Attraction 22 / 33
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Market Street at the Embarcadero
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A recognizable city landmark for more than 100 years, San Francisco’s Ferry Building was once the arrival point for all ferry traffic to the city.
History

The original building was designed by architect A. Page Brown. The length of the building was 201 meter / 660 feet and the foundation was the largest such foundation for a building over water anywhere in the world. The 235-foot-tall (71m) clock tower that Brown designed for the Ferry Building was modeled after the one at the Seville Cathedral in Spain.
Arriving passengers stepped off the ferry and were greeted with a
beautiful two-story public area with repeated interior arches, mosaic floors, and skylights that allowed the sun to shine into the room. Many days, 50,000 passengers made their way through the Ferry Building.
Ferry Building seen from
the Coit Tower
the Coit Tower
However, the building of the Bay and Golden Gate Bridges in the late 1930s made ferry travel obsolete and the building was used very little after the bridges began to accommodate most commuter traffic.
Unfortunately, much of the Ferry Building’s original charm was lost when a development company in the 1950s converted the building to retail and office space, and in that same decade, the building of the Embarcadero Freeway totally obscured the front view of the famous structure.
(The freeway was eventually torn down in 1991 after it suffered extensive earthquake damage.)

The Ferry Building Today
Beginning in 1999, a massive renovation project began at the Ferry Building and was completed in 2003. It became a mixed-use property with a huge European-style public food market on the ground floor and office space above. Restaurants and cafes are situated in the corners and both indoor and outdoor seating is available to customers. All the shops and eateries have a decidedly regional feel, touting wine and produce grown by local farmers and vintners.
The Ferry Building is now on the National Register of Historic Places and is a designated San Francisco city landmark.
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- Next: Embarcadero Center



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