Presented by
Venisa Portillo
Stunning Jr Bedroom and Office with Parking on Rincon Hill
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$530,000
333 1st Street #N706, San Francisco
Modern Jr. 1 Bedroom plus Office Residence with One-Car Parking located on Rincon Hill at The Metropolitan
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- Rincon Hill Luxury Living at The Metropolitan
- Junior One-Bedroom with Closet Organizer
- Private Office Space with New Lighting
- Spacious Kitchen with New Faucet, New Garbage Disposal, Gas Cooktop and Freshly Painted Cabinets
- Versatile Layout Designed to Maximize Every Inch of Space
- Freshly Painted Interior
- Central Heat/Air
- In-Unit Washer/Dryer
- Ideal Live-Work Lifestyle, Quiet Retreat, and Entertaining
- Located in a Full-Service, Heller Manus–Designed Building
- 24/7 Concierge Service
- Heated Indoor Pool, Spa, and Sauna
- State-of-the-Art Fitness Center
- Movie Theater
- Activity Center with Full Kitchen
- Conference Room and Business Center
- Storage and Reserved Bike Area
- Rooftop Terrace with BBQ Area, Patio Heaters, and Fire Pit
- Restaurants, Shopping, Transportation
- Easy Access to Bay Bridge and All Highways
Property Details
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Bedrooms
0
Bathrooms
1
Square Footage
506 sq ft
Neighborhood
East Cut
Property Tour
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3D Virtual Tour
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Floor Plans
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South Beach/Rincon Hill Neighborhood
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Some of the best weather in San Francisco can be found in South Beach. Set at the foot of the Bay Bridge, between the Embarcadero, Oracle Park, and the waterfront, this is one of the city’s great walking neighborhoods. Luxury condos, high-rises, lofts, ballpark energy, ferry access, and bayfront paths all help define daily life in this polished, energetic corner of the city.
Weekend mornings bring residents down from nearby towers to walk dogs, jog along the Embarcadero, and enjoy public art, bay breezes, and open-water views. The Ferry Building remains close at hand for breakfast, specialty food shopping, restaurants, cafés, and the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market, while Woodlands Market gives South Beach residents an easy neighborhood stop for organic groceries, specialty foods, prepared meals, wine, and everyday provisions.
Dining in and around South Beach has evolved. Longtime favorites like Delancey Street Restaurant still anchor the waterfront dining scene, while Boulevard brings classic San Francisco fine dining to the nearby Embarcadero. Cafe Okawari offers Japanese comfort food, sandwiches, curry, bowls, and café drinks on Townsend Street. Garaje remains a local go-to for casual Mexican-inspired food and its cult-favorite zapatos, and KAIYŌ adds Nikkei dining and a rooftop bar beside Oracle Park. Along the Embarcadero, Waterbar continues to offer seafood and Bay Bridge views, while Red’s Java House keeps the area’s old-school waterfront character alive with burgers, breakfast, beer, and a pier-side setting.
The Ferry Building adds even more nearby options, with local food merchants, restaurants, cafés, bakeries, and small eateries, plus newer and evolving names such as Lunette Cambodia and Nopa Fish. The Ferry Plaza Farmers Market remains a major weekly draw for produce, prepared foods, flowers, and local makers.
Culture and recreation are also part of the South Beach lifestyle. SF MOMA and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts are just beyond the neighborhood, while City Kayak at Pier 40 offers a way to experience the city from the water. Add in Oracle Park, the Embarcadero promenade, ferry service, waterfront dining, and neighborhood grocery convenience, and South Beach delivers luxurious city living with food, culture, and the bay right at your doorstep.
Weekend mornings bring residents down from nearby towers to walk dogs, jog along the Embarcadero, and enjoy public art, bay breezes, and open-water views. The Ferry Building remains close at hand for breakfast, specialty food shopping, restaurants, cafés, and the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market, while Woodlands Market gives South Beach residents an easy neighborhood stop for organic groceries, specialty foods, prepared meals, wine, and everyday provisions.
Dining in and around South Beach has evolved. Longtime favorites like Delancey Street Restaurant still anchor the waterfront dining scene, while Boulevard brings classic San Francisco fine dining to the nearby Embarcadero. Cafe Okawari offers Japanese comfort food, sandwiches, curry, bowls, and café drinks on Townsend Street. Garaje remains a local go-to for casual Mexican-inspired food and its cult-favorite zapatos, and KAIYŌ adds Nikkei dining and a rooftop bar beside Oracle Park. Along the Embarcadero, Waterbar continues to offer seafood and Bay Bridge views, while Red’s Java House keeps the area’s old-school waterfront character alive with burgers, breakfast, beer, and a pier-side setting.
