View allAll Photos Tagged salesforcetower
Salesforce Tower, at 1070 feet, is by far the tallest building in San Francisco. It was the last building designed by Cesar Pelli that was completed (2018) in his lifetime. At its base, above our new transportation terminal, there is a 5-acre park, an urban rooftop garden with landscaping, games, and an outdoor cafe.
A view from Yerba Buena Gardens, San Francisco looking towards SFMOMA and the newly completed Salesforce Tower.
The Jingle Rails exhibit at the Eiteljorg Museum in Indianapolis featured miniature reproductions of Sales Force Tower, the city's tallest building, and Monument Circle.
This was shot near the corner of Howard and 1st. I got out early in the morning to get some flow in the traffic. The traffic was bumper to bumper during the day.
The original plans from Pelli Clark Pelli Architects called for a 1,200-foot (370 m) tower as the main tower and a massive three-block-long Transbay Center. However, due to considerations about how the tower would cast a shadow over some of the city's parks, the height was eventually reduced to 1,070 feet (330 m)
2018-06-30_02-28-19
This past week I've spent every night leaving the Gateway Theatre in downtown SF around 10:30pm. It's been super hot most of the week and thus pretty fog-free at night, and the Bay has been lit up by the full moon. The lunar illumination has been great for aiding multiple exposures for HDR compositions, so I've been stopping on the way back across the bridge to shoot from different locations. The fog finally started rolling in yesterday, but downtown is pretty good at providing its own light. (JPOD 230) #salesforcetower #downtownsanfrancisco #sanfrancisco #hdrphotography #hdr #skyscraper
"Elite projection is the belief, among relatively fortunate and influential people, that what those people find convenient or attractive is good for the society as a whole. Once you learn to recognize this simple mistake, you see it everywhere. It is perhaps the single most comprehensive barrier to prosperous, just, and liberating cities. — Jarrett Walker, HumanTransit.org