Mid-Century Mash-Up
In 2005, Gretchen Rice and Kevin Farnham acquired the unique home. Prior to that the couple lived only a few blocks away but, according to Farnham, “couldn’t believe that something like this existed in our neighborhood.” The two had pretty much written off San Francisco’s real estate market, but over the course of one weekend—when Farnham accidentally stumbled upon the listing on a website—everything changed. “I knew right then that I was in trouble,” recounts Farnham of walking into the house for the first time. “I had never really encountered a house in San Francisco that I actually wanted. I knew I had to have this.”
The home’s exterior is so modest you could walk by it a hun-dred times without a second glance, but open the oversized orange door and you are engulfed by an unexpected new world. “It’s a pronounced experience,” says Farnham of Hill’s sweeping design statement. A slight series of stairs angles lazily up to the home’s main level. Tongue-and-groove mahogany paneling elegantly cloaks the walls. A long waist-high horizontal built-in, a fireplace, and embedded hi-fi speaker (remember that in 1947 we’re talking mono), extends back to the façade and its wall of opaque glass. And then there are the atriums: Near the stairs, in the corner between the dining area and kitchen, and along one whole wall of the living area, these magnificent volumetric voids dazzle the eye and flood the otherwise enclosed space with light and plant life.
Impressive as Hill’s great room was, the home’s downstairs had little going for it. Designer John Randolph, whom Farnham and Rice have since commissioned to tackle a handful of domestic projects, even describes a “double happiness” symbol etched in the decaying floor. Almost immediately, Farnham set about updating the space. He hired Jeff Thomasson, a contractor now “on a semipermanent retainer,” to tackle the lighting, walls, and flooring, and commissioned Atlas Industries to wrap the room with its modular shelving and storage. Eventually Atlas also designed the custom wet bar and bar, furnishing CAD drawings for Thomasson to follow. Seated on an expansive Patricia Urquiola sofa, Rice claims it’s “the ultimate man palace.” (However, she has been known to take in more than the occasional NFL game.)
“I spend 80 percent of my time down here,” admits the tech, media, and design junkie Farnham. Whether it’s behind the bar mixing an eclectic array of cocktails, navigating TiVo through the evening’s NBA proceedings, or keeping up with work at the “wired to the teeth” computer station, the downstairs space is a physical extension of Farnham’s character (which surely includes the grill just outside the back door). While the couple is investigating if the home can be raised to accommodate a parking space or considering the possibility of a small additional story, Hill’s design is in good hands. “I’m basically future-proofing the house,” Farnham explains.
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This was a wonderful article to read. Thanks for the terrific photos which brought back lots of fond memories. My sister and I fondly remember visits to Uncle Henry and Aunt Lliy Hong, the former owners. Was the kitchen remodeled as well? We remember the meals our Uncle Henry, restaurant owner and chef at the long-gone Golden Phoenix in Chinatown, used to create there. As kids, we used to be amazed by the dumb waiter in that place! Were the second bedroom and single bath remodeled? We remember watching our Uncle Henry and Aunt Lily and their friends taking dance lessons on the linoleum floor in the basement area with mirrors along the walls. Oh, those bossa nova lessons! LOL
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