Embarcadero Plaza and Vaillancourt Fountain: Preserve and Adapt 

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Docomomo US/NOCA calls on San Francisco to preserve Embarcadero Plaza and Vaillancourt Fountain

San Francisco aims to demolish Embarcadero Plaza and Vaillancourt Fountain as part of the Embarcadero Plaza and Sue Bierman Park Renovation Project, an initiative kickstarted by private interests. Docomomo US Northern California chapter calls on the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department (SFRPD), Arts Commission (SFAC), and District Supervisors to preserve Embarcadero Plaza and Vaillancourt Fountain through adaptive reuse and project rightsizing, especially in this era of history erasure and economic uncertainty.

Take action now

If you want to preserve San Francisco’s history, the most important actions you can take right now are:

Make public comments to the San Francisco Arts Commission and Recreation and Park Department.

Make public comments by attending upcoming San Francisco Arts Commission meetings and San Francisco Recreation and Park Department meetings. If you cannot attend in person, click the button to send a written comment (must be one page or less).

Submit SFAC Public Comment Now

Contact SF Recreation and Parks, SF Arts Commission, and the District Supervisor.

Click the button to use our email template! We encourage you to personalize the contents. This link opens an email that is pre-filled for you to send. Make sure to allow pop-ups on our website for it to work. Alternatively, use our recommended template to write an email.

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Vaillancourt Fountain by Québécois artist Armand Vaillancourt in 1971. Image courtesy of the San Francisco Public Library.

This 5-acre park redesign, the product of a public-private partnership with the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department, BXP, the Downtown SF Partnership, and the Office of Economic and Workforce Developments, threatens to demolish a historically significant Embarcadero Plaza and Vaillancourt Fountain when it breaks ground next year.

For over 50 years, Vaillancourt Fountain has stood as a bold symbol of public art in San Francisco’s Embarcadero Plaza. This video traces the history of the fountain—from its conception and construction to its role in the city’s cultural life—and explains why its preservation matters more than ever. Help us protect this iconic piece of modern art.

Call to action

Local, regional, and state agencies and the public must work to support the preservation of historically and culturally significant places, with particular attention to those used by marginalized communities for free speech and assembly.

We believe that this unique juxtaposition of art, architecture, and expression remain a symbol of San Francisco’s commitment to free speech, cultural practices, and bold, challenging public art. We call on San Francisco Parks and Recreation (RPD) and the San Francisco Arts Commission (SFAC) to:

  1. Preserve Embarcadero Plaza’s brick paving and distinctive footprint, and

  2. Preserve Vaillancourt Fountain.

Read our official statement to San Francisco Recreation and Parks and the San Francisco Arts Commission, shared on April 12 2025, here.

Join us in Advocating

Please write to the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department and the San Francisco Arts Commission to urge them to preserve Embarcadero Plaza and the Vaillancourt Fountain. We encourage you to personalize this email and share personal stories and memories about this historic place.

  • Click here to contact SF Recreation and Parks, SF Arts Commission, and the District Supervisor. We provide an email template but encourage you to personalize the contents. This link opens an email that is pre-filled for you to send and requires that you allow pop-ups on our website.

      • Alternatively, if that link doesn't work for you, use our recommended template to write an email.

  • Read and sign the “Save Embarcadero Plaza” petition focused on skateboarding history.

  • Read and sign the “Sauvons La Vaillancourt Fountain” petition focused on the fountain as an internationally significant work of public art.

  • Share and document your stories about this significant and beloved place. Use hashtags #saveEMB #saveVaillancourt and #docomomonoca.

Vaillancourt Fountain in 1971. Image courtesy of the San Francisco Public Library.

Threats and Urgency

Your advocacy must be heard as San Francisco looks at the plaza’s redesign at this particular moment in time. We highlight the following threats to Embarcadero Plaza and Vaillancourt Fountain:

  • The current project has a rapid timeline for groundbreaking, with the removal of the Vaillancourt Fountain and plaza to begin in 2026.  

  • The current federal administration’s attitude is hostile towards preservation (threats include: censorship, firing employees, and cutting resources at agencies like the National Park Service); this is already impacting places of cultural significance, such as the erasure of trans and queer people from the website of the Stonewall National Historic Landmark.

