In a far corner of the sleepy Outer Richmond neighborhood in San Francisco, just blocks away from Lands End, a city oddity emerges — a 37-foot wide sidewalk.
The stretch of pavement on Point Lobos Avenue is the widest in the city, nearly three times the size of the average residential sidewalk, according to a Chronicle analysis of sidewalk data from the city. That data has some limitations: Entire neighborhoods like Mission Bay and the Presidio weren’t counted, and many street segments in the eastern half of the city are missing.
Still, the Point Lobos Avenue sidewalk stands out even in a neighborhood with relatively wide sidewalks overall — it’s large enough to easily walk five people abreast and still have room for passersby walking the other way. The residential buildings along the blocks, many of them built in the 1920s, offer plenty of room for cars to park in their driveways and still not come even close to encroaching on pedestrian space…