Daniel Burnham's City Beautiful Plan

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Daniel Burnham's City Beautiful Plan, formally titled Report on a Plan for San Francisco, was a comprehensive urban design proposal for San Francisco developed by architect and urban planner Daniel Burnham and his associate Edward H. Bennett between 1904 and 1905. Commissioned by the Association for the Improvement and Adornment of San Francisco under the leadership of Mayor James Phelan, the plan represented one of the most ambitious attempts to reshape an American city according to Beaux-Arts principles of grand civic design, monumental architecture, and organized urban space. The report was formally presented to the city in September 1905, making it a product of Progressive Era reform aspirations rather than of post-disaster emergency planning—a distinction that the plan's later association with the 1906 earthquake has often obscured in popular memory. Although most of Burnham's original vision was never fully realized due to financial constraints, political opposition, and the overriding pressure for rapid reconstruction, elements of the plan shaped San Francisco's built environment in lasting ways, most visibly in the Civic Center complex constructed between 1912 and 1936.[1] The proposal included wide diagonal avenues modeled on Haussmann's Paris, a civic center featuring neoclassical government buildings, expansive parks and public spaces, and a reorganized street grid that would have fundamentally altered the city's geographic and architectural character.

Background and Commission

Daniel Burnham served as Director of Works for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, where his orchestration of the "White City"—a temporary but immensely influential ensemble of neoclassical buildings arranged around formal axes and water features—introduced millions of Americans to Beaux-Arts urban design and established his reputation as the country's foremost planner of civic spaces.[2] The Beaux-Arts aesthetic, rooted in the curriculum of the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, emphasized symmetrical compositions, monumental scale, harmonious facades, and the integration of landscape and architecture into unified civic compositions. It was this vision of the city as a coherent work of art—organized, beautiful, and expressive of collective civic values—that Burnham carried to San Francisco. By 1904, he had already developed City Beautiful proposals for Washington, D.C. (1901–1902, as part of the McMillan Commission) and Cleveland (1903), and was well established as the leading national figure in large-scale civic planning.[3]

The McMillan Plan for Washington had demonstrated what Burnham could accomplish when given institutional support and political backing. Working alongside landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and architect Charles McKim, Burnham had produced a sweeping redesign of the National Mall and its surrounding parkways that restored and extended Pierre Charles L'Enfant's original diagonal street pattern. The Cleveland Group Plan of 1903, which Burnham developed in collaboration with John Carrère and Arnold Brunner, similarly clustered public buildings around a formal mall connecting the lakefront to the city's commercial core. Both projects demonstrated that the City Beautiful program was not merely decorative—it was a functional argument about how public institutions should be organized in relation to each other, to transportation, and to the citizens they served.[4]

In late 1904, the Association for the Improvement and Adornment of San Francisco, a civic organization with close ties to Mayor James Phelan and the city's business and professional elite, engaged Burnham to develop a comprehensive plan for the city's long-term physical improvement.[5] Phelan, a banker's son turned Progressive Era reformer, had served as mayor from 1897 to 1902 and was a central figure in efforts to modernize San Francisco's government and project its ambitions as a Pacific metropolis. His motivations were at once aesthetic, political, and commercial: he believed that a well-ordered, beautiful city would attract investment, elevate civic culture, and strengthen San Francisco's competitive position against Los Angeles, which was growing rapidly in the early twentieth century.[6] The Association funded Burnham's work directly, sidestepping the slower machinery of municipal appropriations and ensuring that the commission reflected the priorities of the city's commercial and reform elite rather than the broader electorate.

The Association for the Improvement and Adornment of San Francisco was itself a product of the Progressive Era's characteristic fusion of civic idealism and elite self-interest. Its membership drew heavily from the city's merchant and professional classes—men who stood to benefit from rising property values, expanded port commerce, and a city whose physical appearance projected confidence to investors and visitors from the eastern United States and from Asia. Phelan had spent years building relationships between this commercial stratum and the city's nascent planning advocates, and his involvement gave the Association the political credibility it needed to command Burnham's attention and fees. The organization's willingness to fund the commission privately rather than seek a municipal appropriation also reflected a calculated reading of San Francisco's political climate: the city's Board of Supervisors, then under the influence of the Union Labor Party machine led by Abe Ruef and Mayor Eugene Schmitz, was unlikely to appropriate funds for a grand planning exercise that served the priorities of the business community.[7]

Burnham established a temporary studio and residence in a cottage atop Twin Peaks, chosen for its commanding views of the peninsula and its surrounding waters. From this vantage point he and Bennett surveyed the city's topography intensively over several months, producing the detailed geographic analysis that underpinned the plan's proposals. Edward Bennett, a British-born architect trained at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, had joined Burnham's office in 1903 and contributed substantial design expertise to the San Francisco work. His role extended well beyond drafting: Bennett conducted independent site surveys, developed the specific geometric alignments of the proposed diagonal avenues, and synthesized the topographic analysis into the plan's illustrative drawings and maps. He would go on to co-author Burnham's celebrated 1909 Plan of Chicago, widely regarded as the most complete expression of City Beautiful principles applied to an American city, and later developed an independent planning practice that produced city plans for Ottawa (1915) and Portland, Oregon (1912).[8][9] The completed report was submitted and formally presented to city authorities in September 1905, several months before the earthquake that would define the plan's historical reputation.

