Soon tour buses might be banned in front of the 'Full House' house

Fans line up along Broderick Street to see the cast of the original "Full House" and the Netflix sequel "Fuller House" during a press event outside the property used in the sitcom in 2016. Click through the gallery for pictures of the home when it went on the market in 2016. less Fans line up along Broderick Street to see the cast of the original "Full House" and the Netflix sequel "Fuller House" during a press event outside the property used in the sitcom in 2016. Click through the ... more Photo: Laura Morton / Special To The Chronicle Photo: Laura Morton / Special To The Chronicle Image 1 of / 39 Caption Close Soon tour buses might be banned in front of the 'Full House' house 1 / 39 Back to Gallery

Reviews for the "Full House" Netflix reboot, "Fuller House," were tepid when the show dropped in 2016 ("When it doesn't even measure up to the mediocrity of the original series... you've got a problem," read the Chronicle's assessment). But that didn't stop the reboot from driving a surge in tourist interest in seeing the titular full house, which has made things unpleasant for neighbors.

Now the SFMTA is weighing a ban on tour buses on the often-congested stretch of Broderick Street where the famous Victorian sits.

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The change to the city's transportation code would ban "commercial vehicles with nine or more seats" from Broderick Street between Pine and Bush streets. It'll be considered at a meeting of the SFMTA's Board of Directors on Tuesday at 1 p.m. The possible ban was first reported by the Examiner.

Illegal parking of tour buses on the block is an ongoing problem, according to the SFMTA.

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The home was purchased by the show's creator in late 2016, several months after it went on the market for $4.15 million.

It's among several tourist destinations around the city — like the twisty stretch of Lombard Street and the Painted Ladies at Alamo Square — that neighbors say create a nuisance by drawing flocks of people and scores of car break-ins.

For their part, tourists don't seem to be too jazzed about the experience of visiting the house, either.

"We were there maybe 2 minutes max and a neighbor was yelling at us on a megaphone from across the street to leave and other obscene words!" noted one disgruntled visitor on TripAdvisor.

"The parking along the road is not good," wrote another. At least in that respect it's an authentic San Francisco experience.

Filipa Ioannou is an SFGATE staff writer. Email her at fioannou@sfchronicle.com and follow her on Twitter