COVID-19 emptied California's downtowns: S.F. still reeling but San Diego rebounds
LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 6, 2022 - - Shoppers, some wearing masks, some not, make their way along Santee Alley in Los Angeles on December 6, 2022. Los Angeles County appears in the midst of another full-blown coronavirus surge, with cases rising by 75% over the last week. The spike - which partially captures but likely does not fully reflect exposures over the Thanksgiving holiday - is prompting increasingly urgent calls for residents to get up to date on their vaccines and consider taking other preventative steps to stymie viral transmission and severe illness. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
Shoppers make their way along Santee Alley in Los Angeles. A study of foot traffic shows that downtown Los Angeles has yet to fully recover from the pandemic. San Diego has rebounded faster while San Francisco still lags behind, according to the study. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

One of the biggest questions facing California's largest cities in the last few years has been how their downtowns will rebound from the pandemic.

Early indications show that some regions are recovering much more quickly than others. And the stakes couldn't be higher, as leaders and officials race to lure workers and tourists back to cities' economic centers.

San Diego has bounced back to 99% of previous foot traffic levels while Los Angeles is at 65%, according to a study by the School of Cities at the University of Toronto that recorded foot traffic based on cellphone data in 62 North American cities from 2019 to November 2022. San Francisco remained at only 31% of pre-pandemic levels.

Each of California's largest downtowns has rebounded differently. San Diego was more reliant on tourism and residential development, which helped its recovery. San Francisco, on the other hand, was far more dependent on office workers and has suffered from companies shifting to remote work. The lack of commuter traffic has also devastated that downtown's retail life. San Francisco leaders have been working to turn things around and prevent what some experts have described as a potential "doom loop."

"There is tremendous diversity in who’s coming back,” said Karen Chapple, a professor emerita of city and regional planning at UC Berkeley and director at the School of Cities.

San Diego

People wait on a skybridge to enter Petco Park in downtown San Diego.
People wait on a skybridge to enter Petco Park in downtown San Diego on April 13. (Meg McLaughlin / San Diego Union-Tribune)

On a Thursday night in Little Italy in downtown San Diego, the restaurants along India Street were buzzing. Tables at Buon Appetito and Barbusa were filled with diners, giddy from the reprieve of California’s wild wintry weather. Tourists strolled the sidewalks, illuminated by string lights overhead. Across town in the historic streets of the Gaslamp quarter, dozens of customers queued up to order ice cream cones and cups from Cali Cream. A few blocks away, fans formed a line outside the American Comedy Club to see Kevin Fredericks’ show, the latest leg of his national tour.

Downtown San Diego is whirling again, a place that was in a developmental sprint until 2020 momentarily slowed it down. “San Diego has an unusually large and diverse set of activities, which I think is part of what’s leading the way,” said Bill Fulton, an urban planner and San Diego's former planning director.

Though San Diego's downtown is less office-centric, it was still decimated by the dramatic retraction of its bedrock leisure and hospitality industries — about 9,840 jobs were lost in 2020, wiping out four years of job growth, according to the Downtown San Diego Partnership.