Finally visiting Salesforce Park in San Francisco

The last outing of 2025 took me (and the whole family) back to San Francisco. While the others went to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, I visited one of the city’s biggest attractions for horticultural nerds: Salesforce Park. It’s hard to believe, but it took seven years for me to finally make it there (it opened in 2018)!

As has become our custom, we parked at the Richmond Ferry Terminal and took the San Francisco Bay Ferry:

San Francisco Bay Ferry docked at the Richmond Ferry Terminal

The 35-minute ferry ride offers panoramic views of San Francisco and beyond. We were lucky; we had both dramatic clouds and even a bit of sun:

View of downtown San Francisco from the ferry

Salesforce Park is located on top of the Salesforce Transit Center right next to Salesforce Tower:

View from the Ferry Terminal

At 1,070 ft, the 61-story Salesforce Tower is the tallest building in San Francisco and the second tallest in California (and west of the Mississippi). It was completed in 2018 for $1.1 billion as part of the Transbay development and named Salesforce Tower after its main tenant, cloud-based software company Salesforce, which signed a 15.5-year lease valued at around $560 million. Separately, Salesforce paid $110 million for the 25-year naming rights for the Salesforce Transit Center and Salesforce Park. These dollar amounts are crazy, I know.

Salesforce Tower

The Salesforce Transit Center is the primary bus terminal for San Francisco, connecting transit systems throughout the Bay Area. The 1.5 million sq.ft. structure cost a staggering $2.2 billion (that's in addition to the $1.1 billion for the construction of Salesforce Tower), but it completely revitalized the East Cut, transforming it from a historic industrial area into a vibrant neighborhood with high-rise residential and commercial towers that are home to many tech companies.


I got my first peak of Salesforce Park from the street level:


The outer skin is white aluminum

Encompassing 5.4 acres and built at a cost of $33 million, Salesforce Park was envisioned as a living roof that would provide ecological benefits to the dense urban core while serving as a public garden. Elevated 70 ft above street level, it’s organized into 13 distinct areas, representing a diverse collection of Mediterranean-climate plants from around the world. These include small gardens dedicated to the world’s five Mediterranean climate zones: the Mediterranean Basin, the California Floristic Province, Central Chile, the Cape Region of South Africa, and (South)western Australia. The park is home to over 600 trees (~50 species) and 16,000 plants (~230 species) and, according to the official Garden Guide, allows visitors to “appreciate the climatic conditions and environments from drought to fog, desert to forest that exist in California.”

Aerial view. Photo © San Francisco | The Official Guide.

The soil composition and drainage systems are central to the park’s technical success. Because the garden sits atop the Transit Center, a lightweight engineered soil is used to minimize the structural load while providing necessary nutrients and moisture retention. The green roof ecosystem helps with stormwater management, contributes to carbon sequestration, and ameliorates urban heat island effects. Graywater from the Transit Center is treated and recycled to irrigate the plantings, creating a sustainable infrastructure.

As you can see on the map above, the 13 distinct gardens are connected by a 0.6-mile loop trail, which takes about ½ hour to complete. But that’s without stopping. It took me significantly longer. In fact, I ended up spending a good three hours at Salesforce Park, looping around three times. I took a lot of photos, and even though I edited them down as much as I could, there are still quite a few for you to look at.

While individual plants aren’t labeled, there are quite a few interpretive signs with useful information. Many of the plant IDs below are from this garden guide.

Overview of Mediterranean gardens of the world

Prehistoric Garden plaque

Tree ferns (Dicksonia antartica) and monkey puzzle trees (Araucaria araucana)

Monkey Puzzle Tree plaque

Monkey puzzle tree (Araucaria araucana)

Monkey puzzle tree (Araucaria araucana)

Monkey puzzle tree (Araucaria araucana)

To my relief, the holiday lighting wasn’t in your face

This is what perfectly maintained bamboo looks like

Phyllostachys bambusoides

A ring of Puya coerulea around the central skylight above the Grand Hall below

Puya coerulea

Salesforce Tower with mayten tree (Maytenus boaria)

Australian Garden plaque

Australian grass tree (Xanthorrhoea preissii)

Queensland bottle tree (Brachychiton rupestris)

Macrozamia sp.

Macrozamia sp.

Cape Floral Region plaque

Mountain cabbage tree (Cussonia paniculata) and silver tree (Leucadendron argenteum)

What I wouldn’t give to be able to grow a Leucadendron argenteum that looks like this!

