Last Call at the Gold Dust Lounge?
Fans rally to save historic watering hole as eviction looms
With its plush red couches, faux gold-leaf covered walls and $3.50 glasses of sparkling wine, the dimly lit Gold Dust Lounge is a holdout of old San Francisco in the midst of the upscale shopping district on Union Square.
News last week that the Gold Dust would be evicted in March, to be replaced by a mystery retailer, has raised a great hue and cry from the bar’s loyal local patrons and tourists alike.
“It’s like taking down one of the spans of the Golden Gate Bridge, it’s like shortening Coit Tower, it’s like dropping the Transamerica tower by 10 stories,” said Tim Chappelone, 64, a retired P.G.&E. employee. “The city will still be here, but it won’t be the same.”
A lifelong San Francisco resident, Chappelone, who was drinking his favored $4 bourbon with water, said he had been coming to the Gold Dust for 40 years. He and his wife, Jennifer, heard about the impending closure from their daughter and read about it “on Google.”
In one short week, a robust campaign to save the historic watering hole has sprung up spontaneously on the Internet: the Save The Gold Dust Facebook page has nearly two thousand fans. There is also an online petition, a Twitter account and a blog dedicated to the cause.
A news conference is being organized with some of the bar’s more famous regulars, including former Mayor Willie Brown and Christopher Caen, son of the legendary Chronicle columnist Herb Caen, who preferred a double vodka on the rocks in a wine glass with a twist and soda on the side.
It was once part-owned by Bing Crosby — and it was also, perhaps, a speakeasy during Prohibition — but since 1965 the Gold Dust has been owned by two brothers: Jim and Tasios Bovis, now 79 and 82 respectively.
“It’s very sad — it’s been like a family,” said Jim Bovis as he sat at the bar with Gracia, his elegantly dressed wife, on Thursday.
Jon Handlery, president of Handlery Hotels, is the landlord who wants the Gold Dust out. Although he refused to identify the company, Handlery said he had a letter of intent to lease that space as well as the larger adjoining art gallery.
“Sometimes change can be challenging,” Handlery said, “but sometimes there’s opportunity for something better.”
Handlery said the prospective tenant would pay more in rent. He added that although “with today’s technology things spread around quickly,” the on-the-ground support for the bar was not as apparent.
“I often walk around the block,” he said. “It isn’t like there’s a line outside the Gold Dust to get in.”
But don’t count the Gold Dust out just yet. On the long list of San Franciscans’ causes, saving bars ranks very high, said Christopher VerPlanck, an architectural historian who engineered a recent effort to save the Tonga Room on nearby Nob Hill.
“There’s just such a long history of drinking in San Francisco,” said VerPlanck. “It’s that simple.”
This article also appears in the Bay Area edition of The New York Times.







M L
Its a dump.
Robert Montgomery
It is a dump. It's also the only inexpensive place (by half) to get a drink without wandering into the 'loin. It's also not full of pretentious folks who only go out to be seen. It's got a good client base, it's comfortable, and a nice place to hide from the action right outside the door.
I'll be sad to see it go. We all know that money talks in SF, and Handlery has lots.
Don Lokke
50 years of SF tradition. What's next...
A city without it's traditions is a city without a soul. The Gold Dust Lounge contributes a continuity that crosses generations. In a world where businesses are lucky to make it 3-years this business has gained the approval of customers for 50-years,
Customers vote every day and for 50-years they have voted with their dollars to keep this tradition, in this location, alive. What an accomplishment for an owner, and a landlord. Where is the loyalty to SF and the history that made it the great city it is today. Not every business can or should be a $250 tourist watering hole.
The Gold Dust Lounge tradition is part of the foundation, the ambiance that is a period in time every city needs to maintain it's credibility. Lose the Gold Dust Lounge and the soul of SF dies a little bit with it.
For 50 successful years the Gold Dust Lounge was a good decision for it's landlord. It has paid it's own way, it's fair share as they say today. It is a stabilizing influence on a neighborhood and business community at a time when economic certainty is a precious as gold itself.
Pull this business out of the economic mix in this economy and you can destabilize the businesses around it. Pretty soon vacancies lead to a decrease in property values, crime and the city loses valuable, needed property taxes. Naturally a landlord can do as they please in a free market but in the long run, it may not be wise to chose glitter over gold dust when gold is over $1800 an ounce. Sometimes stability in a community is in the best interest of preserving their property value.
Surely there is still room for the place that the Bovis brothers, Bing and thousands of patrons have made their tradition for over 50-years. Let's raise a toast to a tradition that deserves better.
David Kaye
Jon Handlery is a rich guy who inherited his hotel and property from his family. He is so desperate for business at his hotel that he has been reduced to offering discounts on the radio to BAY AREA people to stay in his hotel!
It's obvious that Jon Handlery has no business sense whatever, which in and of itself would be no problem, except that he'll be replacing the Gold Dust with yet another Starbucks.