Palace of Fine Arts: Reclaiming a City Jewel

Labeled a jewel in San Francisco’s sparkling crown, the Palace of Fine Arts has reclaimed its status as a gateway and respite from city life recognized by locals and visitors from around the globe.

[gallery link="file"] By Frank LadraThe Guardsman

Labeled  a jewel in San Francisco’s sparkling crown, the Palace of Fine Arts has  reclaimed its status as a gateway and respite from city life recognized  by locals and visitors from around the globe.

The  Campaign for the Palace of Fine Arts unveiled the San Francisco icon’s  seven-year, $21 million transformation to the public Jan. 14. The  fragile rotunda has been reinforced, the artisan-crafted maiden statues  and colonnade structure revitalized, the landscapes restored and the  dome returned to its golden glow.

The  Palace of Fine Arts was built in 1915 for the Panama-Pacific  International Exposition. Originally meant to be a temporary structure,  the Palace was spared from demolition by the Palace Preservation League,  founded by Phoebe Apperson Hearst, mother of famed newspaper publisher  William Randolph Hearst.

During  the 1960s, philanthropist Walter Johnson championed the reconstruction  of the Palace to replace the deteriorating wood and plaster framing with  more permanent materials.

By  the 1990s, mold, rust, graffiti and damage from the Loma Prieta  earthquake had taken its toll on the structure of the Palace, and  significant action was necessary to ensure the preservation of the  landmark.

The  Campaign for the Palace of the Fine Arts formed a partnership with the  Maybeck Foundation (named for Palace architect Bernard Maybeck), the  Recreation and Park Department and the Department of Public Works in  order to carry out a vision that many considered impossible.

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