Video: SFMOMA Expansion Set to Become the Country’s Largest Modern Art Space

When the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art first announced plans to double in size in April 2009, the city shuttered at the thought of metal shards gashing up the downtown landscape. Well, urban planning traditionalists can breath for now – and soon in the museum’s new rooftop plaza. What is set to become the largest building dedicated to modern art in the country, will also blend nicely with the existing Mario Botta design.

In 2011, SFMOMA gave the first visual tease of what the 235,000-square-foot expansion is set to look like, and earlier this year more official renderings surfaced. The plan is to extend the existing building from Howard north to Minna with an open-air 18-foot-wide “pedestrian promenade,” a street-level gallery enclosed in glass on three sides and an elevated public plaza 195-feet above the ground.

Although the block-long project may sound drastic, the photos reveal the modest approach taken by Swedish firm Snøhetta, selected last year to design the new wing. Fortunately, Snøhetta knows better than to create a blocky, anchor-like eye soar in the city. If there’s one thing San Francisco residents are passionate about, it’s their skyline. Snøhetta is also the design firm behind the National September 11 Memorial Museum Pavilion at the World Trade Center site.

“We’re trying to minimize the mass of the building as much as possible. Every facade of the addition has to relate to the urban condition in a unique way,” Craig Dykers, principal architect at Snøhetta, told the San Francisco Chronicle.

This is not just a size complex for the SFMOMA. The museum is in serious need of exhibition floor space ever since acquiring Gap founder Don Fisher’s massive collection, which he loaned to the museum for the next 100 years.

Never ones to “Trump” their neighbors, the museum is also paying for the relocation of Fire House 1 on Howard to make way for the promenade. The replacement fire station will be a “state-of-the-art facility that will enhance emergency response time,” according to a press release. It will be constructed nearby on Folsom at a cost of $10 million, the museum’s gift to the city.

Perhaps the most controversial thing about the expansion is the addition of a new entrance on the east side that will align with the promenade and the new Transbay Transit Center being built two blocks away.

“Offering the public a choice when they approach a building is more powerful than saying, ‘Here is the (one) door,’” Dykers said.

But visitors will have to wait a couple of years before being confronted with that choice. The SFMOMA will close for expansion this summer and will re-open in 2016.

The Opening Ceremony of S.F.’s Largest Art Installation ‘The Bay Lights’

Finally, the much-talked about new art installation taking over the Bay Bridge is having its official premiere tonight. The Bay Lights installation, conceived by artist Leo Villareal, is made up of 25,000 individually programmed LEDs hung across the bridge, stretching 1.8 miles across the water.

The light patterns are loosely based on nature’s algorithms, especially the environment around the Bay Bridge: the wildlife, the weather, the ocean currents.

“I’m not literally using any sensors or making scientific visualizations,” Villareal, a board member of the Burning Man Project, told BuzzFeed. “If you want to think of it from a technology perspective, as the artist, I am the sensor.”

The $8 million project was individually funded by the Bay Area’s tech community, which make ”seemingly impossible things happen on daily basis.” Villareal hopes the project becomes more than a showy display of technological prowess. Like any other work of public art, he wants these lights to start a conversation.

The Bay Lights becomes almost a digital campfire that people can gather around,” he said. “Suddenly you are talking to people you wouldn’t have before. It is building community.”

If you want to gather around this digital campfire tonight for its opening ceremony, check out 7×7′s guide of nearby restaurants and watering holes with good views of the Bay Bridge. The Embarcadero is certain to be swamped, perhaps try venturing out to Treasure Island?

2500 Steiner: The Most Exclusive Address in San Francisco

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Welcome to 2500 Steiner, the 1920s palazzo overlooking Alta Vista Park, each floor home to a three-bedroom apartment. Besides housing some of the most wealthy people in San Francisco, 2500 Steiner is also a stronghold of the Democratic Party. When Nancy Pelosi was sworn in as Speaker of the House in 2006, a quarter of the residents were present and included as “family.”

Not surprisingly, the home of some of the country’s leading Democratic financial supporters has hosted several dinners in support of Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Al Gore. When these high-rolling fundraisers happen, the candidate in question gets to stay in the guest room.

It will be interesting to see how 2500 Steiner will be getting ready for the possibility of a Hillary Clinton ticket in 2016.

Read more about the building’s connections to national politics in this San Francisco Chronicle story, citing how Democratic candidates start at the penthouse and “ascend the tower collecting cash, floor to floor.”

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Outside Lands 2012: The Foggiest Music Festival in the World

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Walking with a mission – to have a kick ass time.

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Here we are now, so like… entertain us.

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Oh, look who we found hanging out in VIP! The dudes from Passion Pit. And by “found” I mean I called them up to come over so I can interview them for Rolling Stone.

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Away from the maddening crowd.

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This is how you create a time-lapse video. Set up the camera and go get drunk.

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VIP view of Beck performing on the mainstage.

Die Antwoord were a racist, homophobic riot. And the first clip is out of focus cause I was too hiiiii to know how to work my camera.

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The natural beauty of Golden Gate Park makes this festival one of the most scenic.

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Local see-through pizza truck, Del Popolo, fed the hungry. The mobile pizzeria is housed in a shipping container that’s been remodeled into a kitchen with a wood-fire oven.

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Five seconds before this dude face planted. You had to be there.

The dreamy air pop rock of Washed Out.

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Friends were not ready for our grand, train wreck entrance.

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Take two.

Santigold

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The crowd piled up on the hill to see Alabama Shakes, while the guy on the lower right got a makeover.

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Let’s meet up! We’ll be stage left by that big tree…

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After sneaking in to VIP, JP made a new fleeting friend dressed in fur. Also check out that random woman eyeing his beer.

Jaime Hince and Alison Mosshart of The Kills are the sexiest rock and roll non-couple ever. Lucky Kate Moss gets to be caught in that sexual tension (and release).

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Ashley, Currin and JP shiver and smile.

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Currin’s signature hotmess hairflip.

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Lighted trees.

Justice

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Wonder through the magical path…

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… to find the construction sounds of Skrillex.

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Skrillex

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We are somewhere on this damn map.

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Muni Inauguration Party in the Castro Station

Muni Diaries shared this awesome party flyer from May 1980 celebrating the inauguration of the Muni metro system in the Castro station.