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How This Renovated Edwardian Bridges Past + Present In San Francisco

In San Francisco's Ashbury Heights, an Edwardian home from 1910 underwent a transformative renovation by Spiegel Aihara Workshop (SAW). Architects Dan Spiegel and Megumi Aihara aimed to honor the home's historical context while introducing contemporary elements. The renovation centered on the concept of the 'quarter-round' molding, symbolizing a bridge between past and present, and a gradual ascent. The project meticulously preserved the first and second-story envelopes while ingeniously adding nearly 1,000 square feet of vertical space. A new rectilinear volume was seamlessly integrated above the existing bay window, featuring Santa Barbara smooth stucco in a custom moody purple pigment. A significant challenge involved illuminating the century-old kitchen and dining room, which previously relied on skylights. To address this, Spiegel designed a series of lightwells throughout the home, channeling natural light from a new terrace and incorporating a total of ten skylights. Even the compact primary bathroom, with its narrowest point at just three feet, was made to feel more spacious through clever dimensions, oversized hallway portals, and lightwells that animate shadows and absorb warm hues from the tiled roof. Inside, the home features striking design elements. A sculptural cascading stair, crafted from eight rounded-off parallelograms of white oak, serves as a central focal point, unifying the four-level residence. Illuminated by modern pendant fixtures, the stair connects the ground-level garage to the rooftop terrace, offering previously unseen panoramic views of the Bay Area, including the Golden Gate Bridge and Sutro Tower. Children's spaces include a 6-foot-wide reading nook on the third floor, where curved oak stacks function as both shelving and seating, and a playroom off the primary bedroom accessed via a discovered 'secret door.' Historic elements were carefully integrated with contemporary design. The original coffered ceilings in the kitchen and dining room were refinished and painted, and the living room fireplace was preserved, fostering a dialogue between old and new. The entry sequence guides visitors through generations of design, with the scale of detailing gradually increasing. Ornamental ogee molding in the living room, a relic of the Victorian era, is juxtaposed with the oversized fillets of the contemporary parallelogram stair panels. Melanie Love of Love & Interiors curated the furnishings, fixtures, and wallpapers, introducing a color palette that complemented the traditional architecture. Periwinkle hues dominate the living areas, paired with floral upholstery and verdant wallpaper, while the upstairs maintains an elemental palette of porcelain, white oak, and powder-coated steel. The renovation successfully navigates between the past and present, creating a unique and timeless dwelling in the Quarter-Round House. #ResidentialRenovation #EdwardianHome #SanFranciscoArchitecture #HistoricPreservation #ContemporaryDesign #InteriorDesign #SpiegelAiharaWorkshop #Lightwells #OakMillwork #ResidentialRenovation #EdwardianHome #SanFranciscoArchitecture #HistoricPreservation #ContemporaryDesign #InteriorDesign #SpiegelAiharaWorkshop #Lightwells #OakMillwork
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