Public Art and Architecture from Around the World

Category: All of SAN FRANCISCO

  • Topo in Cloth and aluminum

    San Francisco International Airport Departure Lobby Terminal 2 Kendall Buster -Powder coated steel tubing; greenhouse shade cloth- 288 in. x 288 in. x 192 in Topograph I & II Kendall Buster earned a BFA degree from the Corcoran College of Art and Design in Washington DC and an MFA in Sculpture from Yale University as well…

  • Welcome

    San Francisco International Airport Terminal 2 Baggage Claim Level 1 Dan Snyder – Polyurethane Paint on Aluminum -1983 Titled Welcome North, Welcome South, Welcome East, Welcome West, is designed to greet visitors from around the world. According to Mr Snyder’s website: Dan was born in St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands in 1941. His father…

  • Caduceus

    110 Sutter Street Financial District This was originally designed in a skeletal Chicago School manner by the important but little-known firm of Hemenway and Miller and remodeled with an overlay of Beaux-Arts details by architect E. A. Bozio. **** This slightly stuffy, but excellent article, written in 1979, explains the building and its environs perfectly.…

  • One of only Two Octagonal Houses in San Francisco

    1067 Green Street Russian Hill   The Feusier Octagon House, built between 1857 and 1858, is one of only two surviving octagon plan houses in San Francisco. The other is the Colonial Dames Octagon on Gough Street. Both Houses retain their original exterior construction and reflect their eight-sided shape in the interior. This house was originally two…

  • Bernstein’s Fish Grotto

    Bernstein’s Fish Grotto

    123 Powell Street San Francisco * Bernstein’s Fish Grotto was opened by Maurice Bernstein (1886-1932) in 1907.  It was known for its unique entrance, a ship’s bow jutting into the sidewalk. The ship was a faithful reproduction of Christopher Columbus’s Nina. Inside the restaurant, the marine theme continued. Bernstein’s had seven colorful dining rooms: the…

  • Cilindro Construito

    San Francisco International Airport Terminal 2 Baggage Claim Level 1 Cilindro Construito by Arnaldo Pomodoro 1983. Cast bronze, 192 in. x 18 in Aside from the great exhibits put on by the SFO Museum, there is a considerable collection of art that is owned by the San Francisco Arts Commission at the airport.  I have…

  • Tudor Revival and Craftsman Style Firehouse

    1088 Green Street Russian Hill The SFFD History site says: After the 1906 Earthquake and Fire, Newton J. Tharp was named city architect and was charged with rebuilding city government buildings.  He designed this firehouse along with a number of Beaux Arts-style firehouses.  Located on top of Russian Hill, this firehouse was designed to conform…

  • Takaroa

    1086 Green Street Russian Hill Takaroa Fountain by David Ruth 2004 Pyrex Glass This fountain sits outside a condominium complex on Green Street, and was a private commission. According to David Ruth’s website: The Look of ice comes from the fusing of borosilicate glasses like Pyrex. After I was introduced to the material I tried…

  • Underwriters Fire Patrol

    147 Natoma SOMA/Financial District According to the History Department of the SFFD: On May 24, 1875, the City’s insurance companies joined together to organize and fund the Underwriters Fire Patrol.  The UFP was like a fire department; it had its own firehouses, alarm system and firemen whose only task was salvage practices.  The patrol worked…

  • Stefan Novak and Redwood

    Clipper and Diamond Heights Blvd Noe Valley/Twin Peaks This piece titled Redwood Sculpture, was done in 1968 by Stefan Novak. Mr. Novak and his family are very private people, so there is little information regarding the artist.  He was an instructor in the architecture department at UC Berkeley. He was born on August 22, 1918 and…

  • Engine Company #13

    1458 Valencia Street Mission Built in 1883, this is the City’s oldest standing firehouse.  In the heart of the Mission District, this rare brick firehouse in the Victorian Italianate style has a front surface made entirely of cast iron detail.  Such buildings are very rare in San Francisco with most clustered in the Jackson Square…

  • Kokeshi to Kaiju

    San Francisco International Airport Astro Boy (Tesuwan Atomu) When the SFO Museum began Twittering about their upcoming Japanese Toy exhibit, I knew I needed to see it. Sadly, it is behind TSA. It is in Terminal Three for all you lucky people flying in and/or out of SFO in the next 6 months. I contacted…

  • A Museum for the Cost of a BART Ticket

    San Francisco International Airport Addison Model 2A Radio c. 1940 Many people know that there is art at SFO, but did you know there is an actual museum?  Much of the art you see scattered around the airport as single pieces belong to the SFAC, however, the exhibits you see, carefully crafted for your enjoyment,…

  • Wally Heider Recording Studio

    245 Hyde Street The Tenderloin The blue building hidden behind this tree (the fourth film vault) has a prominent place in San Francisco Music history as well. In early 1969, Wally Heider opened the San Francisco Wally Heider’s Studio at 245 Hyde Street.  Heider had reportedly apprenticed as an assistant and mixer at United Western Recorders in Hollywood, CA,…

  • Film Vaults of the Tenderloin

    245-259 Hyde Street The Tenderloin   I have driven by this area with these stunning Art Deco/Art Moderne buildings all in a row, and never pursued the history.  An evening of beers at the Brown Jug with Mark Ellinger and my eyes were opened. Originally theaters purchased the films they showed their patrons. Then Harry,…

  • Grain Silos in San Francisco?