  • The plaza and fountain’s recent construction: Late Modernist and more recently built properties worldwide are just barely entering the standard fifty-year timeframe, which is the age at which built resources are typically evaluated for historical significance in preservation advocacy and in the public’s understanding of design significance. This “lack of historical distance” can cause works of the recent past to be undervalued and demolished before their significance is understood or studied.

  • The area is in poor condition, partly due to a lack of maintenance funding and upkeep. 

  • Piecemeal change over time has clouded the original design intent of the Plaza, obscures cohesion, and impacts usability.

Site History and Significance

Docomomo US/NOCA considers Embarcadero Plaza and Vaillancourt Fountain to be highly significant based on the following criteria:

Contributing Property to a Significant Modern-era Landscape Design 

Embarcadero Plaza is the point of departure for a series of publicly accessible civic places leading miles into San Francisco. From banality to reverence, a broad public uses these spaces: commuters, workers, residents, students, tourists, skateboarders, and attendees in parades, marches, and festivals. And it was designed to function this way. The Market Street Development Project, designed by renowned late 20th-century architects and landscape architects, including Lawrence Halprin, Mario Ciampi, and J. Carl Warnecke, was built to modernize and unify the central spine of downtown San Francisco. The street, its transit stations, and seven plazas —including the monumental United Nations and Embarcadero Plazas — share a palette of forms, materials, and amenities. Notably, it incorporated light fixtures, art, and other elements from previous eras. Embarcadero Plaza carries its trademarks: brick hardscape and bold, controversial architectural and artistic features.   

Embarcadero Plaza has already been studied and evaluated by numerous historic preservation and landscape history professionals, who have identified it as a contributing property within a larger significant Modern-era landscape (referred to as the Market Street Cultural Landscape District). Staff at the San Francisco Planning Department and the State Historic Preservation Office have reviewed and concurred with these evaluations.

Vaillancourt Fountain: Icon of Brutalism

Vaillancourt Fountain behind the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Monument, Icon of Brutualism. Photo by Barrett Reiter.

Vaillancourt Fountain, in particular, must be understood in terms of its original physical context next to the Embarcadero Freeway, although that context has since changed. Its original role as a “fountain to hide a freeway” was designed to dilute the roadway’s sound and re-establish the historic connection between Market Street and the Ferry Building.  The fountain is a striking example of Brutalist architecture. Created by Québécois artist Armand Vaillancourt in 1971, this 40-foot-high fountain is a testament to the transformative vision of the project. Like other Halprin plazas containing fountains, the plaza is meant for public participation. It invites people to step beneath the fountain’s large overhangs and, atop stairwells and catwalks, creates unique views of the San Francisco skyline. 

Initially conceived to complement the now-demolished Embarcadero Freeway, the fountain has outlived its original context and evolved into a freestanding artistic statement. This resilient monument has survived the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and multiple attempts at removal over its lifetime.

Together, the plaza and fountain create a sense of monumentality and cater to specific uses and communities. While the context has changed, this significant landscape and sculpture have value worth preserving.

Skate & Speech: Historic Significance & Cultural Legacy

Since 1971, Embarcadero Plaza and its fountain have supported and influenced the evolution of unique San Francisco culture and history. We highlight two roles demonstrating its historical and cultural significance: civic engagement, public demonstrations, and skateboarding. 

Civic Engagement & Public Demonstrations 

Vaillancourt Fountain is the best-known public sculpture in San Francisco and is part of the personal history of countless San Franciscans. It is not only an interactive and sculptural water feature; the fountain gained additional cultural significance when Vaillancourt himself inscribed "Québec libre!" on it during its dedication, advocating for Québec independence. This political expression established the fountain as a symbol of free speech and artistic freedom.

Vaillancourt’s sculpture and political act dovetail in meaning with the function of the surrounding plaza, which is frequently used for free speech. Lawrence Halprin drew inspiration from Siena's Piazza del Campo, an expansive brick plaza designed for civic and political activities in Italy.

Embarcadero Plaza is a destination and point of departure for countless marches and protests down Market Street. This is a noted area of significance in the MSCLD, which connects this space to the labor movement, women’s suffrage, civil rights, LGBTQ liberation and pride, anti-war protests, and peace celebrations. Today’s use for civic engagement and public demonstration continues that significance to the present day.

