With construction spanning over a decade and led by Chief Engineer of the State Harbor Commission, Frank G. White, Piers 1, 1½, 3 and 5, were opened in 1918. Unlike the piers south of the
Ferry Building that were designed in the
Mission and
Gothic Revival styles, the piers north of the Ferry Building were built in the
Beaux-Arts architecture style, similar to
New York City's
Chelsea Piers. The timber-frame bulkhead buildings, covered in
stucco, are each two stories high, punctuated by two-story arches. Behind these formal building are the areas more closely associated with the functioning of the port—the piers and transit sheds. Concrete or timber piers extend east behind the bulkhead buildings, connected to the system of
wharves upon which the bulkhead buildings rest. Steel
truss and timber-frame buildings, accommodating the loading and unloading of ships are built upon the piers, with open aprons for circulation. ==Early history==