The history of Filipino culture in San Francisco dates back to the 1920s when Filipino immigrants and merchant mariners, also known as the Gran Oriente Filipino Masonic fraternity, pooled their money to buy SoMa’s Grand Oriente Filipino Hotel for $6,000. Fast forward to the 1960s, to attract tourists, San Francisco redeveloped SoMa, and eventually built Yerba Buena Center and The Moscone Center, which displaced 4,000 elders, retirees, Filipinos and other working-class people. SOMA Pilipinas, which spans Market and Brannan Streets from 2nd to 11th Streets and serves as the city’s Filipino cultural district, ensures that future tourism initiatives do not put them at risk for displacement.
Today, SOMA Pilipinas have reclaimed the tourism market by hosting popular events such as UNDISCOVRD, a festival that highlights Filipino street food and art. Another major project in the works involves the activation of Kapwa gardens, an outdoor space which SOMA Pilipinas plans to transform into a media, cultural arts and wellness venue.