
Advertisement
Inside were vibrators, $15,000 necklaces, "psychic vampire repellent," and $600 cardigans.
And no, those vaginal eggs were nowhere to be found when we visited (Goop settled a lawsuit related to the health claims of the eggs for $145,000 in 2018).
Advertisement
There's a wide range of skincare shops, clothing stores, cafes, and restaurants in the area, but they most certainly have one thing in common: high price tags.
In one space, startups Garin and Seabedee sell $300 cardigans and topical CBD oil and gummies, respectively.
Advertisement
Rothy's, the sustainability-centric shoe startup selling flats made from recycled plastic, was packed when we passed by.
Its shoes are machine washable and retail for $125 and upward.
Advertisement
In another, a shop named Aday, is clothing made from a material that's a mix of cotton and spandex.
This mustard short-sleeve shirt was $75. It was supple and soft.
Advertisement
And this long-sleeve number cost $135.
A bit further down was Sage, a Canadian-based chain selling aromatherapy products. There was oil designed to mitigate period cramp pain and diffusers.
Advertisement
The diffusers came disguised as what could be home decor statement pieces fit for the illustrious Pac Heights homes surrounding the shop.
These nasal inhalers are $18 a box, with two included that collectively will last about a year, according to a sales associate. They came in different scents like "Brainstorm" and "Stress Release."
Advertisement
There was a face massager for $30, which also came bundled with a face toner.
A few storefronts down was 45R, a Japanese store. French music was playing when we walked in.
Advertisement
These caftans, priced at $410 each, were hanging on their own display. In their defense, they had pockets.
Most of the denim pants were $300-$400, but one pair, which was dyed in true Japanese indigo, cost $1,184.
Advertisement
A store called Cotelac was chock-full of funky eccentric bursts of colors and fabrics. A pair of wool-looking yellow socks with glittery gold heels cost $40. A measly-looking, sheer black knee-length dress was priced at $410. A cerulean blue scarf? $155.
And finally, at SpaceNK were finds that would make any self-care addict giddy.
Advertisement
There were Oribe hair products and a hair brush for $75.
An entire section was devoted to "High-tech skincare."
Advertisement
Among its collection were yellow bottles of bee venom super serum by Rodial for $220 each. A warning on the back advised avoiding use if you have a bee-sting allergy.
My takeaway? There's a price to pay for beauty and luxury.