San Diego photologs from the 1970s

(beautifulpublicdata.com)

130 points | by jonathanmkeegan 5 hours ago

21 comments

  • ear7h 4 hours ago
    The Les Girls sign has stood at the same place basically unchanged until a few months ago, iconic. I remember when I first came across these videos I was living in an area of the city that was hardly developed and mostly dirt roads it was baffling. But aftwards I moved to the center of the city and it was baffling for the opposite reason, the storefronts and buildings were basically the same. Looking at the street view now and downtown also looks similar but a lot more trees.

    Edit:

    Looks like the author only has a reference to a subset of the originals on archive.org. There's tons more for more rural parts of SD you can find them on the city website:

    https://www.sandiego.gov/digitalarchives/film-audio/street-v...

  • AntiRush 4 hours ago
    Your color correction is incredible - the frames you selected look much better than the original video.

    The matrix of vehicles is my favorite part. If you drive down these same streets today it's a sea of black, white and grey.

    You'll be happy to know that Les Girls is still there today, advertising burlesque, go go dancers and "full nude". They finally replaced the sign earlier this year, but it still looks very much the same.

    Les Girls is the feature of a fascinating podcast, too: https://www.kpbs.org/podcasts/stripper-energy

    • jimt1234 3 hours ago
      Everything looks so green, but I'm not sure if it's the color correction or because there was water back then. :shrug:
  • asdff 2 hours ago
    It is shocking how quickly California developed from agriculture to this, and how it basically stopped developing further after hitting this point. These photos could just as believably be van nuys in 2026. No wonder why we have a housing crisis. Progress and building to meet demand has been refused for almost 60 years.
    • eagleinparadise 4 minutes ago
      I work in commercial real estate, grew up in San Diego and work in the SoCal market. I am not joking that the MAIN problem is Prop 13, which came into effect 5 years after this video was made.

      I deal with these owners EVERY DAY who would rather sit on crappy buildings and land because why not, it costs them nothing. They've owned forever. Literally TODAY I had an offer rejected from a Seller that would have yielded 80 units of affordable housing in an area with $150k median income, delivering completion in 2028-2029.

    • littlexsparkee 1 hour ago
      That was my biggest gripe growing up in SD - felt like Caltrans / SANDAG abdicated responsibility for developing good transit/bike/ped infra, doubling down on car dependency. It should be a mecca of active transportation given the weather!
      • asdff 1 hour ago
        It is actually absurd the amount of freeways there are in San Diego. How many north south and east west freeways are there? And they are like sometimes 1 mile or less apart from another parallel running freeway. Then you have all these thick roads where its 6-8 lanes across with a 50 mph speed limit basically freeway capacity right there. Probably the most "built for car" urban area in california IMO, with orange county a close second for basically the same reasons (lot of freeway redundancy and also high capacity high speed roads). LA county would be closer but they never finished their highway master plans and it shows with some of the freeway void spaces where planned freeways were never built for varying reasons. They have those 50mph high speed roads but its limited to the comparatively newer sections of LA county like santa clarita, which is very much built in a "san diegan" way compared to the older san fernando valley.
      • jallmann 32 minutes ago
        Agreed it's a bummer.

        There's a lot of low-density sprawl in San Diego county which makes effective transit difficult, and because you have to drive everywhere, sentiment trends anti-bicycle. The previous CEO of SANDAG tried to push a mobility-centric vision but left because of intense pushback from folks who wanted more funding for roads and freeways, rather than transit and bike paths.

    • socalgal2 23 minutes ago
      > It is shocking how quickly California developed from agriculture to this

      Check out Disneyland. There was nothing else there when it opened in 1955

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YtrVcOxVDls

    • lapetitejort 52 minutes ago
      I love looking at historical photos of Southern California if only to re-enforce this exact phenomenon. At one point the largest vineyard in the world existed in Southern California [0]. Just a small patch of green and some abandoned buildings remain [1].

      [0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guasti%2C_California

      [1]: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Guasti,+Ontario,+CA+91761/

    • nomel 2 hours ago
      I think it's the only possible outcome if sprawl is allowed.