Initial Reception

When the Report on a Plan for San Francisco was formally presented in September 1905, the response from the city's press and civic leadership was broadly favorable, if not uniformly enthusiastic. The San Francisco Chronicle and San Francisco Examiner both covered the presentation at length, with the Chronicle describing the plan as "magnificent in its scope" and praising Burnham's attention to the city's distinctive topography. The plan was received as evidence that San Francisco was serious about its ambitions as a world-class city—a sentiment that carried particular weight at a moment when the Panama Canal's anticipated completion was expected to transform San Francisco into a dominant Pacific port and commercial hub.[10]

Not everyone was impressed. Critics from the city's labor and working-class communities, whose political power had grown substantially under the Schmitz administration, pointed out that the plan said little about affordable housing, working-class neighborhoods, or the practical transportation needs of industrial workers who depended on streetcars to reach the waterfront and manufacturing districts. The plan's emphasis on wide boulevards, scenic drives, and monumental public buildings looked, from this vantage point, like a program for beautifying the city for the benefit of those wealthy enough to live near the proposed diagonal avenues and cultural institutions. The Union Labor Party's political machine had no interest in delivering a civic planning victory to the Phelan-aligned business community, and Schmitz's administration received the plan politely but made no commitment to act on it.[11]

The plan also faced quiet skepticism from property owners along the routes of the proposed diagonal avenues, who recognized that implementation would require the condemnation and purchase of developed land at substantial public expense. San Francisco's city government in 1905 had no mechanism for financing such acquisitions—no special assessment district, no bonding authority tied to planning improvements, and no state enabling legislation that would have permitted the kind of coordinated land assembly that Haussmann had been able to compel in Paris under imperial authority. These structural constraints were known to informed observers at the time the plan was presented, and they cast a long shadow over the optimistic reception the plan received in the press.[12]

Key Proposals

The Report on a Plan for San Francisco was organized around several interconnected proposals that together would have transformed the physical structure of the city. At its core was a system of diagonal avenues modeled explicitly on Georges-Eugène Haussmann's mid-nineteenth-century reorganization of Paris. These boulevards were intended to cut across the rigid rectangular grid that had been imposed on San Francisco's challenging hills and valleys in the nineteenth century, creating more direct routes between major destinations and providing corridors wide enough to serve both traffic and civic ceremony. Burnham proposed approximately a dozen principal and secondary diagonals, the most important of which was a grand boulevard extending from Twin Peaks toward the downtown waterfront—a route that would have bisected several existing residential and commercial blocks and required the demolition of structures across a swath of the city's densest neighborhoods. Secondary diagonals were to link the Mission District, the Western Addition, and the residential areas north of Market Street into a connected system of planted boulevards. All were to be substantially wider than existing streets, with tree-lined margins and generous sidewalks suitable for the kind of civic promenade that Burnham associated with civilized urban life.[13]

The plan's civic center proposal called for a formal plaza to be located near the intersection of Market Street and Van Ness Avenue, surrounded by monumental government and cultural buildings executed in neoclassical style. Libraries, opera houses, courts, and municipal offices were to be grouped around this central space, creating a concentrated district of public institutions that would serve as the symbolic heart of the city. Burnham drew explicitly on the example of the World's Columbian Exposition's Court of Honor, arguing that the clustering of public buildings around a formal open space was both aesthetically superior to scattering them across the city and practically more efficient for citizens conducting public business.[14] The proposed civic center was to be linked to the waterfront and to the major residential districts by the diagonal boulevard system, so that the seat of municipal government would be accessible from every quarter of the city without requiring transit passengers to transfer between multiple lines.

The park and open space component of the plan was equally ambitious. Burnham proposed a large new park in what is now the Sunset District—then largely undeveloped sand dunes—along with parkways running along the waterfront, a scenic drive around the perimeter of the peninsula, and a network of smaller neighborhood parks connected by planted boulevards. The city's major hills—Twin Peaks, Nob Hill, Russian Hill, and Telegraph Hill—were to be preserved and enhanced as public open spaces, with radiating avenues designed to frame views toward these topographic landmarks and toward the Bay and the Golden Gate. The scenic perimeter drive was to run from the northern waterfront, around the tip of the peninsula, and south along the ocean beaches to a large new park at the southern edge of the city. This integration of natural topography into the formal structure of the plan was one of Burnham's most consistently praised ideas and remains visible in the priority that subsequent San Francisco planning documents have placed on view corridor preservation.[15]

