Le 345 California Center, aussi connu sous le nom de 345 California Street est un gratte-ciel de San Francisco, aux États-Unis. Achevée en 1986, cette tour (211,8 m en comptant les aiguilles) est la troisième plus haute construction de la ville, après la Transamerica Pyramid (260 m) et le 555 California Street (237 m). Le projet d'origine prévoyait qu'elle soit plus élevée de 30 m. Le 345 California est construit au centre d'un bloc et flanqué de bâtiments historiques à ses quatre coins. Les onze derniers étages des tours jumelles, qui forment un angle de 45° par rapport au reste du building, initialement prévus en copropriété, sont occupés par l'hôtel Loews Regency San Francisco (en) (ancien Mandarin Oriental San Francisco). Plusieurs passerelles vitrées offrent une vue de la baie de San Francisco.

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342 m

Punch Line San Francisco

Punch Line San Francisco is a comedy club located at 444 Battery St in San Francisco's Financial District. It has a sister club in Sacramento, California, and is also associated with Cobb's Comedy Club, now in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco. It is San Francisco's oldest running comedy club. The club was originally a restaurant during the day and the backstage hangout for The Old Waldorf nightclub next door at night.
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353 m

Maritime Plaza

Maritime Plaza, sometimes known as Maritime Plaza Park, is a 2.1-acre (0.85 ha) elevated park and roof garden in San Francisco, California in the Financial District, in the U.S. state of California. Designed in 1967 by landscape architects Sasaki, Walker and Associates, it surrounds the One Maritime Plaza building. The park can be accessed from the ground level via staircases or via elevated walkways from adjacent Embarcadero Center on the south and apartment buildings on the north. The park is owned and operated by the San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department. Maritime Plaza is bordered by Washington Street on the north, Davis Street on the east, Clay Street on the south, and Battery Street on the west. Several pieces of the San Francisco Civic Art Collection are located in the plaza, including Standing Figure – Knife Edge by Henry Moore, Bronze Horse by Marino Marini, Bronze Icosaspirale by Charles O. Perry, and Limits of Horizon II by Jan Peter Stern. The central Peacock Fountain, sometimes referred to as the dandelion fountain, was designed by architect Robert Woodward.
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361 m

One Maritime Plaza

One Maritime Plaza is an office tower located in San Francisco's Financial District near the Embarcadero Center towers on Clay and Front Streets. The building, built as the Alcoa Building for Alcoa Corporation and completed in 1967, stands 121 m (398 feet) and has 25 floors of office space. The surrounding plaza was finished in 1967. This is one of the earliest buildings to use seismic bracing in the form of external trusses and X-braces.
403 m

Verjus (restaurant)

Verjus is a French restaurant in San Francisco, California, United States. It was included in The New York Times's 2025 list of the nation's fifty best restaurants.
413 m

Kusakabe (restaurant)

Kusakabe is a Japanese restaurant in San Francisco, California. The menu includes sushi.