Public Art/Mural Program

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Public Art/Mural Program

Keep Pacifica Beautiful Through Public Art Program

Public art contributes to the overall vitality of a community.  Public art, including murals, stimulates creativity, imagination and adds a unique human quality to the community environment and enriches public spaces.  The City's "Keep Pacifica Beautiful Through Public Art Program" focuses on soliciting for and implementing durable art projects at City-owned locations.  The program works on a sponsorship model, in which interested community groups, businesses, neighborhoods, or individuals sponsor public art and/or murals in public areas.

More information about the program and the application form can be found under the Documents & Items of Interest and Reports & Resolutions tabs to the left of the main Beautification Advisory Committee page.

 

Public Art/Mural Projects

CURRENT PROJECTS:

Sharp Park Pump Station on Montecito Ave. Mural

 

Beautification Advisory Committee May 7, 2026 Notice of Hearing on Proposed Public Art - Mural

OFFICIAL NOTICE PDF:   Beautification Advisory Committee May 7, 2026 Notice of Hearing on Proposed Public Art - Mural

 

Background:

Peter Bogdanov, artist and owner of Liquid Walls, was selected to paint a mural on the Sharp Park Pump Station on Montecito between Beach and Palmetto by the Wastewater Division of the Public Works Department of the City of Pacifica.  They have applied to the City of Pacifica, via application guidelines instituted by the Beautification Advisory Committee, to create a mural at the Sharp Park Pump Station.  The proposed mural would be 15 feet tall and 105 feet long featuring a large octopus stretching its tentacles towards the Pacific ocean.

 

More information can be found here:

 Sharp Park Pump House Project Description

Liquid Walls Proposal

 

PAST PROJECTS:

 

"Splash of Color" Mural

For an information write-up of this mural on Oceana Boulevard, please click: hereEurekaSquareMuralConceptDesign

BAC Mural 1

 BAC Mural 2

  

BAC Mural 3

BAC Mural 4

 

 BAC Mural 5

BAC Mural 7

 

"Unity Project/Four Directions" Mural

 

For more information abut the "Unity Project/Four Directions Mural"  installed at the Linda Mar Beach Restrooms (Anza Pump Station), please follow this link: "Unity Project / Four Directions Mural"

Unity South Wall

 

 

Mural Commemorating the 250th Anniversary of the Portolá Expedition

The mural at the Pacifica Community Center is the first project following the passage of the new “Keep Pacifica Beautiful Through Public Art Program,” developed by the Beautification Advisory Committee (BAC) and approved by the City Council.

On November 2, 2019, the City of Pacifica, in partnership with San Mateo County, the National Park Service at the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and other agencies, met to commemorate “Ohlone-Portolá Heritage Day,” a story of two people -- the indigenous population and their culture, and the arrival of the Spanish colonists. It was on November 4, 1769, that Spanish captain Gaspar de Portola and his men first sighted San Francisco Bay, a defining event in California history, and one that has been recognized in Pacifica for decades.

The research for the mural’s content, by local Pacifica muralist, Jeffrey Wong,  included review of written documents and conversation with Dr. Jonathan Cordero, chairman of the Association of Ramaytush Ohlone and one of the last descendants of Ramaytush Ohlone, who resided along Calera Creek in the Rockaway quarry area.

The mural depicts the abundance and natural beauty of the area that had been sustainably managed by the Ramaytush-Ohlone for centuries, and a time when two cultures came together peacefully.

Example of the Mural:

 Portola Mural 1

The theme of the mural is in recognition of the 250th year sighting of San Francisco Bay by Spanish explorers in November 1769, which depicts the natural lush beauty and richness of wildlife in the area that was documented by the diarists on the expedition. An ill Spanish explorer is aided by others making the journey and those they meet, the indigenous Ramaytush Ohlone people, who helped the famished foot soldiers that were suffering from scurvy.

 Portola Mural 2

This mural is separate piece that depicts an indigenous person in a canoe with spirit animals around the person. This mural may also be painted, depending on space availability.

Further Information About the Mural and the 250th Anniversary Event and the Ramaytush Ohlone People