The Town That Keeps Tearing Down Its Own Sign

Bolinas, California — population ~1,500 — has been quietly removing the state highway sign pointing toward it for over fifty years. Every time Caltrans puts one up, someone in town takes it down. This episode traces how a small coastal community turned a repeated act of civic vandalism into something close to a founding myth, and what the town looks like today because of it.

The Town That Keeps Tearing Down Its Own Sign
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Somewhere north of San Francisco on Highway One, there is a turnoff that has no sign. Not because the state forgot to put one up. Because someone keeps taking it down.
Bolinas, California — a small coastal community tucked behind Bolinas Lagoon in Marin County — has been removing the highway directional sign that points toward it for over fifty years. Every time the California Department of Transportation installs one, it disappears. The count, depending on which local sources you trust and which decades you include, runs somewhere between thirty and well over a hundred removals. Caltrans, at some point, appears to have stopped keeping an official tally. The sign stays gone.
This episode traces how that started, what it means, and what Bolinas actually looks like today as a result. The story begins with the counterculture wave that arrived in the early 1970s — writers, artists, back-to-the-landers looking for somewhere quieter on the Marin coast — and the unspoken collective decision those residents made about what kind of place Bolinas would be. It moves through the decades of the sign war itself, including the detail that residents reportedly began bringing better tools as Caltrans installed sturdier hardware. And it sits with the honest tension the story carries: Bolinas today is one of the most expensive communities in Marin County, which complicates the romance of a town that said it just wanted to be left alone.
The nearby contrast is Stinson Beach, a few miles down the same highway, with its sign intact — and its summer weekend traffic to match. Whether Bolinas's quiet is a product of the missing sign, or of its geography, water limits, and protected lagoon, or all of those things together, is genuinely hard to separate. What's clear is that the sign — or the persistent absence of it — became the way Bolinas tells its own story.

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