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California Academy of Sciences

The California Academy of Sciences is one of the ten largest museums of natural history in the world, and one of the oldest in the United States, consisting of a coral reef, a rainforest, a planetarium, aquarium and a living roof. Located in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. The Academy began in 1853 as a learned society and still carries out a large amount of original research, with public exhibits and education becoming significant endeavours in the 20th century. According to their visitor map pamphlet, the complex is “the only place on the planet where you can explore an aquarium, planetarium, and a natural history museum under one living roof

The Academy’s primary buildings in Golden Gate Park reopened on Saturday, September 27th 2008.

Public education

While in Golden Gate Park, the Academy attracted around half a million visitors each year. The main thrust of the exhibits was, and will continue to be, natural history, with halls containing specimens from across the world and the “Life through Time” gallery housing a large display on evolution and paleontology. There was particular emphasis on aquatic biology, with the old aquarium housing fish specimens from all over the world, and a “fish roundabout” offering a unique aquarium experience — visitors stood in the middle of a large ring-shaped tank watching fish swimming endlessly against a small generated current.

Other sciences are also covered: as well as the astronomy shows in the planetarium, there was a “Gem & Mineral Hall” containing many samples, and a section of the Academy devoted to earthquakes — appropriately enough considering the influence that these phenomena have had on San Francisco in general and the Academy in particular — including a simulator which recreated the experience of Japan‘s 1995 Kobe earthquake. There was also a Gary Larson hall.


Currently at the Academy


Snake Head Turtle

The focus of the public exhibits in the Academy’s temporary quarters was the aquarium, since live fish cannot be stored in the same way as the other displays, though there was also a shifting schedule of temporary exhibits trying out new ideas for the re-opening.

Research

The Academy conducts research in a number of fields, largely but not exclusively branches of biology: anthropology, marine biology, botany, entomology, herpetology, ichthyology, invertebrate zoology, mammalogy and ornithology. Geology also has a long history at the Academy, with a concentration on paleontology. There is a strong emphasis on environmental concerns, with all the various departments collaborating closely to focus on systematic biology and biodiversity.

History


Academy of Sciences before reconstruction began in 2005.

The California Academy of Natural Sciences was founded in 1853, only three years after California joined the United States, becoming the first society of its kind in the Western US. Its stated aim was to undertake “a thorough systematic survey of every portion of the State and the collection of a cabinet of her rare and rich productions”. It was renamed to be the more inclusive California Academy of Sciences in 1868.

The Academy had a forward-thinking approach to the involvement of women in science, passing a resolution that the members “highly approve of the aid of females in every department of natural science, and invite their cooperation” in its first year of existence. This led to several female botanists, entomologists and others finding work at the Academy during the 19th Century, when opportunities for women in the sciences were limited, and often restricted to menial cataloguing and calculation work.

The Academy’s first official museum opened in 1874 at the corner of California and Dupont Streets (now Grant Avenue) in what is now Chinatown, and drew up to 80,000 visitors a year. To better accommodate its popularity, the Academy moved in 1891 to a new and larger building on Market Street, funded by the legacy of James Lick, a 19th Century San Francisco real estate mogul, entrepreneur and philanthropist. However, only fifteen years later the Market Street facility fell victim to the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, which also wiped out large swathes of the Academy’s library and specimen collections. Fortunately, an expedition to the Galapagos Islands (the first of several sponsored by the Academy) was already underway, and it returned seven months later, instantly providing replacement collections.

It was not until 1916 that the Academy moved to the North American Hall of Birds and Mammals in Golden Gate Park, the first building on the site that was to become its permanent home. In 1923 the Steinhart Aquarium was added, followed in 1934 by the Simson African Hall.

During World War II, the Academy contributed to the American war effort by using its workshop facilities to repair optical and navigational equipment for navy ships (San Francisco being a major port for the Pacific War). The post-war years saw a flurry of new construction on the site; the Science Hall was added in 1951, followed by the Morrison Planetarium in 1952. The Morrison Planetarium was the seventh major planetarium to open in the United States and featured a one-of-a-kind star projector, built by Academy staff (in part using the expertise gained doing the optical work for the U.S. Navy during World War II). The Academy Projector produced a remarkably natural-looking starfield. It projected irregularly shaped stars, rather than the circular stars projected by many optical star projectors. The irregular shapes were created by hand-placing variously sized grains of carborundum onto the glass starplates, then aluminizing the plates, and brushing away the carborundum grains. In 1959, the Malliard Library, Eastwood Hall of Botany and Livermore Room were all added.


The new building on opening day

Throughout the 1960s, universities concentrating on the new field of molecular biology divested themselves of their specimen collections, entrusting them to the Academy and leading to a rapid growth of the Academy’s holdings. 1969 saw another new building, Cowell Hall, added to the site. In 1976 several new galleries were opened, and the following year saw the construction of the “fish roundabout”.

Earthquake damage and new building

The Academy’s buildings were damaged significantly in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. Subsequently, the Bird Hall building was closed to ensure public safety. The Steinhart Aquarium suffered dramatic seismic damage from the 1989 quake as well. As plans were made to repair the damage and make the buildings seismically stable, it was realised that a considerable amount of work would be needed to bring the buildings up to modern standards. This led to the idea of giving the Academy a complete overhaul, thus motivating the closure of the main site.

Construction began on the new building on September 12, 2005, while the exhibits were moved to 875 Howard Street for a temporary museum. The design architect for the museum replacement project is Renzo Piano. The design won the Holcim Award Silver for sustainable construction projects for region North America in 2005[2]. One critic praised the building as a “blazingly uncynical embrace of the Enlightenment values of truth and reason” and a “comforting reminder of the civilizing function of great art in a barbaric age.” [3]

The main contractor for the museum reconstruction is Webcor Builders. Other key members of the design and construction team include Stantec Architecture of San Francisco [4] and Arup, who provided most of the engineering services. The SWA Group, headquartered in Sausalito, CA, provided landscape architectural services, including implementation design of the Living Roof, and Rana Creek Living Architecture from Carmel Valley, CA, provided additional consultation.


The new building is at the forefront of environmentally-friendly design, in keeping with the Academy’s focus on ecological concerns and environmental sustainability. It is expected to receive Platinum certification under the LEED program. [7] [8] As a result of its environmentally-friendly design and other unique features, this project was featured on the Discovery Channel‘s Extreme Engineering series in 2006 and on the National Geographic Channel‘s Man-Made series[9] in July 2008.

The Academy reopened on Saturday, September 27, 2008, with a free day. For most of the day the line for admittance was over a mile long, and although over 15,000 people were admitted, several thousands more had to be turned away. [10] Admission to the Academy is free the third Wednesday of each month, and there are also “San Francisco Neighborhood Free Days” based on zip code.

Features include:

  • Producing 50 percent less wastewater
  • 60 thousand photovolatic cells
  • 2.5 acres (1.0 ha) living roof
  • Over 20,000 cubic yards (15,000 kL) of recycled concrete
  • Natural lighting in 90 percent of occupied spaces
  • Million 11 pounds (5.0 kg) of recycled steel
  • Wall insulation made from scraps of recycled denim