Photo, Print, Drawing Aquatic Park, Area bounded by Hyde Street and Van Ness Avenue on the East and West and the Aquatic Cove and Beach Street on the North and South, San Francisco, San Francisco County, CA San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
About this Item
Title
- Aquatic Park, Area bounded by Hyde Street and Van Ness Avenue on the East and West and the Aquatic Cove and Beach Street on the North and South, San Francisco, San Francisco County, CA
Other Title
- San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
Names
- Historic American Landscapes Survey, creator
- U.S. National Park Service (NPS)
- Punnett, Parez and Hutchison
- Punnett, John
- Bakewell, John, Jr.
- Brown, Arthur, Jr.
- Bauer, John
- Bakewell, Brown and Bauer
- Weihe, Frick and Kruse
- Frick, Edward
- Cantrell, George
- Cotton, Horace
- Weihe, Ernest
- Kruse, Lawrence
- William Mooser and Company
- Mooser, William, I
- Mooser, Wiliam, II
- Mooser, William, III
- William Mooser & Sons
- U.S. Federal Art Project
- Glut, John
- Johnson, Sargent
- Hiler, Hilaire
- Ayer, Richard
- Dowley, Thomas
- Holmberg, Lawrence
- Medalie, Ann Sonja
- Staschen Triest, Shirley
- Rice O'Hanlon, Ann
- Harris, George
- Clark, Robert
- Bufano, Beniamino
- Grabow, T. M.
- California State Division of Beaches and Parks
- Blanchfield, Emmet
- Church, Thomas
- Quesada, George, Jr.
- McHugh, Owen
- San Francisco Motor Drayage Company
- J. P. Holland Inc.
- State Emergency Relief Administration
- Healy-Tibbitts Construction Company
- Meyer Brothers
- Adam Arras and Son
- Baum, Arthur W.
- Cagwin and Dorward
- Pardinas, Alfonso
- Kortum, Karl
- Sage, John B.
- Transwestern Construction
- Moffatt and Nichol Engineers
- Ghirardelli Company
- Aquatic Park Improvement Organization
- Southern Pacific Railroad Company
- State Belt Railroad
- North Beach Promotional Association
- Recreation League of San Francisco
- Vittoria Colonna Club
- U.S. Department of the Army
- Mooser
- Spring Valley Water Company
- M. B. McGowan Inc.
- White, Frank G.
- Hutchison, E. Elmore
- Gordon, Leo
- Gordon, Kenneth
- Schuman, Solly
- Harris, Barton
- San Francisco Senior Center
- Robinson, Elmore
- San Francisco Maritime State Historical Monument
- Blanchfield, Emmet
- Aquatic Park Bocce Ball Association
- San Francisco Board of Supervisors
- San Francisco Board of Park Commissioners
- San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park, sponsor
- Stevens, Christopher M., project manager
- Christianson, Justine, historian
- Croteau, Todd A., photographer
- Pierce, Ryan, field team
- McNatt, Jason W., field team
- Stevens, Christopher M., transmitter
- McPartland, Mary, transmitter
Created / Published
- Documentation compiled after 2000
Headings
- - landscape architects
- - landscapes
- - Streamline Moderne architectural elements
- - parks
- - recreation
- - Works Progress Administration
- - war (World War II)
- - swimming
- - boating
- - bathhouses
- - concrete buildings
- - railroad tracks
- - street railroad tracks
- - bleachers
- - promenades
- - drinking fountains
- - piers (marine landings)
- - deciduous trees
- - shrubs
- - lawns
- - evergreens
- - skylights
- - foundation plantings
- - beds (site elements)
- - benches
- - concrete benches
- - pavilions
- - curvilinear paths
- - railroad tunnels
- - reinforced concrete construction
- - bents
- - concrete parapets
- - street lights
- - sea walls
- - porthole windows
- - murals
- - bas-reliefs
- - mosaics
- - towers
- - gazebos
- - women
- - sports & recreation facilities
- - play (recreation)
- - people
- - New Deal
- - California--San Francisco County--San Francisco
Latitude / Longitude
- 37.806415,-122.423978
Notes
- - See also HABS CA-2225 (Aquatic Park Bathhouse) for additional documentation.
