Guides & Advice  : California : 
San Francisco

 
Frommer's Guide
INTRODUCTION
GETTING TO KNOW
DINING
ATTRACTIONS
Architectural Highlights
Neighborhoods Worth a Visit
Churches
Especially for Kids
Golden Gate National Recreation Area
Golden Gate Park
The Presidio
NIGHTLIFE
SHOPPING
WALKING TOURS
ACTIVE PURSUITS
SPECTATOR SPORTS
FEATURES AND EVENTS

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ATTRACTION Frommer
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts/Yerba Buena Gardens

The Yerba Buena Center, which opened in 1993, is the city's cultural facility, similar to New York's Lincoln Center but far more fun on the outside. It stands on top of the northern extension of the underground Moscone Convention Center. The center's two buildings present music, theater, dance, and visual arts. James Stewart Polshek designed the 755-seat theater, and Fumihiko Maki designed the Galleries and Arts Forum, which features three galleries and a space designed especially for dance.

Cutting-edge computer art, multimedia shows, traditional exhibitions, and performances occupy the center's high-tech galleries. A recent exhibition, "Time After Time: Asia and Our Moment," featured contemporary painting, photography, sculpture, and video from Asia that addressed concepts of time.

More commonly explored is the 5-acre Yerba Buena Gardens, a great place to relax in the grass on a sunny day and check out several artworks. The most dramatic outdoor piece is an emotional mixed-media memorial to Martin Luther King, Jr. Created by sculptor Houston Conwill, poet Estella Majozo, and architect Joseph de Pace, it features 12 panels, each inscribed with quotations from King, sheltered behind a 50-foot-high waterfall. For most, this pastoral patch is a brief stopover to the surrounding attractions .

On the periphery of Yerba Buena Gardens are a number of worthy excursions. In the Children's Center, Zeum (tel. 415/777-2800) includes a cafe, interactive cultural center, ice-skating rink, fabulous 1906 carousel, and interactive play and learning garden. Sony's Metreon Entertainment Center (tel. 415/369-6000; www.metreon.com) is a 350,000-square-foot complex housing great movie theaters, an IMAX theater, a bountiful gourmet food court, interactive attractions (including one that features Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are and surprisingly exciting $5 virtual bowling), and shops. As part of the plan to develop this area as the city's cultural hub, the California Historical Society opened at 678 Mission St. in 1995, and the Mexican Museum is relocating in the area in early 2004.

701 Mission St.Phone: 415/978-ARTS (box office).Open: Tues-Sun 11am-5pm; 1st Thurs of each month 11am-8pm.Admission $6 adults, $3 seniors and students. Free to all 1st Tues of each month. Free for seniors and students with ID every Thurs.Streetcar: Powell or Montgomery. Bus: 30, 45, or 9X.


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