San Francisco's Treasure Island

San Francisco's Treasure Island
Author: Jason Pipes
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 134
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780738547428

Reclaimed from a sandy shoal in the San Francisco Bay, Treasure Island is a man-made creation built in 1936 during the same era that saw the construction of such California icons as the Golden Gate Bridge and the Bay Bridge. Situated next to rocky Yerba Buena Island, it was initially planned to serve as the location of the new San Francisco airport, but its first official duty was to host the 1939 World's Fair. The island's amazing and varied history includes the Golden Gate International Exposition, a U.S. naval station, a Pan-American seaplane base, mock nuclear tests, tragic fires, and many more dramatic events since it rose from the bay. In addition, a number of historic structures remain on Treasure Island, largely frozen in time since they were constructed in 1936.

Treasure Island

Treasure Island
Author: Richard Reinhardt
Publisher:
Total Pages: 169
Release: 1978
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780916290092

Treasure Island

Treasure Island
Author: Leonard Warner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1998
Genre: Golden Gate International Exposition
ISBN:

Urban Reinventions

Urban Reinventions
Author: Lynne Horiuchi
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2017
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780824866020

In the midst of a twenty-first-century high-tech boom and in one of the most expensive real-estate markets in the world, the city of San Francisco and its developers have proposed an ambitious model of military base reuse and green urbanism-a new eco-city of about 19,000 residents on Treasure Island and Yerba Buena Island. The project is synonymous with a growing global trend toward large-scale, capital-intensive land developments envisioned around ideas of sustainability and spectacular place making. Seen against the successive history of development, future visions for Treasure Island are part of a process of building and erasure that Horiuchi and Sankalia call urban reinventions. This is a process of radical change in which artificial, detached, and delimited sites such as Treasure Island provide an ideal plane for tabula rasa planning driven by property, capital, and state control.