Treasure Island — that strange, man-made landmass in the middle of the Bay that's been "under development" for roughly as long as some of us have been alive — is quietly becoming one of the city's most interesting spots. And waterfront yoga is exactly the kind of low-cost, community-driven activity that makes a neighborhood worth visiting without requiring a $47 smoothie as the price of admission.
Look, we spend a lot of time in this column talking about what San Francisco gets wrong: the bloated budgets, the bureaucratic tangles, the endless committees that study committees. So it's worth pausing to highlight something that just... works. People showing up to stretch, breathe, and enjoy one of the most stunning skyline views on the planet. No permits costing six figures. No oversight board. No "equity impact assessment" that takes eighteen months. Just yoga. By the water.
For a city that sometimes seems determined to make every simple pleasure as complicated and expensive as possible, this is a refreshing reminder that the best things in San Francisco are still the ones that cost the least. The Bay, the views, the community — none of that requires a line item in the city budget.
If you haven't been out to Treasure Island lately, it's worth the trip. The yoga is a bonus. The real draw is remembering that San Francisco, underneath all the dysfunction, is still one of the most beautiful cities on Earth — and sometimes all you need to enjoy it is a mat and a deep breath.