    696 Amador Street off 3rd Street / Pier 90/92 Bayview/Hunters Point  These abandoned silos on Pier 90/92 formerly stored grain that was brought in by rail and then loaded from the silos onto ships for export. These operations were discontinued following the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. Pier 90/92 was created in 1918 by the State Harbor Commission.…

  • The Royal Theater – Another Lost Gem

    1529 Polk Street Nob Hill The Royal Theatre was built in 1916 and began its life as a Nickelodeon. Originally designed by the Reid Brothers for the same family that owned two other theaters in San Francisco, the Castro and the Alhambra. It was completely remodeled by Timothy Pflueger during the mid-1930’s for the Nasser…

  • Goldsworthy III

    San Francisco Presidio Main Parade Ground Anza and Sheridan This is the third installation of Andy Goldsworthy’s at the Presidio in San Francisco.  It is titled Tree Fall.  There are two other Goldsworthy’s on the Presidio Grounds that have appeared in this site before and can be seen here. The exhibit is in the Old…

  • Guglielmo Marconi Memorial

    Lombard Avenue On the drive up to Coit Tower North Beach   This memorial to Guglielmo Marconi was placed sometime in 1938-1939. A group called the Marconi Memorial Foundation incorporated in the 1930s for the purpose of enshrining Marconi as the inventor of the wireless (a fact contested by the Russians). They placed two memorials…

  • The Gates of Cayuga Playground

    End of Cayuga Avenue at Naglee Avenue Under the Bart Train and The 280 Freeway Outer Mission Cayuga Playground is once again open.  Your first greeting is the painted still fence, titled Cayuga Portal. Through the City’s two-percent-for-art program, the SFAC commissioned artist Eric Powell to create two new decorative gates for the park. The…

  • The Artist of Cayuga Playground

    Cayuga and Naglee Avenue Outer Mission In 2011 I read this wonderful article  in Conversations.org and was intrigued to visit Cayuga Park and Demetrio Braceros’ work.  I drove to Cayuga Playground to discover that it was closed.  The sign said it would reopen in a few months.  Alas, the work took until August of 2013 to actually…

  • The Rebirth of Cayuga Playground

    Cayuga and Naglee Avenues Outer Mission The 3.89 acre, 63 year old, Cayuga Playground closed December 2011 for a badly needed $8.4 million renovation. About $7.3 million of the renovation was paid for by the 2008 voter-approved parks bond, $711,000 from a state urban greening grant and $1.36 million from BART’s Earthquake Safety Program Impact Compensation.…

  • Alemany Emergency Hospital

    35 Onandaga Avenue at Alemany Mission Terrace / Outer Mission   This beautiful building was once the Alemany Emergency Hospital. There were no other emergency rooms other than San Francisco General Hospital before 1966, therefore the County was responsible for all emergency care and all emergency ambulance transport. Emergency care was provided throughout San Francisco…

  • The Young Dead Soldiers

    Presidio Bay Ridge Trail Presidio Cemetery Overlook Dedicated on Veterans Day 2009, the Presidio cemetery overlook honors the service and sacrifices of America’s soldiers. A wooded section of the Bay Area Ridge Trail leads to the overlook, which is a perfect place for quiet contemplation. The cemetery overlook offers one of San Francisco’s most stunning…

  • Old Chamber of Commerce Building

    Old Chamber of Commerce Building

    333 Pine Street Financial District / Downtown ** From Men Who Made San Francisco  1912 There is not much left to say about McDougall other than he was educated at the California School of Design.  As stated, his work covered a wide range of building types, including churches, schools, apartment houses, commercial buildings, hotels, and private…

  • Hotaling Place

    27 Hotaling Financial District Jackson Square The center building is the Villa Taverna, it sits on Hotaling Place in the Financial District of San Francisco. This is one of many charming San Francisco alleyways. Hotaling Place is named for businessman Anson Parson Hotaling, best known for his 19th century whiskey trade. Hotaling Place leads from…

  • Fire Station #8 a WPA gem on Bluxome Street

    36 Bluxome Street SOMA South of the Slot Fire Station Number 8 was built in 1939 as a result of the WPA The San Francisco Fire Department was a big beneficiary of W.P.A. The Department’s 1974 Historical Review noted, “One of the few advances made by the Department in these lean years resulted from the…

  • Fire Pits on Ocean Beach

    Ocean Beach There is only one beach in San Francisco where bonfires are allowed. In response to beachgoers’ concerns that beach fires were leaving unsafe debris on the beach, as well as concerns about smoke blowing into neighborhood homes, Golden Gate National Parks initiated a public process to consider the future of fires on Ocean…

  • 5th Street Plaza

    400 Block of 5th Street South of Market From 2003 to 2009, the sound of work crews was a constant in the South of Market area due to a $471 million undertaking to retrofit the western approach to the Bay Bridge.  (This construction should not be confused with the replacement of the Eastern Span of…

  • BE BOLD For What You Stand For

    Historic Odd Fellows Columbarium 1 Loraine Court Inner Richmond During the closure of SFMOMA the museum is placing art around San Francisco.  This Exhibition is part of an overall group.  The museum commissioned the four award winners of the 2012 SECA Art Award to create work outside the traditional gallery context. These three pieces are…