San Francisco Botanical Gardens - San Francisco, California

San Francisco Botanical Gardens - San Francisco, California

San Francisco Botanical Gardens - San Francisco, California

Facility Address 1199 9th Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94117
Hours of Operation Open Daily at 7:30 am
The Garden closes one hour after last entry; Last entry changes seasonally
Spring & Summer Last Entry: 2nd Sunday in March - September: 6 pm
Fall & Winter Last Entry: October - Early November: 5 pm
1st Sunday in November - January: 4 pm
February - 2nd Saturday in March: 5 pm

Garden Bookstore and Plant Shop: Open Daily, 10am-4pm
Closed on Federal Holidays

​The Helen Crocker Russell Library of Horticulture: Open Daily except Thursday, 10 am-4 pm
Closed on Federal Holidays
Contact Admin - Information
Website http://www.sfbotanicalgarden.org
Phone (415) 661-1316
Email info@sfbg.org

About the Garden
San Francisco Botanical Garden, one of the most diverse gardens in the world. The Botanical Garden is a living museum within Golden Gate Park, offering 55 acres of both landscaped gardens and open spaces, showcasing over 8,000 different kinds of plants from around the world.

The Bay Area's mild temperatures, wet winters and dry summers, coupled with San Francisco's famous coastal fog, provide a range of climatic conditions that exist in few other botanical gardens in the world. These unique conditions allow it to grow and conserve plants from all over the globe, including plants that are no longer found in their native habitats.

With its unique microclimate, San Francisco Botanical Garden is able to recreate conditions of the high elevation tropical cloud forests of Central and South America and Southeast Asia. Rare high elevation palms as well as plants from New Zealand and temperate Asia also thrive here. Largely due to these natural advantages, San Francisco Botanical Garden is known for its unique, diverse and significant botanical collections. The extensive Magnolia collection, for example, attracting visitors with its dazzling display of winter flowers, is recognized as the world's fourth most significant collection of Magnolia for conservation purposes, and the most important outside China, where a majority of Magnolia species are found.

About the Camellia Collection
Total number of camellia plants:  615
Number of distinct camellia cultivars or species: 336