As soon as we found the first Bronze Medallion, it is a lot easier for us to identify the rest. The medallions are actually everywhere along the trail path -- huge, shiny, nicely engraved, very easy to follow.
Bronze Medallion
Following the bronze medallion, the next visiting spot is Union Square, which locates at Powell and Post.
Union Square is the heartbeat of San Francisco itself -- ever changing, eternally celebrating, yet firmly rooted in its glorious past. Two years before the Gold Rush, in 1847, Jasper O'Farrell created a design for San Francisco, with Union Square as a public plaza. By the 1880s, it was a fashionable residential district, and in 1903, the towering monument was added, topped by the bronze goddess Victory, modeled after Alma de Bretteville Spreckels, known for her enormous influence in the San Francisco art community. After the great earthquake of 1906, Union Square became San Francisco's premier shopping district, and, by the 1930s, the site of the world's first underground parking structure. Today, as a result of an international design competition and a $25 million renewal, Union Square is reborn. It's the obvious place to meet, enjoy coffee, or just let the world go by. Featured are a large central plaza with a terraced performance state and lawn seating...four grand entrance corners bordered by signature palms...a café pavilion with outdoor seating...visitor information and ticketing services...and four magnificent light sculptures; and, of course, Victory, surveying the vitality of one of the world's great cities.
Union Square. Macy's is right next to union square, and Cheese Cake Factory is on the top floor of the building.
Across Powell Street from Union Square, there is St Francis Hotel, which is the first hotel build around Union Square. It was first built in 1905. But just one year after it's built, in 1906, the great earthquake and fire destroyed all builds around union square. St Francis hotel was rebuilt and expanded after that.
St Francis Hotel
Timeline of Union Square history
>>next
Saturday, October 21, 2006
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment