Salesforce Transit Center / Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects


Courtesy of Steelblue

Courtesy of Steelblue
  • Landscape Architecture: PWP Landscape Architecture
  • Structural Engineering: Schlaich Bergermann Partner Specialty
  • Mep /It Engineering: WSP
  • Specialty Mep Engineering: BuroHappold
  • Sustainability Design: Atelier Ten
  • Land Use/Environmental: Rana Creek
  • Geotechnical And Other Engineering Services: Arup
  • Av, It, Security, Acoustics: Shen Milsom & Wilke
  • Curtain Wall/Façade Design: Vidaris
  • Environmental Graphics: WRNS Studio
  • Building Maintenance: Lerch Bates & Associates, Inc.
  • Cost Consulting: AECOM
  • Lighting Design: Auerbach Glasow
  • Mechanical Controls: HMA Consulting
  • Leed Administration: IES
  • Accessibility Consulting: McGuire Associates
  • Vertical Transportation: Edgett Williams Consulting Group
  • Waterproofing Consulting: Henshell & Buccellato
  • Wind Tunnel Testing: RWDI
  • Vibration Consulting: Wilson Ihrig & Associates
  • Emergency Communications: Jensen Hughes
  • Fountain Consulting: Fountain Source
  • Architecture For The Blind: Chris Downey Architect
  • Retail Consultant: Brand + Allen Architects
  • Program Management/Program Controls: AECOM
  • Contractor: Webcor/Obayashi Joint Venture
  • Construction Manager Oversight: Turner Construction Company
  • Client: Transbay Joint Powers Authority
  • Artists: James Carpenter, Julie Chang, Jenny Holzer, Ned Kahn

© Kyle Jeffers

© Kyle Jeffers

Text description provided by the architects. Salesforce Transit Center is a state-of-the-art multimodal transit station in downtown San Francisco, linking 11 transit systems and connecting the city to the region, the state, and the nation. The innovative, highly sustainable design includes a 2.2-hectare (5.4-acre) rooftop park that will anchor the growth of a new mixed-use neighborhood. In the spirit of New York’s Grand Central Terminal and London’s Victoria Station, the Transit Center’s soaring light-filled spaces will give San Francisco a grand entrance that befits its status as one of the world’s great cities.


Courtesy of Steelblue

Courtesy of Steelblue

The new Transit Center will stretch for five blocks along Mission Street, one block south of the city’s Financial District. A gently undulating wall, floating above the street on angled steel columns, will be visible from afar, creating a graceful, luminous, and welcoming image. At street level, shops and cafes will draw visitors and energize the surrounding neighborhood, while high above, the trees and flowers of the rooftop park will invite people to visit for longer periods, transforming the Transit Center from a commuter hub to an urban destination.


© Vittoria Zupicich

© Vittoria Zupicich

Within the Transit Center, space is open and light-filled. Tall, structurally expressive skylights — “Light Columns” — bring sunshine deep into the building, creating a vibrant, inviting atmosphere. The largest Light Column forms the central element of the 36-meter tall (118-feet tall) Grand Hall, the Transit Center’s primary public space. Reaching from the park, down through the bus deck and Grand Hall, and all the way to the train platforms two stories below grade, this dramatic structure will provide light and long views to all areas of the Transit Center.


Courtesy of Steelblue

Courtesy of Steelblue

The heart of the Transit Center’s design is the rooftop park. Dense with nature and activities, it will have over a dozen entry points, potentially including bridges to surrounding buildings. Active and passive uses are woven into the landscape, including a 1,000-person amphitheater, cafes, and a children’s playground, as well as quiet areas for reading, picnicking or simply taking a break. The park will present a wide variety of Bay Area ecologies, from oak trees to a wetland marsh. The park is symbolic of Salesforce Transit Center’s considerable commitment to environmental quality and sustainability.


© Vittoria Zupicich

© Vittoria Zupicich

The building’s annual energy consumption is projected to be up to 50 percent lower than the 2008 Title 24 Energy Efficiency Standards, and the project is on track to receive a Gold certification under the LEED 2009 rating system. The Transbay Joint Powers Authority, the public agency charged with implementing the Salesforce project, has commissioned four major artworks that will be integrated with the Transit Center’s design. Each piece will emerge from a close collaboration between the artists and Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects, blurring the line between art and architecture and making both more accessible to the general public.