SAN FRANCISCO
Lee Heidhues 6.15.2025
The Open the Great Highway losers will undoubtedly decry this latest act of wanton vandalism. But the pathetic unmistakable reality is there for all to see. They are loving every act of vandalism and destruction.
These motorists and their ilk refuse to accept the will of the 55 percent of San Francisco voters who used the ballot box to create Sunset Dunes Park. The unending public tantrum has given flaccid criminal loonies and wingnuts license to destroy The People’s public property.

Excerpted from The San Francisco Chronicle 6.15.2025
A community piano beloved by visitors to San Francisco’s Sunset Dunes has been destroyed amid a spate of vandalism targeting community property at the recently opened park, advocates said.
This is the latest in a series of acts of vandalism targeting Sunset Dunes since the 2-mile, 50-acre park opened in April, months after San Franciscans created it by voting to close a section of the Great Highway to cars. The measure has been highly controversial, and the supervisor who championed it, Joel Engardio, will face a recall election in September driven by groups opposed to the Upper Great Highway’s closure.
An Outer Sunset resident who went to play the instrument, known colloquially as the “wave piano” due to its proximity to the ocean, found that almost none of the keys worked early Saturday, said Lucas Lux, president of the volunteer nonprofit Friends of Sunset Dunes. Lux was also the campaign manager for Proposition K, the measure voters approved in November 2024 that closed the Upper Great Highway to cars and opened the park.

All the evidence points to someone “very intentionally” damaging the piano, ripping off the felted hammers controlling all but 10 of its keys, political communications consultant Catie Stewart told the Chronicle. Piano maintenance experts have since confirmed the instrument is damaged beyond repair.
The vandalism, Lux said, has largely occurred in two separate waves. The first occurred right after the Upper Great Highway closed on March 14, with murals and asphalt marred by graffiti, and the second began shortly after Engardio’s recall qualified in late May.

On Thursday, just two days before the wave piano was found destroyed, park visitors discovered heavy damage to the nearby “Ocean Calling” exhibit — a public art installation consisting of a phone booth that visitors can use to make symbolic phone calls to deceased loved ones. Someone had ripped the phone from its cord, tossed dirt and rocks into the booth and damaged its wooden frame, according to photos and videos taken shortly after the discovery.
Top photo: Opponents of Sunset Dunes Park revved their motorcycles and gunned their engines at Noriega and Lower Great Highway. Disrupting the opening of the Park. The City shut down the street to bring an end to this temper tantrum. April 12, 2025