The photograph included here shows office workers on National Secretaries Day in 1981, during a 19-week strike. First published in Processed World #1 and #2, April and August 1981 respectively, some of this social history is now hosted on the San Francisco digital history archive FoundSF.org; Office Workers on Strike: San Francisco 1981. Note the concrete curl on which they sit: this is one of the plaza’s elements (now demolished) designed by William Turnbull and which soon became integral to the trajectory of skateboarding worldwide.   

Skateboarding

In his petition “Save Embarcadero Plaza,” Docomomo Northern California Chapter Board Member Ted Barrow writes: 

“For skateboarders, the surrounding Embarcadero Plaza, formerly Justin Herman Plaza, has been an iconic, world-class park that has honored San Francisco’s history on the waterfront for the last five decades. Redesigning the plaza without skateboarding in mind and completely destroying the last vestiges of the most famous skate spot in the world would erase a vital part of skateboarding’s history, not just in San Francisco, but worldwide.” — Ted Barrow

Notably, skateboarding evolved in direct relation to the specific forms and materials that exist in this particular plaza, such as the bricks and the low concrete band around Vaillancourt Fountain. While many of these forms have already been removed, it is not too late to preserve what remains.

Case Studies

These joyful, youthful, and necessary uses of the plaza don’t solve the plaza’s challenges. Like other Modernist public works, Embarcadero Plaza oscillates grandly between sparse/calm and frenetic/crowded and, along with Vaillancourt Fountain, has been maligned and under-maintained. We recognize these challenges and highlight a few precedents when considering its future: 

  • Boston City Hall Plaza, a large brick plaza, with similar challenges, also encompassing a monumental Brutalist icon, the recently-landmarked city hall, redesigned in 2022;

  • United Nations Skate Plaza, the local 2023 project that balanced skateboarding with preserving the United Nations Plaza, another of Halprin’s monumental brick plazas.

Photo of 1981 strike on National Secretaries Day by Chris Carlsson as seen on Foundsf.org.

All the press

9/29/2025 - Montreal sculptor fights San Francisco’s plans to remove controversial fountain he designed decades ago - The Globe and Mail

9/15/2025 - Skaters Are Latest Group to Voice Opposition to Removal of Vaillancourt Fountain - SFist

9/15/2025 - Skaters Push Back As San Francisco Plans To Demolish Iconic Vaillancourt Fountain - Patch

9/14/2025 - Skaters push back as San Francisco plans to demolish iconic Vaillancourt Fountain - CBS News

9/14/2025 - Skaters push back against San Francisco plans to demolish iconic Vaillancourt Fountain - CBS News

9/13/2025 - This Fountain Looms Over SF's Skateboarding Scene. A Growing Few Are Trying to Save It - KQED

9/11/2025 - Artist behind San Francisco's Vaillancourt Fountain sends cease-and-desist letter to halt its destruction - The Art Newspaper

9/6/2025 - Vaillancourt fountain sculptor threatens legal action to prevent demolition - The San Francisco Standard

9/6/2025 - Effort to remove fountain from S.F. Embarcadero Plaza hit with cease-and-desist letter - San Francisco Chronicle

9/5/2025 - Removing the Vaillancourt Fountain will destroy more than an epic skate spot - San Francisco Chronicle

8/26/2025 - S.F. Asks to Remove Controversial Public Sculpture: ‘Stonehenge With Plumbing Problems’ - Artnet News

8/20/2025 - SF Rec and Parks Officially Requests Removal of Embarcadero’s Vaillancourt Fountain - SFist

8/20/2025 - S.F. officials take first formal step to remove controversial fountain from Embarcadero Plaza - San Francisco Chronicle

8/7/2025 - How the Embarcadero Plaza became an iconic skateboarding spot - SurferToday.com

7/28/2025 - Ferry Building Fills Up Again as A16 Owner Announces New Restaurant In MarketBar Space - SFist

7/25/2025 - Vaillancourt Fountain in San Francisco’s Embarcadero Plaza faces demolition - The Architect’s Newspaper

7/21/2025 - San Francisco’s Vaillancourt Fountain may soon meet its end, despite public outcry - The Art Newspaper

