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Embarcadero Plaza
Park in San Francisco, California From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Embarcadero Plaza, previously known as Justin Herman Plaza from its opening in 1972 until 2017, is a 3.6-acre (1.5 ha) plaza near the intersection of Market Street and The Embarcadero in San Francisco's Financial District, in the U.S. state of California.[1] It was completed in 1972 and is owned and operated by the San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department.[2]
Embarcadero Plaza is bordered by Sue Bierman Park on the north, The Embarcadero on the northeast, Don Chee Way busway on the southeast,[3] a combination of Steuart Street, Market Street, and Embarcadero Center on the southwest, and a combination of Embarcadero Center and Clay Street on the west.[1]
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Design
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The Ferry Building Park could be a great open space with canals, lagoons, and fountains that would revive the marine flavor by actually bringing the Bay back into the area. The atmosphere of European ports could be injected with handsome paving, sidewalk cafes, and fine restaurants. The freeway should be painted dark, and large trees should be planted to suppress its sight and its sounds. Difficult as all this may be, establish the Ferry Building Park area as a vibrant, alive, colorful place, used by day and at night, and it will send a tingle up the spine of Market Street.
Halprin, Carter, and Rockrise, What to do About Market Street (1962)[4]
The design of Embarcadero Plaza is credited to Don Carter (principal-in-charge) with help from Mario J. Ciampi and John Bolles. The original concept was devised by Lawrence Halprin, who described five distinct districts of Market Street in the 1962 report What to do About Market Street[5] starting at the Embarcadero and ending at Van Ness.[4] In retrospect, Halprin's vision for Market was described as a "pedestrian-oriented series of linked civic spaces"[6] which were later realized as the open spaces running from Embarcadero Plaza (in the northeast) to UN Plaza in the southwest. Halprin described an early concept for what he called Ferry Building Park in the 1962 What to do About Market Street report, proposing to bring San Francisco Bay and the original harbor closer to Market, as "the [Embarcadero] Freeway and the Ferry building have created an impenetrable barrier, at street level, to one of San Francisco's most priceless assets – its marine setting" and offering ways to minimize the visual and aural impact of the double-decked freeway.[4]
The controversial Vaillancourt Fountain dominates the northeast end of the plaza.[7] The large plaza could accommodate large crowds, and the roaring fountain was designed to drown out noise from the Embarcadero Freeway, which was completed in 1959 and ran along the east side of the plaza from its opening in 1972 until the freeway was torn down in 1991.[8][9]


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History
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Early history and construction
The space occupied by Embarcadero Plaza was acquired in the 1950s and 1960s by the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency (SFRA).[1] The space had been previously used for private buildings and parking before acquisition. The plaza was part of the Golden Gateway Redevelopment Project run by SFRA.[10][11]
The designers of the plaza include Lawrence Halprin & Associates in conjunction with Mario Ciampi & Associates and John Bolles & Associates.[1] The SFRA began construction of the plaza in the late 1960s, with construction finishing in 1972. The Vaillancourt Fountain, located on the Northern end of the plaza, was finished in 1971.[12]
While it was referred to as “Embarcadero Plaza” during design and construction, it was renamed Justin Herman Plaza in 1974 in honor of M. Justin Herman, executive director of the SFRA from 1959 to 1971,[13] who died suddenly in 1971.
Updates and changing use
The sculpture La Chiffonnière was installed in the plaza, closer to Market Street in 1981. In 1983, the plaza was renovated with tiered seating, expanded steps, and an outdoor stage platform.[1]
The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake caused significant damage to the adjacent Embarcadero Freeway, leading to the freeway’s demolition in 1991, causing the surrounding area to open up. Around the same time in the late 1980s, the plaza became a world-renowned skateboarding destination during the rise of modern street skateboarding.[14][15]
Further renovations to the plaza were discussed beginning in the early 1990s, with more modest renovation taking place between 1998 and 2001.[1]
Further updates
In 2008, the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Monument was installed between the Vaillancourt Fountain and the Embarcadero.[16] The monument is dedicated to the Americans who volunteered to fight fascism in Spain during the 1930s. The monument was subsequently repaired between 2018 and 2020.[17]
In 2010, two bocce ball courts were installed on the plaza with private funding and labor.[18][19]
Embarcadero Plaza became a contributor to the Market Street Cultural Landscape District in 2016, which is a historic resource listed in the California Register of Historical Resources.[20]
Renaming the plaza
In 2017, San Francisco Supervisor Aaron Peskin introduced a resolution to rename the site Embarcadero Plaza, citing Herman's role in displacing poor and minority residents from the Western Addition, Fillmore, Chinatown, and South of Market neighborhoods while presiding over the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency.[21] The San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed the resolution unanimously on September 19, 2017.[22]
The San Francisco Recreation & Parks Commission voted 4–2 to remove Justin Herman's name on November 16, 2017. An earlier vote in October ended in a 3–3 tie.[23][24] The name has remained Embarcadero Plaza since 2017.
Recent changes
In 2023, temporary, privately owned padel courts were added to the plaza. They remain located on the brick portion of the plaza near the fountain.[25]
In April 2025, a temporary statue by Marco Cochrane, R-Evolution, was installed in the plaza.[26][27]
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Usage
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The plaza is frequented by nearby office workers on lunch break and by families with small children. Free daytime concerts occur frequently in the summer, and an ice skating rink is set up for winter months.[28] In 1987, during The Joshua Tree Tour, U2 held a free concert in Justin Herman Plaza to "Save the Yuppies" following the Black Monday financial crisis in October. During the finale of the impromptu concert, Bono spray-painted graffiti on Vaillancourt Fountain, for which he was fined.[29]

During the early 1990s, the plaza was better known as EMB, one of the world's premier street skateboarding sites.[30][31][32] Formal athletic ceremonies and rallies have also occurred in the plaza, including the retirement of Joe Montana (1995), attended by an estimated 25,000 people;[33] the commemoration of Barry Bonds becoming the all-time home run leader (2007);[34] and as the site of Super Bowl City, a "fan village" for attendees of Super Bowl 50 (2016) at Levi's Stadium in distant Santa Clara.[35] Because of its size, the plaza is also frequently used for political rallies, including the Occupy San Francisco protest which took over the plaza for several months in 2011.[36]
Recurring events
The monthly Critical Mass bicycle rides have started from the plaza since September 1992.[37] Since 2006,[38][39] on Valentine's Day, the plaza is the site of the Great San Francisco Pillow Fight, an unsponsored annual pillow fight flash mob.[40][41][42][43]
References
External links
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