Cafe in the Cesar Chavez Student Center
About This Item
Students order from a cafe in the Cesar Chavez Student Center.
- Identifier
- TP-ATA-029
- Date
- 1976
- Context
A signature building of the San Francisco State campus is the Cesar Chavez Student Center. The unique design was one of seven proposals which students had voted on in 1966. Originally, the proposal of Canadian Architect Moshe Safdie had won the student vote. The administration dismissed his design following the 1968 Student Strikes and welcomed back the other finalists to design a student center that could be “a place that facilitated student gathering but not student uprising," described in architect Paffard Keatinge-Clay’s biography. The final design was created by Paffard Keatinge-Clay in collaboration with student input through the form of a class. Together they designed an “iceberg” building with two pyramids. “The pyramid of silence is aligned with the axis of the north star, and faces northeast for “quiet, introspective activities; while the second pyramid faces west” and is intended for more “boisterous, public activities." The building was completed in 1975.
- Geographic Coverage
- San Francisco, California
- Temporal Coverage
- 1970s
- Type
- still image
- Format
- 35mm slide
- Views
- 33511