Salesforce Park — that elevated green space in the Transbay district that somehow still feels like San Francisco's best-kept secret — is hosting an Alice in Wonderland Family Math Quest. The concept is simple and genuinely clever: take Lewis Carroll's whimsical world (Carroll was a mathematician, after all) and turn it into an interactive math adventure for kids.
Let's be real — getting kids excited about math is a Herculean task in an era of infinite screen time. And doing it outdoors, in a public space, without taxpayers footing some bloated programming bill? That's the kind of community initiative we love to see. It's creative, it's accessible, and it doesn't require a six-figure city grant to make it happen.
Salesforce Park itself is a quiet testament to what public-private partnerships can look like when they actually work. The rooftop park sits atop the Salesforce Transit Center, offering four acres of gardens and open space funded largely through private investment. It's one of the few spaces downtown that feels genuinely inviting rather than neglected — a low bar, sure, but one that much of SF's public infrastructure still can't clear.
Events like this matter because they give families a reason to come downtown, spend time together, and engage with something educational — all without a price tag. That's how you rebuild a city center: not with mandates and subsidies, but by making it a place people actually want to be.
If you've got kids (or if you're an adult who never quite outgrew falling down rabbit holes), this one's worth the trip. Wonderland math beats doom-scrolling any day of the week.

