Aesop Jackson Square is a minimal interior located in San Francisco, California, designed by Tacklebox Architecture. Located on Jackson Street, in San Francisco’s historic waterfront district the design pays homage to the tenacious spirit of the San Franciscans who first settled the Bay Area.

In line with Aesop’s customary architectural approach – to work with what is already in place, weaving a discreet presence into the fabric of the locale – fault lines and natural rifts within the area’s geological timeframe were key influences, expressed through a prominent raked wall of plastered texture and form. Bracing, stitching, and splicing the surface of the wall terrain, forty-one solid copper shelves bridge the in-between, bearing intended reference to the copper stills used to produce the whiskey in A.P Hotaling’s warehouse, once the West Coast’s largest whiskey repository.

This space is situated in one of a handful of structures that survived the 1906 earthquake and fire, owing to the quick-thinking firemen and hundreds of citizens determined to protect the stores of Hotaling’s Whiskey, an endeavor that fortuitously preserved the architecture of neighboring blocks.  Search “파주오피≤AP011.닷컴≥≤그램≥추천ꇴ파주룸클럽 파주오피 파주OP 파주풀싸롱 파주페티쉬 파주리얼돌 파주유흥” from Interiors

Search “파주오피≤AP011.닷컴≥≤그램≥추천ꇴ파주룸클럽 파주오피 파주OP 파주풀싸롱 파주페티쉬 파주리얼돌 파주유흥”

Aesop Jackson Square is a minimal interior located in San Francisco, California, designed by Tacklebox Architecture. Located on Jackson Street, in San Francisco’s historic waterfront district the design pays homage to the tenacious spirit of the San Franciscans who first settled the Bay Area.

In line with Aesop’s customary architectural approach – to work with what is already in place, weaving a discreet presence into the fabric of the locale – fault lines and natural rifts within the area’s geological timeframe were key influences, expressed through a prominent raked wall of plastered texture and form. Bracing, stitching, and splicing the surface of the wall terrain, forty-one solid copper shelves bridge the in-between, bearing intended reference to the copper stills used to produce the whiskey in A.P Hotaling’s warehouse, once the West Coast’s largest whiskey repository.

This space is situated in one of a handful of structures that survived the 1906 earthquake and fire, owing to the quick-thinking firemen and hundreds of citizens determined to protect the stores of Hotaling’s Whiskey, an endeavor that fortuitously preserved the architecture of neighboring blocks.