Tag Archives: Arcuitecture

Au Revoir McAllister House

13 Sep 1347 McAllister Street

Finally after a whole month of hard work looking for a new place to live and emptying the castle I am leaving behind, I have some time to catch up with my blog.

“It’s not surprising that legends swirl around apartment houses designed by James Francis Dunn. With their undulating, cloudlike facades and lion-headed brackets, his buildings are among the most picturesque and provocative in San Francisco, and the most redolent of the grand boulevards of Paris.” (SF Chronicle)

1347 McAllister Street

Two and a half years ago, I arrived to one of Francis Dunn’s houses in search of a new home in San Francisco, and life gave me the opportunity to inhabit such. The McAllister House, one block North from Alamo Square saw me coming as a young woman named Cristina, and this week sees me leaving as a much more mature woman: Isabel. Great changes took place under the influence of French Renaissance architecture.

“The sinuous, wrought-iron balconies on 1347 McAllister St., it is said, were copied after the boxes inside the Paris Opera. Dunn’s client hoped to please a beautiful diva. When she dropped the love-sick swain, the story continues, in fury he turned the place into a bordello.”

Guardians of our dreams

“A Dunn building is likely to have curves everywhere — in bay windows, wrought-iron balconies that often integrate the fire escape into their designs, and window mullions. Decorative detail abounds — cartouches, shields, drips of all sorts, women’s faces, bearded men’s heads, eagles or phoenixes holding up balconies and cornices.

Gaudi Inspired Entrance

Many of Dunn’s buildings have a broad, heavily ornamented cornice at the top — and another above the first floor, to set off the building’s entry from its living floors.

“Weirdo,” an architectural surveyor for the Junior League wrote in 1977 about one Dunn building. “Especially the lions’ heads.”

But fans don’t agree. What sounds on paper like excess comes across in reality as stunning, thanks to Dunn’s compositional skills and taste.”

Living in a Dunn’s building was an honor. Amazing views from the living room also known as the hall of mirrors made each gathering in this space celebratory. The oval windows witnessed everyone’s story.

Hall of Mirrors

Many times when leaving the house, I saw travelers taking pictures of the façade, and once they saw me they would say: “we are taking pictures of your house”. Well, not any more, but at least it was so for a while.

Walking the steep stairs reminded me of my muscles, and always made me aware of the grandness (and sacrifice) of living in a house with high ceilings.

The interior of the house is filled with beautiful plaster ornaments such as a big start surrounding a chandelier, wooden details around the stairs, etc.

A chandelier detail that witnessed my dreams for seven months

Who said that designing from the inside out was a new concept? Dunn practiced such concept with rooms opened to the outside world, such as the living room and the guest area which point toward City Hall.

Guest area opening towards flower deck: home of wasps, roses, tomatoes and many friends.

Dunn was “born and raised in a working-class, largely Irish South of Market neighborhood by a widowed mother, he was self-taught as an architect — but remarkably well taught. He mastered Parisian architecture by studying the latest journals. In later years he traveled throughout the United States, and probably in France, and his work was always up to date, reflecting current trends in New York and Paris.”

1347 McAllister was finished in 1902 and says au revoir to my life in 2010. Now I must seek new inspiration in the vibrant neighborhood of the Mission.

More information about James Francis Dunn’s architecture and buildings around San Francisco at San Francisco Chronicle’ French Connection article.

Studio 101 Designs

6 Aug Simple

Who said that Facebook is a waste of time?

Through Facebook, I have kept in touch with people from whom I have learned either at work, school or life.

Two days ago, I saw a link update by Andrew Faust, my former Team Manager at Michelle Kaufmann Designs (MKD). I was excited to read in his link about a new Bay Area Design firm Studio 101 Designs.

Studio 101 Designs holds the view that the places we live should be useful and functional, beautiful, and durable. These are principles laid out by Vitruvius 2,000 years ago which have guided architects ever since.”

Studio 101 Designs is formed by former MKD Director of  Architecture Scott Landry (President), and former MKD Project Managers Andrew Faust (Project Architect) and James Kean (Design Lead/ Project Manager).

Scott Landry, Andrew Faust, James Kean

According to Studio 101 Designs, they “choose to focus on making buildings that not only aspire to the Vitruvian ideal, but also minimize consumption of resources, time, and energy, both during and after construction … to design efficient, simple spaces that accommodate multiple uses wherever possible, using materials, methods, and forms that minimize life cycle cost.”

Studio 101 offers designs in both prefabricated modular architecture as well as custom site-built homes. Their experience includes years working and maintaining a relationship with Michelle Kaufmann and preserving partnerships with factories such as Blazer Industries.

Their philosophy is: “do more with less.”

Looking forward to seeing more of their work in the upcoming years and seeing more simple, sustainable, well thought out designs out there.

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