Sheraton Hotel
at San Francisco's
Fisherman's Wharf

Project
Highlights

This $84 million project was designed, developed, owned, and built by Chanen. The hotel was constructed using innovative structural engineering concepts tested during the 1989 earthquake. Since the hotel escaped the tragic earthquake virtually unscathed, the added cost of structural stability proved to be a prudent investment. The hotel, located near several landmarks in San Francisco, California, consists of 525 rooms, seven suites, and 10,000 s.f. of meeting rooms - including a 4,813 s.f. ballroom. Pedestrian bridges connect the four separate buildings at each level. The hotel was rated by Sheraton Hotels (Starwood) as the highest average annual occupancy property in the Sheraton system for more than ten years running.
Project Facts
Sheraton Hotels Distinction : Highest average annual occupancy property
Pedestrian Bridges: 4
Conference Center Square Feet: 10,000
Number of Rooms: 525
Project Cost: $84 Million
Testimonials
The added safety that this new tile will afford the casino will show in the lessening of slips and falls and employee injuries...thanks again for the quick, professional, and safe way that this project came off.
Casino Client - Kitchen Remodel
Chanen has been very professional and responsive to staff concerns with various applications that have been through this office.
Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community - Manager Planning & Architectural Services
Their professionalism, attention to detail, and quality and cost-saving measures certainly produce happy clients and make all of us look good.
DWL Architects - President
Let's get
to work
The team at Chanen Construction has never been stronger, and we bring our exceptional skills, experience and commitment to quality to every project. Though our talented employees come from diverse educational and technical backgrounds, they share common traits – working hard to meet or exceed client expectations, paying attention to detail, and showing integrity in all they do. That’s The Chanen Way.