House of Air, the trampoline park tucked inside the Presidio's historic Crissy Field hangars, is hosting Flight Club — an adults-only (18+) jump night that lets you relive the singular childhood joy of hurling yourself into the air without a single kid cutting you off mid-flip.
Here's what we appreciate about this: it's a private business doing what private businesses do best — identifying a market (stressed-out adults who want to jump on trampolines without being surrounded by eight-year-olds hopped up on Capri Sun) and serving it. No city grant required. No feasibility study. No eighteen months of public comment. Just trampolines and grown-ups.
The Presidio location is already one of the better examples of adaptive reuse in San Francisco — a decommissioned military hangar turned into a legitimate recreational business that actually generates tax revenue and brings foot traffic to the area. It's the kind of thing we should want more of: creative, community-serving businesses operating in spaces that would otherwise sit empty or get swallowed by another bureaucratic office nobody visits.
Flight Club is also a reminder that not everything fun in San Francisco has to cost a fortune or require a reservation six weeks in advance at some Valencia Street spot with a one-word name. Sometimes the best night out is literally just jumping around like an idiot for an hour.
If you're over 18 and under the weight of existential dread, consider trading your doomscroll for a double bounce. Your knees might hate you tomorrow, but your soul won't.


