Neighbors slam Olympic gold medalist as trash left piled outside SF home

By New York Post (U.S.) | Created at 2026-06-10 04:49:36 | Updated at 2026-06-10 19:19:57 14 hours ago

Olympic freestyle skiing star Eileen Gu’s family home in San Francisco’s wealthy Sea Cliff neighborhood is drawing fresh scrutiny after a large pile of discarded furniture and household items triggered complaints from nearby residents.

The debris-covered sidewalk outside the family’s 25th Avenue property on Tuesday reportedly featured a couch, mattress, broken furniture, clothing, books, medication bottles and other household belongings.

The pile was so extensive that it obscured a fire hydrant from view.

Gold medalist Eileen Gu Ailing of Team China celebrates during the medal ceremony. Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

A complaint was submitted through the city’s 311 system Monday evening.

The next morning, a Recology worker arrived to inspect the scene but reportedly found no scheduled pickup.

After receiving no answer at the front door, the worker initially declined to remove the items.

Neighbor Ira Glick, a Stanford academic, told The San Francisco Standard he tried contacting the Gu family after learning no one had responded.

Eileen Gu’s mother, Yan Gu, disputed the impression that the family had simply dumped the items at the curb.

She told the SF Standard she moved the belongings outside around 1 a.m. and had carefully packed them into roughly 20 boxes, covering them in case it rained.

Houses in the Sea Cliff neighborhood of San Francisco, California. Bloomberg via Getty Images

Yan Gu said she was shocked to discover the contents scattered across the sidewalk and blamed either scavengers or what she called “vicious people” for tearing through the pile.

She also claimed someone pulled out a shirt bearing her daughter’s name, which she viewed as a deliberate act.

According to Yan Gu, a truck was already on its way Tuesday afternoon to remove the items.

Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

The incident unfolded against the backdrop of ongoing tensions between the family and some neighbors.

Glick said the Gu family had recently hired a gardener and had also been involved in a dispute with another resident over property boundaries.

Another neighbor told the SF Standard he had not spoken with the family in four or five years following a disagreement over a newly installed driveway.

Yan Gu, meanwhile, accused that neighbor of maintaining reflective spinning weather vanes that cast light into her home “like a disco ball,” forcing the family to keep curtains closed.

Gu ]competes during the qualification of Women’s Freeski Big Air qualification run of Freestyle Skiing event. Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

City records show the Gu’s property has faced multiple complaints over the years.

An April 28 complaint alleged the home suffered from neglect, overgrown vegetation and trash issues that attracted rodents and birds, though a city inspector found no housing-code violations the following day.

The property was also the subject of sewage-related complaints in January 2024. Inspection records described standing, bubbling sewage in the backyard before a contractor cleaned the area and agreed to obtain permits for permanent repairs.

In a separate matter, the home is named in a lawsuit filed Jan. 28 in San Francisco Superior Court.

Plaintiff Adolfo Avila Chavez alleges he suffered severe injuries while performing gardening work at the property in July 2024 after falling from a 10-foot ramp that had been improperly positioned.

The lawsuit names Yan Gu and contractor Hector Alvarez as defendants.

According to the complaint, Alvarez was an unlicensed and uninsured contractor who hired Avila Chavez and failed to provide safety equipment.

The suit claims the fall resulted in lasting injuries.

Built in 1925, the Sea Cliff home has been the subject of neighborhood complaints and city inquiries for more than a decade.

Neither defendant has filed a response.

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