![]() Turning left you will pass some phone rooms intended for phone calls, a flight help desk, and then a long booth wtih tables and chairs on one side and more chairs on the other side.īeyond that is another large room with a Polaris-shaped couch and more seating. Upstairs (accessible via escalator and elevator) you can turn left toward seating or right toward the bar, buffet, and restaurant. In fact, during my last visit it was empty downstairs: Your credentials are scanned at the entrance and you can head upstairs to the main lounge or remain downstairs which always tends to be quiet. ![]() The layout of the lounge has not changed. If you are traveling the opposite direction, you would have access at both LAX and SFO if traveling on United but only SFO if traveling on Lufthansa. If you are traveling in Lufthansa Business Class (or First Class) from Frankfurt to San Francisco then connecting in United First to Los Angeles, you will not have access in either city. If you are traveling from Frankfurt to San Francisco to Los Angeles on United Airlines with the Frankfurt – San Francisco flight in Polaris, you will have Polaris Lounge access in both San Francisco and upon arrival in Los Angeles. Perhaps an example will best illustrate this. The exception to the rule is for United Polaris Business Class passengers, who can enjoy this lounge if connecting or upon arrival as part of their same-day United-operated Polaris itinerary. To access this lounge, you will need to a same-day longhaul business class ticket on a Star Alliance carrier departing from SFO. It is open daily from 6:30 am to 10:30 pm. ![]() If coming from Terminal 3, proceed down the hallway (past the American Express Centurion Lounge) and then up the escalator. You’ll find the lounge in International Terminal G. She has works in private collections in New York City, Phoenix, Los Angeles, Sweden, and Australia.This review encompasses three recent visits to the lounge as recently as earlier this month. In her overall experience, she has created over fifteen album covers for musical recording artists, numerous print designs for film and television, and exhibited throughout galleries primarily across the United States. Among Ellie’s creative achievements are large-scale installation public artworks including commissions of two 3-D collage murals for the San Francisco offices of Meta/Facebook, a permanent public art vehicle bus wrap for The City of West Hollywood, and an 11-room temporary public art installation series for Hong Kong Times Square, among other projects. The end result depicts eyecatching surrealist and psychedelic dream-worlds which encourage peace, self-care, mindfulness and harmony within all creatures and the planet. She often incorporates and adheres hand-painted and hand-cut 3-D collage into the design. Once the analog printmaking is complete, Ellie works digitally to reproduce artworks on paper to large-scale murals for final installation. Viewers are enticed to get up close and personal, while their eyes are traveling through various color fields and visual textures to feel immersed with a dreamy, contemplative or escapist experience. The flow within her paintings creates a space where the viewer’s mind can truly wander. She combines traditional marbling methods with her own innovative and meditative techniques, utilizing the concepts of intuitive automatic painting. Her process involves capturing swirled, kaleidoscopic colors and intricately designed patterns painted from an aqueous surface transferred onto paper or fabric. ![]() Danielle Garza, who also goes by the moniker "Ellierex" is a Los Angeles-based mixed media artist, muralist, and avid practitioner in the art of paper marbling printmaking. ![]()
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