7/13/2025 - Letters: S.F. mystery benches may annoy city, but they’re a lifesaver for some people - San Francisco Chronicle

7/9/2025 - Controversial S.F. fountain not part of Embarcadero Plaza renovation plans, officials say - San Francisco Chronicle

7/9/2025 - Embarcadero Plaza’s Maligned Brutalist Fountain Likely Done For, According to Rec and Parks Official - SFist

6/13/2025 - San Francisco's historic Vaillancourt Fountain fenced off with future threatened - CBS News

6/13/2025 - Vaillancourt Fountain fenced off in San Francisco as redevelopment plans threaten future - CBS News

6/10/2025 - A new twist in the saga of San Francisco's most controversial monument - SFGATE

6/9/2025 - SF fountain that divides public opinion to be fenced off - KRON4

6/9/2025 - S.F.’s controversial fountain deemed ‘hazardous’ and will be fenced off indefinitely - San Francisco Chronicle

6/9/2025 - SF’s Controversial Vaillancourt Fountain Deemed 'Hazardous,’ Now Getting Fenced Off to the Public - SFist

6/9/2025 - San Francisco's Iconic Vaillancourt Fountain Cordoned Off Amid Safety Concerns - Hoodline

5/27/2025 - San Francisco’s controversial monument, the Vaillancourt Fountain, could be facing demolition - wallpaper.com

5/25/2025 - One of SF's most controversial public monuments may come down - SFGATE

5/23/2025 - Developers threaten San Francisco’s loved and loathed concrete colossus - The Art Newspaper

5/22/2025 - S.F. fountain’s 95-year-old creator returns: ‘I’m here to save that piece of art’ - San Francisco Chronicle

5/22/2025 - 95-Year-Old Artist Behind Often Reviled Embarcadero Plaza Fountain Flies to SF to 'Save' It - SFist

4/21/2025 - Very Unattractive Embarcadero Fountain May Be Demolished, But Its Fans Are Fighting to Preserve It - SFist

4/21/2025 - Letters: Honor Pope Francis’ legacy by fulfilling his calls for compassion and justice - San Francisco Chronicle

4/20/2025 - Fans of controversial S.F. fountain fear Embarcadero Plaza makeover puts it ‘in danger’ - San Francisco Chronicle

4/16/2025 - Huge Embarcadero statue doesn't mesh with SF public art history - San Francisco Examiner

4/4/2025 - San Francisco to Revitalize Embarcadero with Multi-Million Park Renovation - San Francisco YIMBY

3/21/2025 - R-Evolution sculpture to be unveiled at San Francisco’s Embarcadero Plaza - Petaluma Argus-Courier

3/14/2025 - 'They fought for this space': SF plans to wipe away cultural landmark for $30M park - SFGATE

3/6/2025 - San Francisco's Embarcadero Plaza to get $35 million facelift funded by private-public partnership - ABC7 San Francisco

3/5/2025 - 'Game-changing' new park twice the size of Union Square inches closer to reality in San Francisco - SFGATE

3/4/2025 - New downtown park on the Embarcadero advances with key vote by S.F. supervisors - San Francisco Chronicle

11/5/2024 - Mayor Breed Presses Forward With Embarcadero Plaza Revamp on Eve of Election - SFist

11/5/2024 - SF mayor reveals reimagined Embarcadero Plaza in new renderings - KRON4

11/4/2024 - S.F. plans revamp of Embarcadero Plaza into sprawling park with retail corridor and event stage - San Francisco Chronicle

11/4/2024 - Plan for new downtown SF park on the Embarcadero gets major boost - The San Francisco Standard

10/18/2024 - BXP funded Embarcadero Plaza park plan advances - San Francisco Examiner

8/10/2024 - New event series starts in SF’s Embarcadero Plaza - San Francisco Examiner

8/7/2024 - San Francisco launches new 'Bricks at Embarcadero Plaza' downtown revitalization push to bring people back to city - ABC7 San Francisco

8/1/2024 - ‘Crush it, pulverize it’: Readers react to idea of preserving S.F.’s most polarizing piece of art - San Francisco Chronicle

8/1/2024 - The plans for the new Embarcadero park are great—except for one thing - Time Out Worldwide

