Philosopher's Way, San Francisco is a 2.7-mile (4.3 km) loop trail around the perimeter of John McLaren Park created by artists Peter Richards and Susan Schwartzenberg,[1][2] staff artists at the Exploratorium.[3][4] The trail, dedicated on January 5, 2013,[5] is the first and only path built for philosophers in the United States[6] and features fourteen stone markers by mason George Gonzalez intended as "musing stations" to stimulate contemplation.[1][5] The US$146,000 (equivalent to $191,000 in 2023) trail was funded as a public art set-aside by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, and offers views of Mount Diablo, Mount Tamalpais, Angel Island, and the Pacific Ocean on a clear day.[5]
Design and history
Selected through a competitive process in 2008, Richards and Schwartzenberg were inspired by the philosopher's walks found in other major cities such as Heidelberg, Toronto and Kyoto.[7][8] According to the artists, “these are places where poets, philosophers and intellectuals strolled through in conversation, considering the ideas of their times.”[8]
The path was laid out by Richards and Schwartzenberg along existing park trails and new trails added by city agencies and volunteers.[7] During their research, the artists noted that regular park users would only stick to a small portion of the park, hampered in part by poor pedestrian access with no contiguous trail.[6] The trails and musing stations were designed to prompt walkers to notice and think about the local landscape and their place within it.[7][8] Some of the stations provide commentary, while others draw attention to the park's physical attributes.[8] For example, one station features a bench positioned to look out over a meadow to the ocean, and another includes a stone bowl that catches runoff from the surrounding hills.[8][9][10] Richards shaped the bowl from a hexagonal column basalt rock taken from Washington state.[7]
George Gonzalez created the musing stations from rough-edged Sierra granite, using surplus city curbstones warehoused in nearby Hunters Point.[7] Some of the stations include:[7]
An overview of Philosopher's Way featuring a map of McLaren Park[11]
A July 1929 photograph of a Visitacion Valley family visiting now-lost Sandy Beach, with a quotation from Esther Salomon[12]
A photograph of native grasses, with a quotation from Kirra Swenerton[13]