Surfacedesign “celebrates material reuse” at San Francisco waterfront park

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Local landscape design studio Surfacedesign has completed Bayfront Park waterfront park in San Francisco using steel elements from a recently demolished portion of the Oakland Bay Bridge.

Located along the eastern shore of the Mission Bay neighbourhood, the park was constructed in a formal industrial site across from the city’s Chase Center arena.

Surfacedesign has created a waterfront park in San Francisco’s Mission Bay neighbourhood

“Bayfront Park celebrates material reuse and a sense of place along the evolving waterfront,” said Surfacedesign. “With its palette of rugged and reclaimed materials, [it] reconnects present-day Mission Bay to its maritime history.”

The project is wedge-shaped in form and contains a promenade that runs along its urban border and terraced steps that lead down to a waterfront path.

The design incorporates several pieces of steel leftover from the demolition of a portion of a bridge

For the project, the studio received leftover steel from the Oakland Museum of California’s Bay Bridge Steel Program, which allocates leftover material from the demolition of a portion of the Oakland Bay Bridge to public projects throughout the state.

The studio used the material throughout the park, inserting steel beams both vertically and horizontally to create a variety of features including a slim cantilevered observation deck.

Steel pieces were used to create elements such as seating and shading structure

“Steel elements from the now-demolished eastern span of the bridge are incorporated throughout the park as sculptural features,” said the team.

“Vertical steel elements animate the 16th Street Plaza and act as supports for a pair of shade structures, repurposed beams are used as informal seating elements along the waterfront and in the plaza, and as part of the observation deck.”


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The steel elements and public plazas encircle two elevated lawns. On one end, a plaza contains a colourful basketball court and seating, while the other 16th Street Plaza contains barbeques, picnic tables and shade structures.

Surfacedesign also considered sea-level rise by raising the elevation of the site and protecting its waterfront with rip-rap.

Steel elements were also used to create sculptures

Portions of a nearby “historic seawall” were also placed in the park as informal seating.

The studio used a mixture of native and naturalized plant species for the landscaping, which also included biorentation gardens to help manage stormwater run-off.

The studio created a slim observation deck out of leftover steel

Developed by Mission Rock Development Group, the park is intended to connect visitors to the waterfront as one of its “last pieces”of a wider development.

“At the site of one of the last pieces of the waterfront in Mission Bay, Bayfront Park is a democratic, iconic new public space that represents the dynamism and optimism of San Francisco,” said the team.

The area is also home to the recent Mission Rock development, which includes a cluster of new buildings by WORKac, MVRDV, Studio Gang and Henning Larsen.

The photography is by Marion Brenner

Project credits:
Landscape architect: Surfacedesign, Inc. -James A. Lord, Partner, Roderick Wyllie, Michal Kapitulnik, Tyler Chandler, Senior Associate Annie Hansel, Penelope Leggett, Associate
Client: Mission Bay Development Group (FOCIL)
Structural, electrical and utilities: GHD
Geotechnical: Langan
Civil: Lotus Water
Irrigation: Brookwater
Contractor: Hosele

The post Surfacedesign “celebrates material reuse” at San Francisco waterfront park appeared first on Dezeen.

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