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Imagining what the Great Highway park could look like with AI

Proposition K said nothing about what happens next, so here are some suggestions.

The image shows a vibrant coastal park with lush gardens, walking paths, and picnic areas beside a sandy beach lined with palm trees. Buildings extend along the coastline.
If the Great Highway becomes a park, it might look like this AI rendering. | Source: AI illustration by The Standard

The Great Highway will cease to be a road and become a park — at some point. That’s because last week San Francisco voters narrowly passed Proposition K, a measure to extend the ban on vehicles from the section between Sloat Boulevard and Lincoln Way.

The only problem? Prop. K didn’t offer a plan for how to transform the four-lane divided road into open space, or specify where funding for it might come from.

This was a major reason why many voters opposed the measure. But for others, this lack of a blueprint is an opportunity to take matters into their own hands and reimagine Ocean Beach Park for themselves. To that end, one Redditor used ChatGPT to generate a bucolic greenscape full of zigzagging trails and palm trees extending north from Sloat.

Like most AI renderings, the vision is uncanny. Baffling, really. There’s a skyline where the Richmond should be — and a roadway that still shows plenty of cars. But the picture of the imaginary park is beautiful, and the post spawned plenty of ideas for what to do with the current Great Highway, the suggestions ranging from practical to fantastical to straight-up trolling. 

The Standard took some of the most ridiculous suggestions and ran them through ChatGPT ourselves. For good measure, we added a few of our own conceptions of what a Great Highway Park of the future could look like.

Golden Gate Park of the Sea

The image depicts a scenic coastal city with a bustling road, lined with buildings and greenery. A beach, pier, and bridge are visible, and people enjoy the oceanfront.
If you ignore the Golden Gate Bridge in the wrong place and the sloping of the flat Sunset, this rendering gives a good idea of what a Great Highway park could be. | Source: AI illustration by The Standard.

This one is our idea of the ideal version of the park that could replace the Great Highway. A landscaped wonderland with winding foot paths, meadows for picnicking, dunes for gazing out at the sea and sliding down, piers for fishing, and ponds for native birds, this would be more an extension of Golden Gate Park.

A park of infinite dunes

A scenic coastal view features a winding boardwalk, grassy dunes, palm trees, and a sandy beach with waves lapping the shore, framed by a city skyline.
Lightly landscaping the natural sand dunes of OB would make it a birding paradise. | Source: AI illustration by The Standard.

The simplest vision may well be the best: Demolish the roadbed and restore the ecosystem. Most of the west side was originally sand dunes, so a park that expands their reach inland from the ocean might be best for shorebirds like the vulnerable snowy plover. As long as somebody promises to stay on top of any invasive ice plant.

Playland at the Beach 2.0

A vibrant beachfront amusement park with roller coasters, ferris wheels, and colorful buildings. Crowds enjoy rides, fountains, and the sandy shoreline under a clear sky.
Playland at the Beach has strong Santa Cruz boardwalk vibes. | Source: AI illustration by The Standard.

For most of the 20th century, the northern end of Ocean Beach was the site of a giant amusement park called Playland. One commenter in the Reddit thread fondly remembered their grandma describing it. Santa Cruz has been stealing our boardwalk thunder since its demolition in 1973, so here’s a resurrected version, complete with roller coasters, water slides, and a carousel.

The two-mile lavatory

A futuristic, massive curved public urinal installation spans a busy beach path near a coastal area. It twists alongside beachgoers walking and enjoying the shore.
We couldn't resist seeing what this suggestion would look like. | Source: AI illustration by The Standard.

In the Reddit thread, one cheeky commenter called for “world’s longest stadium trough urinal, from Sloat to Balboa.” Well, SF is notoriously short on public restrooms, so maybe this beachfront pissoir will help keep the surrounding neighborhood’s streets clean.

Big-box chains and one-armed bandits

A bustling beach runs alongside a cityscape filled with towering buildings, large advertisements, and a pier. The beach is lively with people and the ocean is calm.
San Francisco's permitting department would never. | Source: AI illustration by The Standard.

A commenter with a populist bent expressed interest in carpeting the former Great Highway in casinos and Wal-Mart superstores. So we decided to crank up the dystopia factor a bit, turning the seashore into a hideous, hyper-commercialized Coney Island boardwalk with corporate logos galore.

Our very own Dubai

The image shows a futuristic cityscape with modern high-rise buildings lined along a highway, adjacent to a wide sandy beach with waves gently lapping the shore.
The city would hurl itself into the sea before letting this happen. | Source: AI illustration by The Standard.

Remember last year’s pie-in-the-sky proposal to erect a 50-story residential tower near the zoo? It was thoroughly criticized for being out-of-scale with the surrounding neighborhood, but then again, San Francisco is on the hooks to approve 82,000 new housing units by 2030. They can’t all go up in Mission Bay.

Emily Dreyfuss can be reached at edreyfuss@sfstandard.com
Astrid Kane can be reached at astrid@sfstandard.com
Jesse Rogala can be reached at jesse@sfstandard.com