Gingerbread Monolith Appears Mysteriously

Gingerbread Monolith Appears Mysteriously

Gingerbread: San Francisco- “Looks like a great spot to get baked,” said the city’s parks director, who plans to leave the structure up, at least for a “while.”


The following written content by Mary Papenfuss

It could have been alien elves. There was no other immediate explanation for a 7-foot-tall gingerbread monolith that mysteriously appeared in a San Francisco park.

Mysterious Gingerbread Monolith Appears , follow NWP, News Without Politics about monoliths, San Francisco, holidays, unbiased news, non political news

It’s not clear how edible the structure was, but witnesses reported the texture and smell of the monolith panels seemed to be the real thing — and it was decorated with frosting.

The monolith appeared early Christmas Day on a hilltop in Corona Heights Park overlooking the Castro neighborhood.

Resident Ananda Sharma told KQED public radio that he went for a run in the park early Friday and spotted what he initially thought was a “big post” — but as he ran closer, he could smell the gingerbread. 

The structure was the latest in a series of monoliths that have appeared — and disappeared — from Utah to Romania. The San Francisco version appears to be the first made of a Christmas treat.

Neighbors and city officials appeared to enjoy it. 

Informed by KQED News about the new monolith, San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department General Manager Phil Ginsburg responded: “Wow. Even makes a Jewish parks director smile.”

Ginsburg said there were no immediate plans to remove the monolith, and it could stay, at least for the time being.

“Looks like a great spot to get baked,” Ginsburg quipped like a true Californian. “We will leave it up until the cookie crumbles.”

“We all deserve a little bit of magic right now,” he said.

“I just thought it was hilarious,” said Raemond Bergstrom-Wood, who lives nearby. 

Jeffrey Tumlin, director of transportation at the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, called the “expertly-iced” monolith the “perfect act of SF 2020 defiance.” Read more from Huff Post.

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