Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu

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Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu

Information

  • Project Name: Dolores Heights Residence
  • Practice: Jones | Haydu
  • Products: Series 670 , Mosa , Graff , Blu Bathworks , Sogni Di Cristalo , Benjamin Moore , Tulip , Calacatta Vagli , Riobel Mythic
  • Completion year: 2021
  • Gross Built up Area: 295 m²
  • Project Location: San Francisco
  • Country: United States
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Hulett Jones, Paul Haydu
  • Design Team: Project Architect: Grace Leung
  • Structural Consultants: Strandberg Engineering
  • MEP Consultants: Design/Build
  • Contractors: Jeff King and Co
  • Interior + Furniture: Sawyers Design
  • Photo Credits: Matthew Millman
  • Others: Electrical Engineer: Design/Build, Geotechnical Engineer: Rockridge Geotechnical, Historic: Left Coast Architectural History
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Excerpt: Dolores Heights Residence by Jones | Haydu is a refurbishment project aimed at transforming disconnected rooms into an open, harmonious space. The house was designed to maximize its relationship with a unique site, with a straight axis of circulation and a material palette of cedar, standing seam metal, and cementitious panels. The forms of the house nest with each other, creating rooms within a wide-open plan.

Project Description

Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman

[Text as submitted by architect] Located in San Francisco’s Dolores Heights neighborhood, this home was a collaboration between Jones | Haydu and Kevin Sawyers of Sawyers Design, who is also part owner of the residence. Kevin and his husband wished to remodel and expand their existing earthquake cottage that had been added onto piecemeal over the years, transforming these awkwardly connected rooms into an open, harmonious space. 

Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
First Floor Plan © Jones | Haydu
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
Section © Jones | Haydu
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman

Given the existing footprint covered much of the lot, the goal was to make the most of the house’s relationship to this unique site. The circulation for the site and house is a straight axis, interacting with the building’s forms as they ascend to the main entrance. Continuing at the interior, one’s experience along this axis is always anchored on the downhill end by Sutro Tower, and on the uphill end by a magnificent Monterey cypress tree. 

Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman

The forms of the 3,180-square-foot house nest with each other, highlighted by their material palette of cedar, standing seam metal, and cementitious panels. These forms, along with the interior palette, create rooms within a wide-open plan. The crescendo of forms occurs at the front, nodding to quintessential San Francisco vernacular architecture. 

Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
Section © Jones | Haydu
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman
Dolores Heights Residence | Jones | Haydu
© Matthew Millman

An “inverted” Bay window box cantilevers eight feet from the facade highlighting three experiences of the “urban forest”. Below is an exterior fire pit for the forest floor. Inside, the box frames a view of the “trunk” level. Above, a roof deck extends the living room, allowing an experience of the “canopy” level. At this deck the backdrop is that almost child-like expression of home, a gable.

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