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Old Posted Jul 30, 2011, 4:09 AM
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San Francisco - Financial District - Historic Era

Financial District is a neighborhood within San Francisco's 7-mile by 7-mile city limits. It makes up the core of downtown and is composed of about 60 blocks. It features the tallest buildings of the city and the largest concentration of them as well; the skyscrapers are primarily older ones since the area is almost entirely built-out and surrounding permitted heights and historic designations restrict further development. The city's newest skyscrapers are concentrated in the South of Market area adjacent to the Financial District, where lower density and fewer historic designations allow newer large projects. It is surrounded by several other neighborhoods, most of which are considered part of the downtown: to the South is the South of Market area, with the part of it closest to the Financial District acting as an extension of the tall city skyline. Market Street is the dividing line between these two districts, and I consider the buildings on both sides of the street as part of the Financial District. A thin district along the Eastern edge is the Embarcadero, along the San Francisco Bay waterfront. To the North is Telegraph Hill and North Beach; I consider the small area known as Jackson Square to be part of the Financial District on its Northern border. West is Chinatown, and Southwest is Union Square; I consider Kearny Street to be the dividing line between the Financial District and those two areas. The terrain is mostly flat. It is a very busy neighborhood during the week, but on weekends it is rather quiet since a majority of the buildings are offices. However, a mix of some hotels and restaurants and shops and residential buildings helps it avoid becoming a deserted area during those days. The area has both historic and modern edifices; this thread will focus on the historic era while another one will focus on the modern era: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=192884

Market Street:
The largest and grandest street in the Financial District is this one that forms the border of this area and the South of Market area. It is a two-way diagonal street in contrast to the grid of the rest of the district and forms triangular blocks where it meets the grid. The streetscape is treated consistently throughout its length in the district with street furniture and amenities. The historic streetcar line runs along its center, while all the city light rail lines run in a subway one level below and share their stations with the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) rail lines another subway level below them. The street ends at the Embarcadero on the waterfront, with the Ferry Building acting as the terminus of the axis; looking down the street in the other direction, the hills of Twin Peaks further South in the city can be seen.

















Pine Street:
This street is typical of the scale of many of the one-way streets in the grid.



California Street:
One of the three historic cable car lines runs through the middle of this two-way thoroughfare, climbing up Nob Hill in the background. The view from Nob Hill looking down the same street is dramatic, with one of the towers of the San Francisco Bay Bridge visible in the distance. The 'canyon effect' of the close proximity of tall buildings along much of its length is notable.









Historic Rows:
Some of the streetscapes feature concentrations of adjacent early 20th century buildings.









Jackson Square:
On the Northern border of the district is this small area of about 6 blocks that contains the highest concentration of pre-1906 buildings in the area. Many of these survivors date back to the Gold Rush era of the mid-19th century and were nearly 50 years old when the Great Earthquake and Fire occured. Most are two or three stories tall, and are now predominantly used for interior design galleries and firms as well as some restaurants.













110 Sutter, 1902-13:



Buich Building, 1909:



Alvinza Hayward Building AKA Kohl Building, 1901:



Standard Oil Building, 1912:



The Palace Hotel, 1909:









260 Montgomery, 1910:





Royal Insurance Building, 1907:





Commercial Union Assurance Building, 1921:



Omni San Francisco Hotel, 1926 (originally a bank):





Southern Pacific Building, 1916:





Adam Grant Building, 1908-26:



Postal Telegraph Building, 1908:



Mills Building, 1890-1918:





de Young Building, 1890 (lower facade is only part of the original that remains):



Hunter-Dulin Building, 1927:







Russ Building, 1927:











Hobart Building, 1914:



Crocker Bank, 1908 (only the lower floor remains):







Bank of Italy, 1908:





United States Custom House, 1911:











Matson Building, 1923:







Pacific Gas and Electric Building, 1924:







Standard Oil Building, 1922:





San Francisco Mining Exchange, 1923:



Bank of California, 1908:







The Insurance Exchange, 1913:



Merchants Exchange Building, 1904:





Security Pacific Building, 1922-41:



Old Federal Reserve Bank, 1924:







Pacific Coast Stock Exchange (now a fitness club!) and Tower, 1915-30:













130 Montgomery, 1930:





343 Sansome, 1908-29:







Shell Building, 1929:











All photographs taken in 2011 (except a few from 2005-2010) by geomorph.

Last edited by geomorph; Apr 28, 2014 at 6:49 PM.
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  #2  
Old Posted Jul 30, 2011, 8:01 PM
jg6544 jg6544 is offline
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Sensational!

The story is, the buildings in the Jackson Square area survived the 1906 fire because many of them were wine warehouses and the contents were used to put out any fires that got going.

