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« on: May 06, 2011, 02:44:02 AM »
As a Berkeley native, I want to reiterate what was said up above about the Bay Area consisting of WAY more than just San Francisco itself. San Francisco is very strongly a non-isolated city, despite having to go across bridges to get to the other major parts of the Bay Area. Oakland/Berkeley/Richmond and San Rafael/Sausalito/Marin are all very definitely important parts of the San Francisco area.
Also, if you really do want a big isolated house on a hill, there are two places you could pull one off, though both are about an hour's drive from San Francisco proper. Behind the Berkeley hills you've got Orinda, Moraga, Lafeyette, and further out Danville, which are way more sparsely populated, and do have a fair number of mega-mansions out in the nearby hills. (I went to high school with kids from there--the parties they threw were pretty crazy, let me tell you.) Driving up the other way (due North) from SF, Mill Valley is home to some similarly palatial homes, though they're much closer together than the ones out towards Orinda.
I'd definitely spend time with maps of the Bay Area, familiarize yourself with the look of it. NYC is a very apt comparison--the different parts of the Bay Area are all very different from one another, but still interconnected. Also check out a map of the BART system, as it's vital for getting around, but only goes to certain places.
As for SF/F viability, frankly it doesn't get much better than San Francisco. It's full of weirdness, historically and currently. I actually just got done running an urban fantasy tabletop campaign set in SF. Good times ensued, I assure you.
~Duk