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Port presents Crane Cove Park master plan; staff previews $45 million build-out and historic-preservation budget

Historic Preservation Commission · August 7, 2013
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Port and planning staff presented a master plan for Crane Cove Park at Pier 70, outlining a phased plan for a nine-acre park, reinterpretation of Slipways 2–4, adaptive reuse of Building 109, and an anticipated total budget of about $45 million, including approximately $19 million for historic preservation work.

Port of San Francisco staff and consultants presented the Crane Cove Park master plan to the Historic Preservation Commission on Aug. 7, describing an approach that rehabilitates World War II-era slipway features, adaptively reuses historic buildings, and creates layered public open space on a nine‑acre site at Pier 70.

Plan overview: the master plan divides the park into five zones—ranging from a more formal ‘New Port’ west of Illinois Street to a ‘Working Port’ area directly adjacent to continuing ship-repair operations—with Slipway 4 as the central historic…

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