A new chapter for a landmark island
Treasure Island, a California Historical Landmark in the San Francisco Bay, is a human-made island originally built for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition. Upon its opening, the island featured expansive fairgrounds, exhibit halls, airplane hangars, a federal building, and a 12,000-car parking lot. By World War II, the U.S. government had established a naval station on the island, which remained in operation until 1997.
Following the decommissioning of the naval station, Treasure Island presented a compelling opportunity to address San Francisco’s need for housing. In 2005, SOM signed on as Master Architect to transform the 393-acre island into a new, mixed-use district.
Sustainability and open space are the core principles of the master plan. Arranged as a series of high-density, residential neighborhoods with retail, hospitality, and offices, Treasure Island features a mix of low-, mid-, and high-rise buildings and approximately 300 acres of open green space—about 75 percent of the island. New and improved modes of transit, walkable streets, solar energy infrastructure, and restored wetlands work in tandem to keep Treasure Island resilient and minimize carbon emissions.