Project: Laguna Street Residence
Architects: Michael Hennessey Architecture
Location: San Francisco, California, USA
Area: 4,370 sq ft
Photographs by: Joe Fletcher
Michael Hennessey Architecture is the studio behind the design of today’s showcased project.
The Laguna Street Residence is an elegant, minimalist modern home located in San Francisco’s Cow Hollow neighborhood.
This dwelling is organized in multiple levels where most of the living spaces are located on the upper-most level while the middle level is dedicated to bedrooms and the lower level is reserved for a garage. The design of this modern abode is characteristic both on the outside and the inside with its light material palette and glazed surfaces.
The program for this ground-up, single-family residence is organized in a rational manner in an attempt to create visually simple spaces serving as the backdrop to a family’s daily activities. An open living level is situated at the upper floor, allowing for maximum light at the space where most time is spent during the daytime. The bedrooms and bathrooms are located at the floor below and are kept modest in scale. These living and bedroom levels are articulated at the exterior of the building as a light mass resting above a concrete base. This massive base contains the garage and an in-law unit towards the rear of the building, and allows the upper two levels to rise above the busy street.
In addition to a clear relationship between the various program elements, bringing daylight deep into the building proved to be a driving factor in the design. Given that the building is located in a tight urban condition, this created a challenge for extending daylight into the building in a meaningful way. The amount of glass at the front and rear elevations of the building was maximized, but this did not solve the issue at hand. By creating a sloped ceiling at the upper level, this allowed the opportunity for a north-facing clerestory window that brings uniform lighting at the upper living level. A large light well towards the center of the building brings light to bathrooms and hallways below. In addition, the stair hallway carries light down to the bedroom level and entry.
Finally, material selection and composition is given high priority. White plaster is selected as the exterior finish for the upper two levels to take advantage of the diffused lighting condition in the Cow Hollow neighborhood of San Francisco. This plaster is juxtaposed against a rough concrete base that indicates the utilitarian nature of the garage. The use of wood at the sloped upper ceiling brings color and variation into the main living space as light rakes across the boards from the continuous clerestory window. Wood and tiled floors are used as a simple means to bring color into the spaces. Ultimately, proportion is given careful consideration while composing each material and element in relation to one another.
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