Leucadendron argenteum foliage

South African Garden plaque

Leucospermum ‘Blanche Ito’

Leucospermum flower

Leucospermum ‘Veldfire’

Leucospermum ‘Veldfire’

Leucospermum ‘Veldfire’

Leucospermum ‘Veldfire’

Featherhead (Phylica pubescens)

Reminder that you’re in an urban center

Palm Garden plaque

Hybrid California fan palms (Washingtonia robusta × filifera) and Norfolk Island pine (Araucaria heterophylla), often sold as a living Christmas tree in California

Wider view

High rises all around, making for a dramatic setting

Hybrid California fan palms (Washingtonia robusta × filifera) and Mediterranean fan palms (Chamaerops humilis)

Chilean wine palm (Jubaea chilensis)

Chilean wine palm (Jubaea chilensis) and Salesforce Tower

It takes a certain kind of person to be able to do this job. Check out this video to see what it’s like to be a window washer.

Cordyline ‘Soledad’ (left) and Acacia cognata ‘Cousin Itt’ (right)

Aloe plaque

The Desert Garden has two parts: aloes and other Old World plants on one side, and agaves, cacti, and other New World plants on the other. While the aloe selection isn’t large, it’s still more varied than I had expected, seeing how the often chilly climate of San Francisco isn’t exactly what aloes want to thrive.

Aloe tongaensis

Aloe tongaensis

Aloe tongaensis base

New branch forming on Aloe tongaensis

Aloe thraskii and another Aloe tongaensis

Large concrete planter with fan aloes (Kumara plicatilis)

Fan aloes (Kumara plicatilis)

Agave plaque

Concrete planter with Agave attenuata mirroring the Kumara plicatilis planter above

Agave ovatifolia framed by striking San Pedro cactus (Echinopsis pachinoi). I don’t really know why the cacti are so yellow, but the contrast with the steely blue agave is fantastic.

Agave ovatifolia and Echinopsis pachinoi

Canary Island dragon tree (Dracaena draco) and Grevillea ‘Moonlight’. I don’t know why there’s a grevillea in the “Desert Garden,” but who cares.

Some random snaps:



California Garden:

California buckeye (Aesculus californica) and strawberry tree (Arbutus ‘Marina’)

California buckeye (Aesculus californica) and strawberry tree (Arbutus ‘Marina’)

California buckeye (Aesculus californica) makes a striking outdoor Christmas tree

Barebottle Beer Garden

Walkable glass floor, the largest of its kind in the US

Australian tree fern (Cyathea cooperi, now Sphaeropteris cooperi) hanging over the glass wall along the Bus Fountain

The Bus Fountain is a 1,200 ft long interactive water feature on the north side of the park. It consists of 247 water jets along a linear pathway of white and gray granite. The jets — their frequency, motion, and height — are triggered by the movement of buses arriving and departing in the transit center at the lower levels. According to its creator, artist Ned Kahn, “The fountain is like a huge musical instrument that is played by the bus drivers.”

Ned Kahn’s Bus Fountain

Finally, the strangest view in the entire park:


I was very puzzled, but then I started to put two and two together...


...especially after seeing this leaf:


These bizarre-looking stumps are Gunnera manicata, cut back for the winter. Known as giant rhubarb (although not related to edible rhubarb) or dinosaur food, this water-loving Brazilian native is one of the world’s largest herbaceous perennials. Its leaves can grow to 8 ft across. I want to go back in the summer when the gunnera is at its peak — this summer, not in seven years!

The stats for Salesforce Park are stunning: the location, the intricacy, the cost. Not many cities would have been able to pull off a project of this magnitude. I’m glad that San Francisco did, and that I’m able to visit any time I want.

There are a lot of articles, blog posts, and images of Salesforce Park out there, but a video often captures the essence of a place better than anything else. This is a good video of a walk through Salesforce Park. And here is jaw-dropping drone footage of this part of San Francisco; if you want to see just the park, go to the 2:28 mark.

Just as we were getting ready to take the ferry back to Richmond, the sun came out, illuminating the Bay Bridge — an auspicious ending to a great outing.

Bay Bridge from the San Francisco Ferry Terminal, with the Richmond ferry on the left

Salesforce Park is at 425 Mission Street. It’s open daily from 6 am to 8 pm (9 pm in the summer). To get to the park from the street level, you can use one of the four main elevators or ride in style by taking the free gondola from Salesforce Plaza located at the southwest corner of Mission and Fremont. I was looking forward to riding the gondola, but it wasn’t in operation when I arrived, and later on the lines were too long. Next time!


© Gerhard Bock, 2026. All rights reserved. To receive all new posts by email, please subscribe here.

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