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California Quadrangle

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California Quadrangle
California Quadrangle in 1915, with Cabrillo Bridge in the foreground, Administration Building (with red awnings), California Building (with dome and tower), Fine Arts Building (with yellow roof), St. Francis Chapel (far right)
California Quadrangle is located in California
California Quadrangle
Location1350 El Prado, San Diego, California
Built1911–1915
ArchitectBertram G. Goodhue, Carleton Winslow, Irving Gill
Architectural styleSpanish-Colonial Revival
NRHP reference No.[1]
California Building and Tower seen from the rear

The California Quadrangle, California Building, and California Tower are historic structures located in Balboa Park in San Diego, California. They were built for the 1915–16 Panama-California Exposition and served as the grand entry to the Expo.[1] The buildings and courtyard were designed by noted architect Bertram Goodhue. They were added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 17, 1974.[2] They now house the San Diego Museum of Man.

California Quadrangle

Entrance to the Plaza de California, 1916

The Quadrangle includes the California Building and Tower on the north side, and Evernham Hall and the St. Francis Chapel on the south side. Between them is an open space linked by arcaded passageways and massive arched gateways to form the Plaza de California. The original Balboa Park Administration Building (now the Gill Administration Building) lies just outside the Quadrangle, adjacent to and west of the California Building. Unlike most of the exhibits at the Expo, the Quadrangle buildings were intended to be permanent.

The Plaza de California is the main entryway to Balboa Park, approached over the Cabrillo Bridge. That entry is currently a two-lane road providing vehicle access to the park. The city approved plans to divert vehicle traffic away from the Plaza de California and restore it as a pedestrian-only promenade, hoping to complete the project in time to celebrate the 2015 centennial of the Exposition.[3] However, the plan was challenged in court and was overturned by a judge on February 4, 2013, on the grounds that the city had not followed its own Municipal Code requirements in approving it.[4]

California Building and Tower

The California Building with its ornate facade and blue-and-gold dome, together with the adjoining California Tower, are among the most recognizable landmarks in San Diego. The design and ornamentation combine many style elements including Gothic, Plateresque, Baroque, Churrigueresque, and Rococo to create the impression of a Spanish Colonial church. The dome's design looked to the dome at the Church of Santa Prisca and San Sebastián in Taxco, Mexico. The great central dome is encircled with the inscription "Terram Frumenti Hordei, ac Vinarum, in qua Ficus et Malogranata et Oliveta Nascuntur, Terram Olei ac Mellis", (A land of wheat, and barley, and vines, and fig-trees, and pomegranates; a land of oil olive, and honey), (Deuteronomy 8:8 taken from the Vulgate of St. Jerome), as well as the California motto, "Eureka".[5]

California Building and California Tower

The building's facade features stone ornamentation as well as many historical figures and busts sculpted from modeling clay and plaster, depicting prominent people from California, England, Mexico, and Spain. These include Junípero Serra, Philip III of Spain, Sebastián Vizcaíno, George Vancouver, Luís Jayme, Carlos III of Spain, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, Gaspar de Portolà, and Antonio de la Ascención.[6] The facade also features the shield of the United States and the coats of arms of California and Mexico.[7]

The California Tower is 198 feet (60 m) tall and is not open to the public; however, the city of San Diego is studying the possibility of opening it to public access in time for the 2015 centennial of the Expo.[8] The tower's design is Spanish while the details and color are Mexican in style. The tower is composed of three tiers that shift from a quadrangle to an octagon and then a circle.[9] There is a Maas-Rowe carillon in the tower, first installed in 1946 and replaced in 1967.[8] The carillon can be heard throughout the park. It plays "Westminster chimes" every quarter hour, and a resident carilloneur plays three songs at noon every day.[8] The tower has been described as "San Diego's Icon," the most photographed and best-known landmark in San Diego.[10]

The State of California paid the $250,000 cost to develop the California Building and Tower for the 1915 Exposition.[8] Although California owned the building, it was turned over to the San Diego government in 1926.[6] During the Exposition the California Building was the home of the Expo's theme exhibit, an anthropological display called "The Story of Man through the Ages." After the Expo ended, the exhibit was retained and expanded, eventually becoming the San Diego Museum of Man.