- - Significance: Aquatic Park is located on a sheltered cove of San Francisco Bay, flanked on the west by Fort Mason and on the east by Hyde Street Pier where the historic ships administered by the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park are anchored. The current site is comprised of the original Aquatic Park (largely built by the Works Progress Administration), Municipal Pier, the Bocce Ball Courts at the southwest corner, Victorian Park to the east, and the cable car turnaround at the southeast corner. The story of the creation, development, and construction of San Francisco’s Aquatic Park is characterized by persistent advocacy by citizens groups, lack of funding, and tensions between public and private interests. Ultimately, citizen’s groups championing Progressive Era ideas of preserving outdoor space for public recreational use triumphed over private industrial development and military use. In the early twentieth century, groups of private citizens, like the Recreation League of San Francisco, and women’s groups, such as the Women’s Auxiliary of the Recreation League and the North Beach Vittoria Colonna Club, lobbied the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and effectively pushed several bond issues for funding the creation of an aquatic park at the site to public vote, although none were successfully passed. When the Dolphin Swimming and Boating Club, the Ariel Rowing Club (later the San Francisco Rowing Club before its 1977 closure), and the South End Boat Club (now the South End Rowing Club) were forced from their locations elsewhere in the city and established their boathouses at the site, they too joined the efforts to create a park. The advocacy of these groups in preserving the cove for recreation provided a significant counterpoint to the private industries already established in the area, the dumping activities taking place after the 1906 earthquake and fire, and the activity of the State Belt Railroad, who erected a trestle across the cove in 1914, among other development pressures. By the late 1910s, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors had begun acquiring the necessary land for a park in response to public demands. The board contracted with John Punnett to develop a general design of the park that would serve as the basis for a design competition in 1920. Architects John Bakewell, Arthur Brown, and John Bauer collaborated on the 1923 plan commissioned by the Board of Park Commissioners. Actual construction was delayed until the Works Progress Administration supplied the necessary $2 million in funding to make the park a reality. John Punnett was again retained to create the final plan of the park, while William Mooser III, descended from a long line of well-known San Francisco architects, designed the buildings in a Streamline Moderne style that complemented the waterfront location. The interior of the bathhouse, the centerpiece of the site, was finished as a Federal Art Project by a number of significant artists, including Hilaire Hiler, Sargent Johnson, and Beniamino Bufano. The landscaping complemented the modernity of Mooser’s designs for the bathhouse, bleachers, convenience stations, and loudspeakers, characterized by lawn with plantings defining the foundations of structures and curving pathways traversing the park. Yet even with federal funds, the project incurred delays and cost overruns, and it was eventually turned over incomplete to the city of San Francisco in 1939. World War II further delayed decisions about what to do with the park, but by 1950, Karl Kortum and the San Francisco Maritime Museum Association had identified the park and bathhouse as the ideal site for the museum. Although Kortum’s ambitious plans for a park dedicated to all forms of transportation were not fully realized, the San Francisco Maritime State Historical Park was established on Hyde Street Pier in 1956. Kortum also guided the development of the lots east of the original Aquatic Park at the Powell-Hyde-Street cable car turnaround into Victorian Park in the 1960s. In contrast to the modernism of the original Aquatic Park landscape, Victorian Park was inspired by the city’s Victorian architecture, reflected in the use of decorative iron work, cobblestone paving, and gardens. Aquatic Park is nationally significant, therefore, as a representative example of Progressive Era ideals about the importance of publicly-available recreational spaces within cities. In addition, Aquatic Park has been designated a National Historic Landmark due to its masterful architectural and landscape design, the integrity of the Streamline Moderne buildings, the rareness of a complex of buildings designed in this style, and the bathhouse art work.
