You may see a few photos from nearby locations here. Many shoots span multiple spots in the same session.
Golden Gate Overlook
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Hop next door for a different mood
Baker Beach
The Presidio beach with the head-on Golden Gate Bridge view.
Sutro Baths
The 1896 ruins on the cliffs at the western tip of the city.
Lands End
The Coastal Trail along the northwest cliffs with bridge overlooks.
Batteries to Bluffs Trail
The 470 stairs down to Marshall's Beach, tide-dependent.
Where we shoot, on a map

Golden Gate Overlook is the curved concrete plaza on a coastal bluff inside the Presidio, just west of the Golden Gate Bridge Welcome Center, built in 2012 for the bridge's 75th anniversary. Two historic cypress trees frame the bridge from this exact spot, perfectly aligned. The shortest-walk, biggest-payoff stage in the cluster, with free parking 50 feet away and the trailhead for the Batteries to Bluffs Trail starting at the same lot.
Golden Gate Overlook is the easiest big-payoff frame in San Francisco. Pull into the Langdon Court lot off Lincoln Boulevard. Walk fifty feet down a gravel path. Sit on the curved concrete bench at the bluff edge. Two historic cypress trees are positioned exactly where you need them to be, framing the Golden Gate Bridge dead-center between their trunks, with the towers and cables compressed by the angle into one of the most-photographed views of the bridge in the city.
The lay of the land
The story I tell most often about Golden Gate Overlook is the timing one. A surprise proposal I shot here a few summers back — couple was flying in from Chicago, the partner being surprised had been told they were stopping at a Presidio overlook on the way to dinner reservations in Sausalito. I arrived forty minutes early to scout the bench traffic, and the plaza was sitting under a marine layer thick enough that I couldn't see the bridge from the curved concrete. I texted him that the bridge was socked in and asked if he wanted to push the moment or stay the course. He said: I'm doing it either way. They walked up at the agreed time. He sat her on the bench facing what should have been the bridge. As he reached into his jacket pocket, the fog peeled back off the towers in maybe sixty seconds — not all the way, but enough that the orange of the south tower came through the cypress trunks behind her. He dropped the knee at the exact moment the bridge appeared. The frame we got is the only proposal photo I've ever shot where the timing of the weather and the timing of the question feel like the same event. Lesson I pass on now: at Golden Gate Overlook, the fog moves fast. Don't bail. The cypress hold the frame even when the bridge isn't doing its part, and most of the time the bridge sorts itself out inside the proposal window.
Make a trip out of it
Where to stay
Getting here
A few things about Golden Gate Overlook
Golden Gate Overlook was built in 2012 to commemorate the bridge's 75th anniversary. The curved concrete plaza was designed to mirror the geometry of the surrounding coastal batteries, while feeling intentionally fresh and uncluttered. Funded by the Evelyn and Walter Haas, Jr. Fund and other foundations.
— Presidio.govThe two cypress trees that frame the bridge from the plaza were planted decades before the plaza itself, and the 2012 plaza was deliberately sited between them.
— Parks Conservancy: How to Get the ShotThe north trailhead of the Batteries to Bluffs Trail starts at the same parking lot, which makes Golden Gate Overlook a natural first stop on a Marshall's Beach shoot. From parking to plaza to trail-entry is fifty feet.
— Presidio.gov: Batteries to Bluffs TrailThree major multi-use trails converge at the Overlook: the California Coastal Trail, the Bay Area Ridge Trail, and the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail.
— Presidio.govBattery Godfrey just above the Overlook is the largest of the Presidio's coastal batteries, built between 1895 and 1898 with three 12-inch disappearing rifles. The guns were removed for scrap in 1943; the concrete emplacements remain.
— NPS: Battery Spencer page / Presidio.govOn clear evenings, the position of the towers, the cypress trees, and the bench at the Overlook align so that someone seated on the bench has the south tower of the bridge framed exactly between the trees with no other infrastructure visible.
— Parks Conservancy: How to Get the Shot
Golden Gate Overlook also appears as Langdon Court Overlook, or Two Trees Overlook.




