Project posted by Mia Zinni
Entry Way AFTER
Entry Way AFTER
Living Room AFTER
Living Room AFTER
Living Room BEFORE
Living Room BEFORE
Living Kitchen  AFTER
Living Kitchen AFTER
Kitchen BEFORE
Kitchen BEFORE
Kitchen AFTER
Kitchen AFTER
Kitchen Dining BEFORE
Kitchen Dining BEFORE
Dining AFTER
Dining AFTER
Dining BEFORE
Dining BEFORE
Dry Bar AFTER
Dry Bar AFTER
Stair AFTER
Stair AFTER
Hall Bathroom AFTER
Hall Bathroom AFTER
Hall Bathroom AFTER
Hall Bathroom AFTER
Hall Bathroom BEFORE
Hall Bathroom BEFORE
Primary Bathroom AFTER
Primary Bathroom AFTER
Primary Bathroom BEFORE
Primary Bathroom BEFORE
Nursery AFTER
Nursery AFTER
Office AFTER
Office AFTER
Backyard AFTER 2
Backyard AFTER 2

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Credits

Posted by
Interior Design
Photographer
Garry Belinsky

From Mia Zinni

Urban Remedy Project has a particularly constrained existing context. The single family residence is a part of a long integrated history of outdated and sweepingly applied developer vernacular homes. The house was built in the 1960’s along with 2000 other intended homes by the Meyer Brothers in the Miraloma park development of San Francisco. Using only a few prototypical basic plans the Meyer Brother’s built almost 600 one-story-over-garage homes, comprising one of the largest developer communities in San Francisco’s history. This remodel for a young family in San Francisco questioned the developer vernacular and its ability to respond to the individuality of its owners as well as the environment. The remodel was tested with not only meeting the client’s needs for modern living within a limited budget, but also its ability to respond to the latest reality of a COVID-19 world. Due to the extended need to quarantine, an office space was carved out of the mid-level area to accommodate work from home needs. The ‘green belt’ that wraps around the back of most Miraloma Park homes was initially left as a wild hillside by the developers and often filled with unnative trees causing soil disturbance on the steep sloped “backyards”. The project reclaimed the back hillside area through a network of occupiable terraces and a reintroduction of native plants. The interior rooms of the home were reworked to accommodate more open living with closer connection to the different living areas and the outdoors. Lifting and articulating ceilings along with more introduction of light through windows and skylights, further enhanced feelings of expansion within the small 1,400sf home. The outdated interior was modernized to match the clients minimal and design oriented tastes. The result of these improvements re-introduced the home to its neighborhood and removed it from its previously isolated introverted nature. Green-space was maximized to create an opportunity for outdoor living as well as rehabilitate the eroding soils. By both carving out new spaces and enhancing the interior, a more responsive home emerged. One that meet the client's individual family needs and also provides a stabilizing space for them to inhabit throughout a pandemic and beyond.