The Moscone Center consists of three components that
were developed every eleven years over the last 30 years. The first was Moscone
South, completed in 1981. The second included the Esplanade Ballroom and Moscone
North, completed in 1991 and 1992 respectively. The third, Moscone West, opened
in 2003.
Today, the Moscone Center
is San Francisco's
premier meeting and exhibition facility. There are more than 2 million square feet
of building area that includes over 700,000 square feet
of exhibit space, up to 106 meeting rooms, and nearly 123,000 square feet
of prefunction lobbies.
Although, as the city
and the convention landscape continue to grow, the Moscone Expansion Project plans
to meet that need by expanding contiguous exhibition space as well as increasing
the amount of flexible meeting and ballroom spaces.
In addition to adding
new rentable square footage, the project architects – Skidmore, Owings and Merrill
– seek to create an iconic sense of arrival that enhances Moscone’s civic presence
on Howard Street
and reconnects it to the surrounding neighborhood through the creation of reintroduced
lost mid-block passageways.
As such, the project
proposes two new, enclosed pedestrian bridges connecting the upper levels of the
new Moscone North and Moscone South as well as an upgrade to the existing pedestrian
bridge across Howard Street.
This would help to frame
the main public arrival space between the two new buildings, provide enhanced circulation
for Moscone convention attendees, and reduce on-street congestion all while maintaining
full-time elevated public access across Howard Street from Yerba Buena Gardens to
the cultural facilities.









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