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The owners of this small 4-room
1920’s Berkeley bungalow wanted to expand the dark, cramped north-facing kitchen, and enhance its connection to the garden while retaining the bungalow’s character and charm. As landscape architects and professors of ecology, both owners were very excited by sustainable aspects
of the project, which includes solar hot water and extensive use
of reused and recycled materials.
A key element in sustainable design is working
with existing conditions, both on site and from local salvage yards:
the rear wall of the kitchen was removed, and the remaining old-growth
fir framing supported by a segment of railroad track (dated 1882)
inverted and used as an I-beam. The former laundry porch is now
a small sitting area—dubbed, the Frog Viewing Room—which
features a new (salvaged) window facing the frog pond with a wide
sill for sitting.
While the existing portions of the remodel
seek to blend in with the house, the curved-roofed addition acts
as a counterpoint in both form and material. The roof of the addition
(a mere 28 sf footprint) curves up over the former laundry shed
to bring high southern light into the kitchen and it is sheathed
in license plate “shingles”.
The fireplace, in disrepair but was critical
to the function of the living room, was removed completely and replaced
with a small Rumford style fireplace (with the concrete block structure
left exposed behind the stove on the reverse side). Impressions
from oak and hickory leaves (from the owner’s childhood home
in North Carolina) enliven the cast concrete surround.

AIA SF “Best of the Bay and Beyond”
Bluprint Small: Creative Ways to Live with Less Building with Vision: Optimizing & Finding Alternatives
to Wood
Hot Dirt Cool Straw
Architectural Record July 2000
San Francisco Chronicle 1.26.00
San Francisco Chronicle 8.5.01
Landscape Architecture July 2002
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