Transportation was central to the plan's logic from the outset. The diagonal avenues were intended not merely as aesthetic features but as functional corridors for streetcars and other forms of public transit, which Burnham expected would carry the bulk of the city's passengers. The plan called for transit lines to be integrated into the boulevard system so that transportation infrastructure would reinforce rather than conflict with the broader composition of urban space. This integrated approach to land use and transit—treating them as inseparable design problems rather than separate engineering tasks—anticipated principles that became standard in twentieth-century planning practice, even though San Francisco itself never built the boulevard system that would have embodied them.[16]

The 1906 Earthquake and the Plan's Fate

The massive earthquake of April 18, 1906, and the fires that burned for three days afterward destroyed an estimated 28,000 buildings across approximately 490 city blocks, representing the near-total destruction of San Francisco's built downtown and many of its residential neighborhoods.[17] The scale of the destruction was extraordinary. It cleared, at least temporarily, precisely the kind of land that Burnham's diagonal avenues would have required. Burnham returned to San Francisco within weeks of the disaster and publicly argued that the city now had a rare opportunity to rebuild according to the 1905 plan rather than simply restoring what had been lost. "Make no little plans," he is widely quoted as having said—an aphorism whose precise origin is disputed by historians but whose sentiment accurately captured his position in 1906.[18]

Burnham formally re-presented his comprehensive plan to San Francisco authorities in the weeks following the earthquake. He and civic allies including Phelan argued that the disaster, however catastrophic, had created a once-in-a-generation chance to impose rational order on a city that had grown haphazardly across difficult terrain. Mayor Eugene Schmitz's administration and the city's Board of Supervisors were initially receptive. A Committee on Reconstruction was convened, and for a brief period in May and June 1906 it appeared that at least the diagonal avenue system might be adopted as the framework for rebuilding.[19]

The window closed quickly. Private reconstruction began almost immediately after the fires were extinguished. Property owners, who held clear title to their lots, began rebuilding on existing alignments without waiting for any official guidance from the city. Within weeks, physical structures were rising on the old street grid, creating facts on the ground that made wholesale realignment progressively more expensive and legally complex. The city lacked both the legal authority to compel landowners to delay rebuilding while new street patterns were established and the financial capacity to compensate them for the property that diagonal avenues would have consumed. No emergency planning legislation was enacted to create that authority, and neither state nor federal government offered reconstruction funding conditioned on adherence to a new plan.[20]

The speed of private reconstruction was perhaps the most decisive factor in the plan's failure. Insurance payments and relief funds flowed directly to property owners rather than into any municipal reconstruction account that could have been directed toward acquiring new rights

  1. Burnham, Daniel H. and Edward H. Bennett. Report on a Plan for San Francisco. 1905. San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library.
  2. Hines, Thomas S. Burnham of Chicago: Architect and Planner. University of Chicago Press, 1979.
  3. Reps, John W. The Making of Urban America: A History of City Planning in the United States. Princeton University Press, 1965.
  4. Wilson, William H. The City Beautiful Movement. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989.
  5. Kahn, Judd. Imperial San Francisco: Politics and Planning in an American City, 1897–1906. University of Nebraska Press, 1979.
  6. Kahn, Judd. Imperial San Francisco: Politics and Planning in an American City, 1897–1906. University of Nebraska Press, 1979.
  7. Kahn, Judd. Imperial San Francisco: Politics and Planning in an American City, 1897–1906. University of Nebraska Press, 1979.
  8. Hines, Thomas S. Burnham of Chicago: Architect and Planner. University of Chicago Press, 1979.
  9. Moore, Charles. Daniel H. Burnham: Architect, Planner of Cities. Houghton Mifflin, 1921.
  10. Moore, Charles. Daniel H. Burnham: Architect, Planner of Cities. Houghton Mifflin, 1921.
  11. Kahn, Judd. Imperial San Francisco: Politics and Planning in an American City, 1897–1906. University of Nebraska Press, 1979.
  12. Wilson, William H. The City Beautiful Movement. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989.
  13. Burnham, Daniel H. and Edward H. Bennett. Report on a Plan for San Francisco. 1905. San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library.
  14. Scott, Mel. American City Planning Since 1890. University of California Press, 1969.
  15. Reps, John W. The Making of Urban America: A History of City Planning in the United States. Princeton University Press, 1965.
  16. Scott, Mel. American City Planning Since 1890. University of California Press, 1969.
  17. Template:Cite web
  18. Hines, Thomas S. Burnham of Chicago: Architect and Planner. University of Chicago Press, 1979.
  19. Kahn, Judd. Imperial San Francisco: Politics and Planning in an American City, 1897–1906. University of Nebraska Press, 1979.
  20. Scott, Mel. American City Planning Since 1890. University of California Press, 1969.