San Francisco bans tour buses from 'Full House' residence

Residents in the neighbourhood complained about double parking and congestion outside the Victorian home, causing traffic hazards

Aries Layton, seated left, and her aunt Kelsy Layton pose as Debra Layton, Aries' grandmother and Kelsy's mother, foreground, takes photos outside a Victorian home made famous by the television show "Full House" in San Francisco, Tuesday, July 17, 2018. Tour buses will no longer be swinging by the San Francisco house made famous in the popular 1990s sitcom "Full House." The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency voted Tuesday to ban commercial vehicles from Broderick Street after neighbors complained.  (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)
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Tour buses will no longer be swinging by a San Francisco house made famous in the popular 1990s sitcom Full House.

The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency voted Tuesday to ban commercial vehicles from Broderick Street after neighbours complained. Vehicles that seat nine or more people will no longer be allowed on the block.

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Spokesman Paul Rose says neighbours complained about double parking and congestion outside the Victorian home, causing traffic hazards.

The exterior of the Broderick Street house was used as the family's residence in the original show and in a Netflix reboot in 2016.

The producer who created the show bought the home for more than $4 million (Dh14.6 million) in 2016.