The .git/svn directory can be created if you run any git svn command in any repository - e.g. just running git svn info, as Carl Norum suggests will create it. However, a slightly better test might be that .git/svn exists and is non-empty, e.g.
[ -d .git/svn ] && [ x != x"$(ls -A .git/svn/)" ] && echo Looks like git-svn
If you want a stricter test, you could look through the history of HEAD for any commit messages that contain a git-svn-id - essentially that's what git svn info is doing before it gives up. For example:
[ x != x"$(git log -n 1 --grep='^\s*git-svn-id' --oneline)" ] && echo "git-svn!"
... but it sounds as if that might be too slow for your use case.
The source code in git-svn.perl describes the layout of a git-svn repository in its different versions:
... so you could write tests for all of those if you want to be careful to catch all the different versions.