The Ferry Building adds even more nearby options, with local food merchants, restaurants, cafés, bakeries, and small eateries, plus newer and evolving names such as Lunette Cambodia and Nopa Fish. The Ferry Plaza Farmers Market remains a major weekly draw for produce, prepared foods, flowers, and local makers.
Culture and recreation are also part of the South Beach lifestyle. SF MOMA and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts are just beyond the neighborhood, while City Kayak at Pier 40 offers a way to experience the city from the water. Add in Oracle Park, the Embarcadero promenade, ferry service, waterfront dining, and neighborhood grocery convenience, and South Beach delivers luxurious city living with food, culture, and the bay right at your doorstep.
Some of the best weather in San Francisco can be found in South Beach. Set at the foot of the Bay Bridge, between the Embarcadero, Oracle Park, and the waterfront, this is one of the city’s great walking neighborhoods. Luxury condos, high-rises, lofts, ballpark energy, ferry access, and bayfront paths all help define daily life in this polished, energetic corner of the city.
Weekend mornings bring residents down from nearby towers to walk dogs, jog along the Embarcadero, and enjoy public art, bay breezes, and open-water views. The Ferry Building remains close at hand for breakfast, specialty food shopping, restaurants, cafés, and the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market, while Woodlands Market gives South Beach residents an easy neighborhood stop for organic groceries, specialty foods, prepared meals, wine, and everyday provisions.
Dining in and around South Beach has evolved. Longtime favorites like Delancey Street Restaurant still anchor the waterfront dining scene, while Boulevard brings classic San Francisco fine dining to the nearby Embarcadero. Cafe Okawari offers Japanese comfort food, sandwiches, curry, bowls, and café drinks on Townsend Street. Garaje remains a local go-to for casual Mexican-inspired food and its cult-favorite zapatos, and KAIYŌ adds Nikkei dining and a rooftop bar beside Oracle Park. Along the Embarcadero, Waterbar continues to offer seafood and Bay Bridge views, while Red’s Java House keeps the area’s old-school waterfront character alive with burgers, breakfast, beer, and a pier-side setting.
The Ferry Building adds even more nearby options, with local food merchants, restaurants, cafés, bakeries, and small eateries, plus newer and evolving names such as Lunette Cambodia and Nopa Fish. The Ferry Plaza Farmers Market remains a major weekly draw for produce, prepared foods, flowers, and local makers.
Culture and recreation are also part of the South Beach lifestyle. SF MOMA and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts are just beyond the neighborhood, while City Kayak at Pier 40 offers a way to experience the city from the water. Add in Oracle Park, the Embarcadero promenade, ferry service, waterfront dining, and neighborhood grocery convenience, and South Beach delivers luxurious city living with food, culture, and the bay right at your doorstep.
Weekend mornings bring residents down from nearby towers to walk dogs, jog along the Embarcadero, and enjoy public art, bay breezes, and open-water views. The Ferry Building remains close at hand for breakfast, specialty food shopping, restaurants, cafés, and the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market, while Woodlands Market gives South Beach residents an easy neighborhood stop for organic groceries, specialty foods, prepared meals, wine, and everyday provisions.
Dining in and around South Beach has evolved. Longtime favorites like Delancey Street Restaurant still anchor the waterfront dining scene, while Boulevard brings classic San Francisco fine dining to the nearby Embarcadero. Cafe Okawari offers Japanese comfort food, sandwiches, curry, bowls, and café drinks on Townsend Street. Garaje remains a local go-to for casual Mexican-inspired food and its cult-favorite zapatos, and KAIYŌ adds Nikkei dining and a rooftop bar beside Oracle Park. Along the Embarcadero, Waterbar continues to offer seafood and Bay Bridge views, while Red’s Java House keeps the area’s old-school waterfront character alive with burgers, breakfast, beer, and a pier-side setting.
The Ferry Building adds even more nearby options, with local food merchants, restaurants, cafés, bakeries, and small eateries, plus newer and evolving names such as Lunette Cambodia and Nopa Fish. The Ferry Plaza Farmers Market remains a major weekly draw for produce, prepared foods, flowers, and local makers.
Culture and recreation are also part of the South Beach lifestyle. SF MOMA and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts are just beyond the neighborhood, while City Kayak at Pier 40 offers a way to experience the city from the water. Add in Oracle Park, the Embarcadero promenade, ferry service, waterfront dining, and neighborhood grocery convenience, and South Beach delivers luxurious city living with food, culture, and the bay right at your doorstep.
Venisa Portillo
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Venisa Portillo