      New families with some money spend too much income buying house.

      Kids move out, parents get old and don't get out as much. Don't keep up the house, because they need to retire.

      Sell house that's only attractive to lower income. Low income statistics take over the area.

      Nearby businesses close from everything related to low income statistics.

      Repeat with new families and newly built houses at edge of city, letting the interior rot.

      Like a slime mold.

      • asdff 1 hour ago
        Infill development used to be allowed in California but it stopped in the early 70s when communities turned to zoning to exclude blacks and browns after redlining was made illegal. The many sundown towns did not go without a fight. There are still some pieces of what that infil looked like. The bog standard brick 5 story building you see all over east coast cities can be found in california in parts, often sticking out like a sore thumb because nothing has been allowed to be built to that height since the late 1960s/early 1970s. The dingbat is another example of infill housing that was since made illegal although it was quite popular. Most blocks you see with some sort of apartments were at one point single family home lots, but this sort of development carefully limited to the blocks you now see them instead of widespread throughout the area.

        There was even a time when very large highrises were being constructed e.g. Wilshire Blvd's condo canyon. But that was also seen as a blight and quickly stopped in its tracks from expanding beyond the immediate arterial frontage. All hell would surely break loose if you allowed for student housing to be built on the eastern edge of UCLA instead of contained in the sliver of land between the school and veterans cemetery I guess. Unfortunately for the student body, the school is shoehorned in between two prestigious country clubs, and it is clear where priorities lay among local leadership.

        • socalgal2 11 minutes ago
          Communities did not turn to zoning in response to infill being disallowed. Zoning was around since at least 1917 and already for that purpose.

          Zoning in the 70s was more a response to (1) homeownership property value protection (2) nimbys being given the power to block projects like they still do today, especially in highly "progressive" cities. The more progressive, the harder to build (3) people claiming expansion was bad for the environment.

  • stevenfoster 55 minutes ago
    Wild there's a Safeway sign in there and not Alpha Beta, Fedco, and the old Coronado bridge sign.

    My parents grew up around this time and a lot of it still looked liked this when I was a kid in the 90s.

    I always wanted to move back to this San Diego, but it no longer exists. Appreciate whoever did this work.

  • corlinp 50 minutes ago
    Wow- the entire Point Loma area pretty much looks the same as it does today. Too bad they didn't drive down Newport to see Hodad's.

    Torrey Pines area definitely looks the most different, mostly because of the growth of UCSD I'm thinking.

  • squeedles 4 hours ago
    Color is magnificent and I can't believe we've lost so much joy on our relentless march to hyper-optimized profit. I recently read another article about how everything has gotten more monochrome, will try to find it again.

    In scanning some slides from the 1970s, I was struck by the colors of the pants! Bright! Stripes! Fun! I sew shirts and gravitate towards bright prints, and everything tends to stand out because clothing in general doesn't seem as varied today.

    EDIT - Found many articles along the same lines, some even with the same images. This isn't the original one that I was thinking about, but it is equivalent

    https://uxmag.com/articles/why-is-the-world-losing-color

  • vvpan 16 minutes ago
    When I look at those people first thing I think is that they have never seen a cell phone and I am bit jealous.
  • ilaksh 3 hours ago
    I drove down Garnet and Grand so many times as a teenager on the way to the beach. Beings back a few memories. Most of that was thirty years ago, and the videos are from way earlier. But it's kind of interesting that some of it seems familiar.

    I actually don't really think cities should be like that though. They should evolve more freely. No point in trying to explain it though.

  • alexjplant 4 hours ago
    Les Girls is still there. I chuckle every time I pass it on the way to the rehearsal space my band uses. I always suspected that it had been a bigger deal in some bygone era; glad to see that confirmed via photographic evidence.
    • jimt1234 4 hours ago
      I keep hearing that whole area is gonna be razed as part of the Midway/Sports Arena redevelopment, but I feel like as long as MCRD stays put, Les Girls will always have a home. LOL
      • cstone 3 hours ago
        The most recent draft of the Midway Rising Specific Plan (https://www.sandiego.gov/sites/default/files/2025-09/dsd_app...) says Les Girls stays; the development doesn't go north of Kurtz St.

