Mayor
Edwin M. Lee and
City Administrator Naomi Kelly together with Honorary Co-Chairs
United States Senator Dianne Feinstein, former Mayor
Willie L. Brown, Jr. and
San Francisco Chief of
Protocol Charlotte Mailliard Shultz today announced
The City Hall Centennial Celebration, a civic celebration honoring the
100th anniversary of
San Francisco’s
City Hall with a kickoff event to be held on Friday, June 19th at 6 p.m. in
Civic Center Plaza. The civic celebration coincides with Mayor Lee’s hosting of the
U.S. Conference of Mayors’ 83rd
Annual Meeting, which will bring 450 Mayors from across the country to San Francisco.
Following the devastating
1906 Great Earthquake and
Fire, San Francisco’s City Hall was rebuilt and reopened by Mayor “
Sunny” Jim Rolph in
December 1915. Mayor Rolph is noted for saying that the citizens
of the City needed to build City Hall as a palace not for a king or queen, a prince or princess, but for the people of San Francisco. The principal architect was
Arthur Brown, Jr., of
Bakewell and Brown.
City Hall is the oldest building in the
United States to receive
LEED Platinum Certification for
Building Operations and Maintenance in Existing
Buildings (
LEED - EBOM). This LEED classification highlights the potential for significant water and energy savings.
Platinum Certification of San Francisco’s 100-year-old City Hall is the culmination of a multi-year water and energy retrofit partnership between the
San Francisco Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC), the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, and the City Administrator’s
Office. With a
100 percent greenhouse gas-free electricity supply from the SFPUC’s
Hetch Hetchy Power System, City Hall was already one of the greenest, most sustainable historic buildings in the country. These improvements will only serve to further reduce the environmental footprint of the building. Overall, the SFPUC’s energy efficiency improvements at City Hall will reduce consumption by approximately 20 percent, helping to make City Hall one of the more energy efficient buildings in the country. The water efficiency upgrades are estimated to save approximately 825,
000 gallons of drinking water per year.
The civic celebration will include unveiling of two new lighting advances for City Hall.
First, a permanent installation of
LED fixtures that will light the exterior of City Hall for years to come allowing, at the strike of a key, a limitless array of lighting combinations.
Second, and the feature attraction, the unveiling of an extraordinary and permanent multi-media projection system – designed by San Francisco-based
Obscura Digital – which will project lights and images on the façade of City Hall and help bring this iconic building into the
21st Century.
The City Hall Centennial Celebration is organized by the
Centennial Planning Committee, which is co-chaired by
Tanya and Rich Peterson. They and their committee are raising $2,
200,000 in private dollars to join with $
1,800,000 in approved city capital spending to support the overall effort.
Stephen Revetria,
General Manager of
San Francisco Giants Enterprises and Mick and
Sabrina Hellman will co-chair the June 19th centennial celebration at Civic Center Plaza.
The Giants have partnered with the
City in the past to host civic celebrations following the three
Giants World Series Championships in
2010,
2012, and 2014. The Hellman family, greatly appreciated for carrying on the legacy of
Warren Hellman’s beloved
Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival, continues to supports arts, culture and philanthropy in San Francisco.
In addition to the captivating public light display, the civic celebration on June 19,
2015 is scheduled from 6:00 p.m. –
11:00 p.m. and will feature live entertainment by local artists performing hits from different eras throughout the past century. The Hellman family is generously funding and curating the talent for the musical performances.
The June 19th event in Civic Center Plaza will be just one component of the campaign to commemorate the 100th anniversary of City Hall. In November,
KQED will release a documentary titled, “
The People’s Palace”, on the history of City Hall and its importance to the rebirth of San Francisco following the earthquake that is produced and directed by Jim
Yager. City Hall will also host a series of public tours and showings of the documentary later this year as part of the centennial campaign.
For more information regarding the public centennial celebration, tours of City Hall and the KQED documentary trailer, go to: www.sfcityhall100.com.
- published: 21 May 2015
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