Fine Arts Building

On the south side of the Quadrangle is the fair's original Fine Arts Building (not to be confused with the Fine Arts Gallery, which opened in 1926 and is now the San Diego Museum of Art). The building is now used by the San Diego Museum of Man. It houses a banquet hall called Evernham Hall, and is also used for temporary exhibits.

St. Francis Chapel

The St. Francis Chapel is a small chapel in Mission style, built to add a religious note to the Expo. The interior design is simple except for an elaborately decorated and gilded Spanish-style altar. To the right of the carved statue of Our Lady and Child is an effigy representing San Diego de Alcala, name-saint of the city, and to commemorate the early Jesuit missions in Arizona on the left is an unknown Jesuit saint.[5] The chapel is not generally open to the public but is available for private events such as weddings and commitment ceremonies.[11] It was used as a military chapel during World War II.[12]

Administration Building

Just outside of the California Quadrangle on the west, the first building constructed in Balboa Park was the Balboa Park Administration Building, completed in 1911 and designed by Irving Gill in a Mission style, later augmented with baroque ornamentation and Beaux Arts balconies to match the architectural theme of the rest of the Expo. It contained numerous large offices and an auditorium. It served as the planning and administrative headquarters for the 1915-16 Exposition, as well as a place for international receptions. During World War II it was used as a military hospital. For many years after that the building was vacant, and the city proposed to tear it down in 1978, but it was eventually restored in the 1990s and turned over to the San Diego Museum of Man.[12] Today it is known as the Gill Administration Building and houses the administrative offices of the San Diego Museum of Man.

Map

This is a schematic map of the Panama-California Exposition as it appeared in its second year, 1916. The California Quadrangle is the blue area on the left side of the map.

Day nursery Jardins de Eucalyptus Japanese & Formosa Exhibit North Gate
gardens United States Botanical Building Indian Village
Administration Building California State Building Science & Education Plaza de Panama Pan-Pacific La Laguna de Las Flores Foreign & Domestic Calle Cristobal Southern California Counties
Cabrillo Bridge West Gate Plaza de California East Gate El Prado, the central avenue
Fine Arts Building Montezuma gardens Russia & Brazil Plaza de Panama Foreign Arts Canadian Building Canyon Espanol Service buildings
Chapel of St. Francis thick bosque Palm Canyon Esplanade San Joaquin Valley Hospital
Via de los Estados Plaza de Los Estados Pepper Grove park
Great Organ
Theosophical Building
Washington Montana
New Mexico

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007. Cite error: The named reference "NPS" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ "California Quadrangle". National Park Service. Retrieved 6 November 2012.
  3. ^ Showley, Roger (October 19, 2012). "Balboa Park construction delayed to February". San Diego Union Tribune. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  4. ^ Ogul, Jeremy (March 29, 2013). "City Searching for Plaza de Panama Solutions". Mission Times Courier. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  5. ^ a b Winslow, Carleton Monroe (1916). THE ARCHITECTURE AND THE GARDENS of the SAN DIEGO EXPOSITION. San Francisco: Paul Elder and Company. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  6. ^ a b Christman, Florence (1985). The Romance of Balboa Park (4th ed.). San Diego: San Diego Historical Society. ISBN 0-91874-003-7.
  7. ^ "California Building". San Diego Museum of Man website. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d Showley, Roger (November 12, 2012). "California Tower may open to visitors". San Diego Union Tribune. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  9. ^ Hudson, Andrew (2000). The Magic of Balboa Park (1st ed.). La Jolla: PhotoSecrets Publishing. ISBN 0-96530-879-0.
  10. ^ "Balboa Park's California Tower - San Diego's Icon". Balboa Park. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  11. ^ "Saint Francis Chapel". Museum of Man website. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  12. ^ a b Wurman, Richard Saul (2008). Access San Diego. Access Press. p. 23.