- - Unprocessed Field note material exists for this structure: N100
- - Survey number: HALS CA-113
- - Building/structure dates: 1919-1939 Initial Construction
- - Building/structure dates: 1960-1961 Subsequent Work
- - Building/structure dates: 1962 Subsequent Work
- - National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 84001183
Medium
- Photo(s): 102
- Color Transparencies: 20
- Measured Drawing(s): 13
- Data Page(s): 62
- Photo Caption Page(s): 10
Call Number/Physical Location
- HALS CA-113
Source Collection
- Historic American Landscapes Survey (Library of Congress)
Repository
- Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Control Number
- ca4182
Rights Advisory
- No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. https://aj.sunback.homes/rr/print/res/114_habs.html
Online Format
- image
Part of
Format
Contributor
- Adam Arras and Son
- Aquatic Park Bocce Ball Association
- Aquatic Park Improvement Organization
- Ayer, Richard
- Bakewell, Brown and Bauer
- Bakewell, John, Jr
- Bauer, John
- Baum, Arthur W.
- Blanchfield, Emmet
- Brown, Arthur, Jr
- Bufano, Beniamino
- Cagwin and Dorward
- California State Division of Beaches and Parks
- Cantrell, George
- Christianson, Justine
- Church, Thomas
- Clark, Robert
- Cotton, Horace
- Croteau, Todd A.
- Dowley, Thomas
- Frick, Edward
- Ghirardelli Company
- Glut, John
- Gordon, Kenneth
- Gordon, Leo
- Grabow, T. M.
- Harris, Barton
- Harris, George
- Healy-Tibbitts Construction Company
- Hiler, Hilaire
- Historic American Landscapes Survey
- Holmberg, Lawrence
- Hutchison, E. Elmore
- J. P. Holland Inc
- Johnson, Sargent
- Kortum, Karl
- Kruse, Lawrence
- M. B. McGowan Inc
- McHugh, Owen
- McNatt, Jason W.
- McPartland, Mary
- Medalie, Ann Sonja
- Meyer Brothers
- Moffatt and Nichol Engineers
- Mooser
- Mooser, Wiliam, II
- Mooser, William, I
- Mooser, William, III
- North Beach Promotional Association
- Pardinas, Alfonso
- Pierce, Ryan
- Punnett, John
- Punnett, Parez and Hutchison
- Quesada, George, Jr
- Recreation League of San Francisco
- Rice O'Hanlon, Ann
- Robinson, Elmore
- Sage, John B.
- San Francisco Board of Park Commissioners
- San Francisco Board of Supervisors
- San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
- San Francisco Maritime State Historical Monument
- San Francisco Motor Drayage Company
- San Francisco Senior Center
- Schuman, Solly
- Southern Pacific Railroad Company
- Spring Valley Water Company
- Staschen Triest, Shirley
- State Belt Railroad
- State Emergency Relief Administration
- Stevens, Christopher M.
- Transwestern Construction
- U.S. Department of the Army
- U.S. Federal Art Project
- U.S. National Park Service (Nps)
- Vittoria Colonna Club
- Weihe, Ernest
- Weihe, Frick and Kruse
- White, Frank G.
- William Mooser & Sons
- William Mooser and Company
Location
Language
Subject
- Bas-Reliefs
- Bathhouses
- Beds (Site Elements)
- Benches
- Bents
- Bleachers
- Boating
- Concrete Benches
- Concrete Buildings
- Concrete Parapets
- Curvilinear Paths
- Deciduous Trees
- Drinking Fountains
- Evergreens
- Foundation Plantings
- Gazebos
- Landscape Architects
- Landscapes
- Lawns
- Mosaics
- Murals
- New Deal
- Parks
- Pavilions
- People
- Piers (Marine Landings)
- Play (Recreation)
- Porthole Windows
- Promenades
- Railroad Tracks
- Railroad Tunnels
- Recreation
- Reinforced Concrete Construction
- Sea Walls
- Shrubs
- Skylights
- Sports & Recreation Facilities
- Streamline Moderne Architectural Elements
- Street Lights
- Street Railroad Tracks
- Swimming
- Towers
- War (World War II)
- Women
- Works Progress Administration