It's a modern classic, but the Crown Zellerbach building is still one of the best glass skyscrapers ever built; distant cousin to Lever House on Park Ave.

You missed the Pied Piper bar off of the spectacular Garden Court of the Palace Hotel. It's the location of Maxfield Parrish's "The Pied Piper" mural, a companion to "Old King Cole" at the St. Regis in New York.
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Old Posted Jul 30, 2011, 10:41 PM
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I love that San Fran is an old enough city to have a plethora of these grand old buildings. Fabulous city!!!
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Old Posted Jul 31, 2011, 1:17 AM
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Great tour! Impressive collection of buildings!
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Old Posted Jul 31, 2011, 1:34 AM
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Wicked! We stayed at the palace and loved that area.
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Old Posted Aug 1, 2011, 2:53 PM
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Great pictures! You showed a lot of San Francisco's older buildings. I wonder how many people know that San Francisco has so many older skyscrapers and prominent buildings.

I'm loving your neighborhood tours of San Fran!
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Old Posted Aug 1, 2011, 4:33 PM
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sweet tour! thanks for posting
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Old Posted Aug 1, 2011, 7:24 PM
sterlippo1 sterlippo1 is offline
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there really no wordes to describe San Francisco..........maybe "
"an embarrassment of riches". you did an incredible job with these just aas you did in the other threads. SF sure is photogenic
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Old Posted Aug 1, 2011, 11:14 PM
edsg25 edsg25 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OhioGuy View Post
I love that San Fran is an old enough city to have a plethora of these grand old buildings. Fabulous city!!!
San Francisco may be unique in this respect. If you look at the northeast quadrant of the nation, going south to about DC and west to around St. Louis, you will see the great American cities that boomed in the late 19th century and into the early 20th, starting around the time of the end of the civil war.

this was the era of great industrial and transportation growth and the time that immigrants were pouring into our shores.

no city outside the northeast quadrant is so linked to this era as San Francisco. The south was still in its long decline after the civil war and San Francisco was the "The City" out west. Indeed, SF was called "The City"; LA's rise was yet to happen.

If you look at density and the sense of urban feel, nothing west of the Mississippi or south of the Mason Dixon line compares with San Francisco.
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Old Posted Aug 5, 2011, 10:56 PM
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Originally Posted by edsg25 View Post
If you look at density and the sense of urban feel, nothing west of the Mississippi or south of the Mason Dixon line compares with San Francisco.
Maybe you should clarify (or distinguish) what you mean more specifically. Not to get into a pissing match, but St. Louis is "West of the Mississippi" as is Kansas City, which before it started annexing like crazy was very urban in its core too. St. Louis has had its prime time (population and vibrancy), and has suffered in pockets from urban decay over the years, but it is still feels very urban. I would estimate that 98% of St. Louis is still very urban built despite population loss.

And yes, these are nice photos of one of my favorite cities.
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Old Posted Aug 13, 2011, 3:40 AM
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jg6544, the Crown Zellerbach Building is in my thread for the modern era of Financial District, just barely missed my halfway cut-off between the two eras.
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Old Posted Aug 13, 2011, 6:38 AM
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I hope the PG&E building can handle a decent earthquake. Im interviewing out there next week.
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  #13  
Old Posted Jun 20, 2015, 12:20 AM
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One of my favorite threads!
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Old Posted Jun 20, 2015, 1:52 AM
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Gorgeous!
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Old Posted Jun 20, 2015, 5:02 AM
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Wonderful and informative. Something not pictured is the 140 New Montgomery (Pac Bell) building of 1926(?) that tied the Russ Building for tallest for so many decades. Underwent a fantastic renovation and now serves as HQ for Yelp and has a fantastic lobby and fantastic bars/restaurants on its ground floor. Worth a picture update...great lighting schemes at night, too.

It's nice having enough wealth and a good enough economy in this town where things worth preserving have all been immaculately preserved. Can't think of any notable historic buildings that are crumbling down.
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Old Posted Nov 5, 2015, 12:09 AM
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^Good call!

What great coverage of some of my favorites in SF. I especially love the extreme close-ups of the amazing details on these older buildings. Top notch work, geomorph.
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  #17  
Old Posted Nov 5, 2015, 1:14 AM
lio45 lio45 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by xzmattzx View Post
Great pictures! You showed a lot of San Francisco's older buildings. I wonder how many people know that San Francisco has so many older skyscrapers and prominent buildings.
I went to San Francisco at least three times already, and I didn't even know the city had such a wealth of them. (Granted, I never had enough time to explore as much as I'd have liked. This thread actually makes me feel I've done an awful job at visiting!)

Fabulous photoset! I love early 20th century skyscraper architecture. Great job geomorph
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