Gingerbread monolith appears, then collapses in San Francisco - Los Angeles Times
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Gingerbread monolith appears — then collapses — on San Francisco hilltop

A gingerbread monolith on a San Francisco hilltop was held together by icing.
(Karl Mondon / Bay Area News Group via Associated Press)
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In true pop-up-art fashion, a nearly 7-foot-tall monolith made of gingerbread mysteriously appeared on a San Francisco hilltop on Christmas Day and collapsed the next day.

The three-sided tower, held together by icing and decorated with a few gumdrops, delighted the city on Friday when word spread about its existence.

Ananda Sharma told KQED-FM that during his morning run he climbed to Corona Heights Park to see the sunrise when he spotted what he thought was a big post. He said he smelled the scent of gingerbread before realizing what it was.

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“It made me smile,†he said. “I wonder who did it, and when they put it there.â€

People trekked to the park throughout the day, even as light rain fell on the ephemeral, edible art object. In one video posted online, someone took a bite of the gingerbread.

Phil Ginsburg, head of city’s Recreation and Parks Department, told KQED the site looked “like a great spot to get baked†and confirmed his staff would not remove the monument “until the cookie crumbles.â€

It did by Saturday morning, a fitting end to what was surely an homage to the discovery and swift disappearance of a shining metal monolith in Utah‘s red-rock desert last month. It became a subject of fascination around the world as it evoked the movie “2001: A Space Odyssey†and drew speculation about its otherworldly origins.

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The still-anonymous creator of the Utah monument did not secure permission to plant the hollow, stainless steel object on public land.

A similar metal structure was found and quickly disappeared on a hill in northern Romania. Days later, another monolith was discovered at the pinnacle of a trail in Atascadero, Calif., but it was later dismantled by a group of young men, city officials said.

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