Buildings in cities are remarkable things: they provide not only shelter
but touchstones of reference and recall, a language that shapes our
sense of place as well as the skyline. In sparkling prose and with
full-color photography, Cityscapes looks at fifty buildings that
convey a distinct slice of San Francisco. These are the buildings that
are defined by bold visual moves and the ones that offer tactile
delight. These are the structures you notice every time you pass by, and
the ones that escape notice until the light hits them a certain way.
Included are some of San Francisco's most familiar buildings and works
by some of architecture's biggest names--but also plenty of buildings
that are often ignored yet add a unique texture to this fabled place. An
outgrowth of "Cityscape," a weekly column that debuted in the San
Francisco Chronicle in 2009, Cityscapes is part history, part
guidebook, and part architectural primer. And the points it makes about
specific buildings convey something true to all great cities--that every
building shines in its own way as a distinctive piece in a much larger
puzzle, one still being assembled before our eyes.