What Kind of House Do You Live In?
By Christopher Radcool Reynolds
Design is like a time capsule. It captures the aspirations of the moment during which it was made. I’m obsessed with historic design because it tells a visual story of our human experience.If you know what to look for, you can see the story of San Francisco in its homes. In the earliest styles, you can see the growth of the city from a scrubby frontier settlement into a cosmopolitan city. Every era had its own look. Turn of the century aesthetics show SF’s struggle with the advancements and losses of Industrialization. During the last century, change happened crazy fast. And modernist design reflects technological and social upheavals that transformed the city’s cultural and actual landscape.
Here are the architectural styles of San Francisco homes. What type of house do you live in?
When the speculators of the gold rush arrived in 1849 the look of the
day was Italianate, a movement that tried to recreate the look of the
farmhouses and villas of the Italian countryside. The main decorations
of these homes are the brackets at the roofline and the hoods over the
window and doors.
SF's earliest Italianates were just flat-fronted boxes, like the buildings you’d see in old western towns, which the city really was at the time. As San Francisco and framing techniques became more sophisticated, multi-story octagonal bays become an important element of this style. Italianates were once ubiquitous, but most burned down in 1906.
Examples of Italianate homes remain west of Divisadero and south of 20th Street in the Mission.
SF's earliest Italianates were just flat-fronted boxes, like the buildings you’d see in old western towns, which the city really was at the time. As San Francisco and framing techniques became more sophisticated, multi-story octagonal bays become an important element of this style. Italianates were once ubiquitous, but most burned down in 1906.
Examples of Italianate homes remain west of Divisadero and south of 20th Street in the Mission.
San Francisco was once surrounded by ancient
old-growth forests. As the industrial revolution powered up, the city
was ready for a style that used its natural resources. Redwood forests
were reduced to two by fours. New framing practices made use of
standardized lumber. Homes began to feature more complicated facades and
rooflines. Once built, every imaginable surface was covered in bits of
machined trim to create geometric patterns.
“Stick,” the name given to this style, embodies a
tragic irony. Basically, the homes are built of and decorated with
sticks – starting from the ancient redwood forests and ending in a neat
forest of patterned homes.
Stick homes are common in neighborhoods that were
untouched by the 1906 fire, such as in the Western Addition, Noe and
Eureka Valleys, the Mission, and Potrero Hill.
In one hot second, San Francisco went from being a
faraway outpost to a world-class industrial city. Its denizens wanted to
show off all their new money with opulent houses. The designs were a
free-for-all, precious and pretty. Queen Anne homes are fanciful and
over the top. They feature countless combinations of bay windows,
turrets, and decorated rooflines. The trimming of these homes tends to
be feminine and flashy. Like the Painted Ladies on Alamo Square, they
are dripping in swags of flowers and shining with gold.
Extravagant examples of Queen Anne homes can be found in Ashbury Heights, Alamo Square, Cow Hollow, and Pacific Heights.
During the turn of the century, most of the Western
world wanted to see itself as a direct extension of ancient Rome. San
Franciscans, however, saw themselves as something new: modern.
San Franciscans had to work out the tension of being
ambassadors of Western culture while living in a modern world. Enter the
Edwardian home, where wives of industrialists could entertain in togas.
Though less opulent than earlier Queen Annes, the more masculinely
trimmed Edwardian houses borrow details from ancient temple
architecture. Edwardians had fewer interior walls and featured larger
“great rooms.”
Edwardian homes are highly concentrated in areas that
were rebuilt after the fire, such as in the south of Market, downtown,
and Mission neighborhoods.
Industrialization made San Franciscans face the harsh
reality of modern city life and romanticize the simple rural lives of
the city’s founders, the missionaries. Mission style was an attempt to
turn back time. It revived the look of Spanish missions, which had
little decoration on adobe and stucco facades.
Key elements of Mission style were reinterpreted
beginning in the late teens as 'Spanish Colonial', which is now the most
influential style in California. It was used by tract developers to
romanticize the western frontier. This nostalgia became an essential
marketing gimmick to sell homes to midwesterners who wanted a piece of
glamorous, sunny California.
Mission homes are found in Glen Park, the Sunset, the Richmond, outer Mission, and Noe Valley.
By the early 1900s, corporations and machines were
producing everything. People feared that traditional crafts were going
to be lost to assembly lines. The Craftsman home is not machined; it's
handmade by skilled craftsmen. The movement revived the trades
by inflating them to art status. The Craftsman-style home has no added
decoration. Instead, it champions the creation of a house into an art in
its own right.