        By my reading of the map, it means that that Midway Rising will cover the Salvation Army store and everything west of it between Sports Arena and Kurtz St (including the current parking lots).

        Of course, if/when Midway Rising does happen, it'll probably spark future developments..

        • alexjplant 33 minutes ago
          Rock and Roll San Diego (the aforementioned rehearsal space) is slated to be part of the redevelopment :-( as is Soma. I only moved here 6 years ago and it already feels like the end of an era.
  • littlexsparkee 1 hour ago
    Folks might find the archives of California Revealed interesting - photos, videos that you can filter on place, time, subject, etc.

    http://californiarevealed.org/search

  • sllabres 3 hours ago
    Nice you could choose if you would like your gasoline with or without service :-) (4:00).

    Why was the chain called "Der Wienerschnitzel" and not "Das Wienerschnitzel". It is (was) a proper noun, but why the wrong article? (5:02)

    A small part appears twice (from 8:51--9:06).

    more cyclists than I see in current streetview footage

    Coca-Cola delivery vans where yellow?

    • reaperducer 3 hours ago
      Nice you could choose if you would like your gasoline with or without service

      Still possible in some places. Especially cities with large numbers of retirees.

      I used a full-service optional Shell station in Las Vegas last year. Unlike when I was young, full-service didn't mean in increase in the price of gas.

      • ghaff 3 hours ago
        There are a few full-service stations around where I live. But you really don't need your oil checked when you get gas so unless the objective is to have someone else pump your gas in crappy weather there's not a not of point.
  • danans 2 hours ago
    > before pulling into a Texaco to pay $0.34 per gallon for low-lead Fire Chief gas and fill up your "Mellow Yellow" AMC Gremlin.

    The nostalgia aside, that's $3.23/gallon today. Cheaper than today with our ongoing war, but same price as Nov 2020. At 20mpg that AMC gremlin was about as fuel efficient as our modern huge SUVs though.

  • markkat 3 hours ago
    IMHO comparably, cars today look depressing. So soulless, so similar, so boring. White/grey/silver/black, maybe a few boring blue or burgundy.
    • littlexsparkee 1 hour ago
      I don't drive but aesthetically the cars of the '60s - '80s (e.g. a vintage Oldsmobile or Cadillac coupe) are so much better than boxy, oversized modern cars.
    • ksd482 1 hour ago
      And they are bigger too. Everything is bigger.
    • gonzalohm 2 hours ago
      Nowadays car brands charge you upwards of $1k to get a special color. And even then, you can only pick from at best 5 colors. It's sad
      • mlsu 1 hour ago
        And it's even worse because the colors now could be so good because of modern technology. The potential is so high
  • ashleyn 4 hours ago
    >"Hypno-Sex-Ism"

    50 years early to the "gooning" trend, I see...

  • latchkey 4 hours ago
    As someone born and raised in san diego since the 70s, this is really nice!
  • rnxrx 3 hours ago
    The commentary on hand-created signage was especially fascinating. The observations about the use of computers "enshitifying" design sort of eerily echo a lot of the commentary about AI now, including the (not unfounded) fear of the loss of human inconsistency, and the beauty it can bring.
  • thelonelyborg 1 hour ago
    and not a single beach in sight!
  • burnt-resistor 3 hours ago
    Can't forget California smog and haze that varied between yellow, orange, and brown.
    • annoyingnoob 2 hours ago
      And we just can't capture the smell of those vehicles or the smell of gas stations of that time.
      • asdff 2 hours ago
        Just wait for a mow and blow crew to show up and catch a whiff of that 2 stroke exhaust.
  • rdiddly 2 hours ago
    Cool project
  • AnimalMuppet 3 hours ago
    So many Volkswagen Beetles! The original ones, not the 1990s version.