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Kezar Pavilion

1924 establishments in CaliforniaAmerican Basketball Association (2000–present) venuesBasketball venues in CaliforniaGolden Gate ParkHaight-Ashbury, San Francisco
Music venues in the San Francisco Bay AreaSan Francisco Dons basketball venuesSports venues completed in 1924Sports venues in San FranciscoWrestling venues in San Francisco
Kezar Pavilion 9 22 2006
Kezar Pavilion 9 22 2006

Kezar Pavilion, located adjacent to Kezar Stadium, is an indoor arena in the southeast corner of Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California, United States (US). Built in 1924, the Pavilion seats 4,000 people and is owned and operated by the City of San Francisco. The San Francisco Rumble, of the American Basketball Association, and the Academy of Art Urban Knights, an NCAA Division II school, call Kezar Pavilion their home court.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Kezar Pavilion (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Kezar Pavilion
Stanyan Street, San Francisco

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Wikipedia: Kezar PavilionContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 37.767458 ° E -122.453903 °
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Address

Kezar Pavilion

Stanyan Street 755
94117 San Francisco
California, United States
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Kezar Pavilion 9 22 2006
Kezar Pavilion 9 22 2006
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Alvord Lake Bridge
Alvord Lake Bridge

The Alvord Lake Bridge was the first reinforced concrete bridge built in America. It was built in 1889 by Ernest L. Ransome, an innovator in reinforced concrete design, mixing equipment, and construction systems. The bridge was constructed as a single arch 64 feet (20 m) wide with a 20-foot (6.1 m) span .Ransome is believed to have used his patented cold-twisted square steel bar for reinforcement, placed longitudinally in the arch and curved in the same arc. The face of the bridge was scored and hammered to resemble sandstone and the interior features sculpted concrete "stalactites" created during the initial construction to give the bridge underpass a faux cave-like appearance. E. L. Ransome left San Francisco a few years later, frustrated and bitter at the building community's indifference to concrete construction. Ironically, the city's few reinforced concrete structures, including the Alvord Lake Bridge, survived the 1906 earthquake and fire in remarkable shape, vindicating Ransome's faith in the method. The bridge was designated a historic civil engineering landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers in 1969. The Alvord Lake Bridge, which arches over a pedestrian walkway near the lake in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park, allows visitors coming from the Haight Ashbury District and entering the park from the east at Stanyan Street to access the rest of the park safely and directly by providing a grade-separated crossing underneath busy Kezar Drive.