Sather Gate

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Sather Gate and Bridge
File:Sather Gate.Jpg
Sather Gate in October 2006
Location University of California campus in Berkeley
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Area 0.2 acres (0.081 ha)
Built 1910
Architect John Galen Howard
Architectural style Classical Revival-Beaux-Arts
MPS Berkeley, University of California MRA
NRHP Reference # 82004649[1]
BERKL # 157
Significant dates
Added to NRHP March 25, 1982
Designated BERKL February 25, 1991[2]

Sather Gate is a prominent landmark separating Sproul Plaza from the bridge over Strawberry Creek, leading to the center of the University of California, Berkeley campus. The gate was donated by Jane K. Sather, a benefactor of the university, in memory of her late husband Peder Sather, a trustee of the College of California, which later became the University of California. It is California Historical Landmark No. 946[3] and No. 82004649 in the National Register of Historic Places.

History

File:Sather Gate under renovation 11-22-08.JPG
Sather Gate with its metalwork removed in November 2008

Designed by John Galen Howard and built by Giovanni "John" Meneghetti in the Classical Revival Beaux-Arts style, Sather Gate was completed in 1910. Atop the gate are eight panels of bas-relief figures: four nude men representing the disciplines of law, letters, medicine, and mining, and four nude women representing the disciplines of agriculture, architecture, art, and electricity. They were sculpted by Professor Earl Cummins.

Originally, the gate served as the terminus of Telegraph Avenue, and marked the University's south entrance. (The circle in front of the gate served as a turning point for the trolleys coming from Oakland.) The University later expanded further south of Strawberry Creek, and the gate is now well separated from Berkeley's city streets by Sproul Plaza.

Sather Gate has undergone restoration beginning in October 2008 that focused on its bronze and steel metal work, which had deteriorated over time. During its restoration it remained open to pedestrian and vehicular traffic.[4] Restoration of Sather Gate was completed in April 2009. Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc., coordinated the restoration of Sather Gate; a 2010 Design Award recipient from the California Preservation Foundation.[5]

References

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