The Embarcadero Freeway: Elevated Infrastructure and Urban Regeneration in San Francisco

The Embarcadero Freeway: Elevated Infrastructure and Urban Regeneration in San Francisco
The Embarcadero, San Francisco in 2017. Image © Bob Collowan via Wikipedia under license CC-BY-SA-4.0 The Embarcadero, San Francisco in 2017. Image © Bob Collowan via Wikipedia under license CC-BY-SA-4.0

In recent decades, cities across the world have seen an increase in the demolition of elevated concrete freeways. Taipei, Seoul, Portland, and Boston, for example, have all seen the rise and fall of these infrastructures to give way to parks and new urban regeneration ideas. In other cases, like Montreal in Canada, some people opposed the freeways even before they were built, effectively rerouting viaducts, preserving heritage, and freeing waterfront views. For San Francisco, in the United States, the story of the Embarcadero Freeway is one of those narratives that serves as a case study of the city's mid-century infrastructural ambition, people's reaction to the project, and its eventual reversal in favor of urban connectivity.

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