San Francisco’s favorite crooner, Tony Bennett, turned 90 Wednesday and planned to celebrate in New York with a celeb-filled party at 30 Rockefeller Plaza and an Empire State Building light show synced up to his songs, according to ABC News.

But star-studded soirees are fleeting. Bronze is forever.

That honor will come Aug. 19, when an 8-foot-tall statue of Bennett will be unveiled outside the Fairmont San Francisco atop Nob Hill — where Bennett first publicly sang his trademark “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” in 1961 in the hotel’s Venetian Room. The public is invited to attend the ceremony.

That night, the San Francisco Giants will celebrate Tony Bennett Day before and during their game with the Mets at AT&T Park. And an Aug. 20 dinner and concert in the Venetian will benefit the Tony Bennett Fund for Emergency Pediatric Care at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital.

He’s getting his own ice cream flavor too, a “Duet” created by the city’s Humphry Slocombe. In honor of his Italian heritage, it’s vanilla ice cream swirled with limoncello sorbet and fennel biscotti.

What’s next for his fans? Bennett tells Billboard that’s he talking with pal Lady Gaga, his 2014 “Cheek to Cheek” collaborator, about doing a second album together. And he, Gaga, Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, Elton John and Billy Joel are taping a TV special for NBC, “Tony Bennett Celebrates 90: The Best Is Yet to Come,” which will air Dec. 20.