7/28/2024 - People hate this huge S.F. fountain. Here’s why the city absolutely should keep it - San Francisco Chronicle

7/20/2024 - San Francisco could have a new park that's twice the size of Union Square - SFGATE

7/17/2024 - Could S.F.’s Embarcadero Plaza become a ‘world class’ park? There are plans to make it happen - San Francisco Chronicle

6/21/2024 - The Bono fountain is broken. Is SF too broke to pay for its $3 million fix? - The San Francisco Standard

6/15/2024 - Workers met with massive surprise after draining iconic San Francisco fountain - New York Post

6/14/2024 - The city drained a famous San Francisco fountain and found it full of junk - SFGATE

11/17/2022 - U2 played a surprise 1987 S.F. concert. Then all hell broke loose - San Francisco Chronicle

11/14/2022 - Photos of U2’s Bono Vandalizing an Iconic Work of SF Public Art - The San Francisco Standard

6/11/2022 - New, old, quirky, costly: Get familiar with SF’s Civic Art Collection - The San Francisco Standard

5/21/2021 - The (actual) list of weirdest things in San Francisco - SFGATE

5/3/2021 - Teen Rediscovers San Francisco's Enduring Skate Spot: EMB - KQED

12/20/2020 - Embarcadero’s Vaillancourt Fountain is stark, brutal and ugly, and that’s why I love it - Datebook

12/15/2019 - The worst-reviewed attractions in San Francisco - SFGATE

9/20/2019 - San Francisco’s most glorious fountains - Curbed SF

9/20/2019 - A freeway through the Sunset District? Roots of a San Francisco revolt - San Francisco Chronicle

7/31/2018 - Soap suds overflow in Vaillancourt Fountain - Curbed SF

9/14/2017 - Why is Vaillancourt Fountain spewing electric blue water? - SFGATE

9/13/2017 - San Francisco needs to honor the right people - theguardsman.com

9/10/2017 - 'Save The Yuppies:' U2's Free 1987 Concert In Justin Herman Plaza - Hoodline

8/16/2017 - Testing the waters for bringing the Vaillancourt Fountain back to life - San Francisco Chronicle

8/16/2017 - In defense of the fountain San Franciscans love to hate - Curbed SF

8/15/2017 - Breaking: Fountain everyone loves to hate is back on today - Curbed SF

8/11/2017 - Open thread: Why on earth do you love the Vaillancourt Fountain? - Curbed SF

8/10/2017 - Appalling Embarcadero Fountain Would Cost a Half Million Dollars To Turn Back On - SFist

8/9/2017 - Restoring Vaillancourt Fountain Would Cost $500K Or More - Hoodline

8/9/2017 - It will cost $500K to turn on Embarcadero fountain everyone hates - Curbed SF

8/5/2017 - Vaillancourt Fountain deserves respect — and water - San Francisco Chronicle

7/19/2017 - 9 of the Most Beautifully Abstract Fountains Around the World - Architectural Digest

5/17/2017 - The last time U2 played 'Joshua Tree' in the Bay Area they were under investigation in SF - Connecticut Post

5/17/2017 - U2 1987 Oakland Coliseum Joshua Tree tour - SFGATE

5/6/2017 - U2 caused unforgetta­ble furor with free 1987 concert, graffiti - PressReader

5/1/2017 - Hey Area: Why is San Francisco's Vaillancourt Fountain dry? - KALW

3/24/2015 - Vaillancourt Fountain - Atlas Obscura

7/18/2014 - Mapping 29 Pieces of Public Art Across San Francisco - Curbed SF

6/1/2013 - Vaillancourt Fountain now stands alone - San Francisco Chronicle

11/11/2012 - U2's Bono cited as graffiti artist - SFGATE

8/9/2012 - When U2 comes to town: Vaillancourt incident 25 years later - SFGATE

4/4/2009 - Herb Caen spotlight: 1987 Little bits from Bono to Strom - SFGATE

9/28/2007 - On the Town: Marianna Stark - SFGATE

3/17/2004 - SAN FRANCISCO / Justin Herman Plaza fountain's creator vows to fight Peskin's demolition proposal / Some say piece looks awkward, draws transients - SFGATE

11/15/1987 - Artist defends singer who defaced his fountain - upi.com