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Conservatory of Flowers

Golden Gate Park Conservatory
SF Conservatory of Flowers 2014-05.jpg
Conservatory of Flowers is located in San Francisco
Conservatory of Flowers
Conservatory of Flowers is located in California
Conservatory of Flowers
Conservatory of Flowers is located in the US
Conservatory of Flowers
Location San Francisco, California
Coordinates 37°46′19.2″N 122°27′36″W / 37.772000°N 122.46000°W / 37.772000; -122.46000Coordinates: 37°46′19.2″N 122°27′36″W / 37.772000°N 122.46000°W / 37.772000; -122.46000
Built 1878
Architect Lord & Burnham
Architectural style Italianate, Gothic
NRHP Reference # 71000184
CHISL # 841
SFDL # 50
Significant dates
Added to NRHP October 14, 1971
Designated CHISL September 1, 1970
Designated SFDL December 4, 1972 (44 Years Ago)

The Conservatory of Flowers is a greenhouse and botanical garden that houses a collection of rare and exotic plants in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California. With construction having been completed in 1879, it is the oldest building in the park. It was one of the first municipal conservatories constructed in the United States and is the oldest remaining municipal wooden conservatory in the country. For these distinctions and for its associated historical, architectural, and engineering merits, the Conservatory of Flowers is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the California Register of Historical Places. It is a California Historical Landmark and a San Francisco Designated Landmark.

The Conservatory of Flowers is an elaborate Victorian greenhouse with a central dome rising nearly 60 feet (18 m) high and arch-shaped wings extending from it for an overall length of 240 feet (73 m). The building sits atop a gentle slope overlooking Conservatory Valley. The structural members are articulated through one predominant form, a four-centered or Tudor arch.

The Conservatory of Flowers consists of a wood structural skeleton with glass walls set on a raised masonry foundation. The entire structure has a shallow E-shaped plan that is oriented along an east-west axis. The central 60-foot (18 m) high pavilion is entered through a one-story, glassed-in vestibule with a gable roof on the south side of the pavilion. Flanking the rotunda to the east and west are one-story, symmetrical wings framed by wood arches. Each wing is L-shaped in plan, with cupolas adorning the intersection of the two segments.

The octagonal pavilion supports an arched roof that is, in turn, surmounted by a clerestory and dome. The clerestory is supported by eight free-standing, wood-clad, cast-iron columns located within the rotunda and grouped in pairs. Projecting from the pavilion roof on the east, west, and south elevations are dormer windows with peak roofs. Between major arched structural framing members are wood muntins that hold the glass lights on their sides. The lights lap one over one another like shingles and follow the curve of the arches.


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