The irony of this style is that the movement elevates
the status of handmade houses as being better than mass-produced houses.
But like today's artisanal and small-batch hipster culture, only the
rich could afford it.
Craftsman homes were built away from the city's
center. You'll find them in Glen Park, the Sunset, the Richmond, outer
Mission, and Noe Valley.
With a grip of steel and unchecked enthusiasm for
industry, the buildings of the 1920s scraped the sky. Art Deco houses
are heavily decorated in geometric patterns that play up verticality,
and give the illusion of a building vanishing into the sky. They feature
modern or machine-age materials such as chrome, glass, and steel. These
buildings are all about optimism and technology.
As an embodiment of capitalism, this style was mainly
used for commercial buildings, but a few Art Deco houses can be found
in Pacific Heights, the Sunset, Marina, and Sea Cliff.
As families came to California escaping the Dust Bowl,
developers had a big idea. They discovered they could make a ton of
money by buying up the tracts of land outside the city center and
building a multitude of nearly identical houses. For maximum profit,
common floor plans were repeated over and over like an assembly line.
The 1930s was the dawn of the subdivision trend that transformed the
entire American landscape.
Developers relied heavily on hype – The San Francisco Chronicle wrote
glowing articles about the new homes (while selling ad space to the
developers themselves). And ever-changing stylized facades or new models
helped keep the excitement (and profits) up.
These homes are ubiquitous in the Marina, Sunset, the
Richmond, Excelsior, Visitation Valley, Hunters Point, Bernal Heights,
Noe Valley, Potrero Hill, and Glen Park.
The desperation of the Great Depression left the common man dreaming of traveling to exotic places. Movies like The Wizard of Oz captured
the nation's longing to leave a drab existence by escaping to more
colorful locales. Style in the 1930s was all about high-speed luxury
travel. Aerodynamic detailing for trains and the horizontal decks and
rails of luxury ships inspired the Streamline Moderne home. The low,
long silhouettes are reinforced at every opportunity with horizontal
details, and rounded corners evoke the bow and porthole of chic yachts.
Streamline Moderne houses can be found in areas that
were the last to be developed, such as in the Sunset, Excelsior, outer
Mission, and Noe Valley.
The Depression made capitalism look really ugly.
Socialism started looking pretty sweet. The world was ready for an
aesthetic movement that embodied the new cooperative idea. International
style was introduced as a style for the whole world. The 1939 Golden
Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island showcased this minimal
architectural style, which drew inspiration from technology instead of
history. The idea was to leave behind individual cultural identities and
exist as one world. The International home drops any decoration that
isn't useful. No one had ever seen such simple square shapes. Today,
many say they look like boring boxes, but at the time the clean lines
were revolutionary.
International homes can be found in Noe Valley, Sea Cliff, Twin Peaks, upper Market, Laurel Village, and Golden Gate Heights.
In the '50s nearly everyone believed that very soon
we'd all be living like the Jetsons. New materials made modern homes
out-of-this-world. With few walls and tons of glass, it was hard to tell
where indoor and outdoor started and stopped. You could drive your
rocket ship–styled Desoto right into your home and enter through the
“carport,” a play on “spaceport.” By 1950 there was virtually no land
left in San Francisco on which to build. That is, except for the most
windswept peaks, which had previously been considered too hostile to
live on. But new technologies made houses weather-tight, and areas were
finally open to developers. After all, with views like those, who needed
to go outside?
Midcentury modern houses can be found in Diamond Heights, Twin Peaks, and Golden Gate Heights.
At first, minimalism seemed subversive, but to the
children of the baby boom, it was bland, monotonous, and predictable.
Modern homes were seen as plain boxes and it was time to think outside
the box.
San Francisco was the epicenter of radical change.
Civil rights, women's liberation, and the sexual revolution were mixing
things up. Free love, drugs, and rock 'n' roll permeated youth culture.
This anything-goes spirit let styles blend together. Like an
architectural electric Kool-Aid, this style tends to appear weird,
impossible, surprising, or awkward.
Postmodern homes were built anywhere single lots
remained undeveloped, like in the Sunset, Golden Gate Heights, Diamond
Heights, Bernal Heights, or where outdated industrial buildings were
replaced – Potrero Hill, the Mission, South of Market, and Mission Bay.
If you love Eli Myers' illustrations from this story, take note that we have a limited edition San Francisco Architecture poster, letterpressed by Western Editions in The Bold Italic's Shop!
Link to original article: http://www.thebolditalic.com/articles/3427-a-guide-to-san-francisco-architecture
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