Who owns strawberry hill in hillsborough
Celia's father Richard Tobin was president of Hibernia Bank. The Tobins maintained a c. Later generations of Tobins owned one of Hillsborough's ultimate parcels at Irwin Drive.
The flat 2-acre lot presides at one of Lower North's very best streets and featured a c. Driving by, it's now a momentous new composition by San Francisco architect Richard Beard. Early Hillsborough architects such as George H. And architecture was the preferred expression. Inspired by New York Fifth Avenue society by way of Nob Hill, Hillsborough mansions were designed with grand receiving and entertaining in mind. And that meant porte cocheres, ballrooms, grand salons, and banquet-scale dining rooms.
As the Victorian era yielded to the 20th century, the architecture of choice became the Beaux Arts. Willis Polk-designed Uplands, a Crocker property from , embodies the epoch perhaps best of all. Of note, the inspiration for Uplands was none other than Newport's c. Carolands became the boldest of all statements, its construction foreshadowing World War I in With 65, sq.
The drafting boards of architect Willis Polk must have been quite the visual between and ! In addition to Uplands and dozens of San Francisco projects, He was also the stateside supervising architect responsible for the construction of the Carolands.
Carolands is considered one of Sanson's later works, the architect having passed away at age 82 in Architect Lewis Hobart earns a class of his own, as many of his great Hillsborough mansions still exist as thriving icons of an era. Villa Rose later renamed Strawberry Hill by second owner Charles Blythe in from commands the end of the Forest View Avenue historic corridor main entrance at the end of Redington still on nearly 50 intact acres. Villa Rose was commissioned by Joseph D.
Grant, who like many wealthy San Franciscans, was intent on dividing his time between City and country at the advent of Hillsborough. Grant was a charter member of the Burlingame Country Club. Hobart's c. Crocker today serves as the Burlingame Country Club clubhouse. The original gateposts still stand at the intersection near North School, New Place Road, and the golf course. San Francisco businessman George A. Newhall was an influential early property holder as he first owned the c.
Page Brown Cottage at Floribunda, and later made his mark building the classically magnificent La Dolphine. Also of note in Lower North , Hobart's elegant 12, foot villa, c.
Complete with towering music room, the home was built for George T. Later re-configuration of the cul-de-sac now places the home at 10 Stacey Court below. One can only imagine the excitement in Hillsborough's air around It was the age of the Titanic, the brink of World War I, and for wealthy San Franciscans, it was a brilliant phase of "carpe diem" real estate after the earthquake. From the basis of land holdings and architectural magnificence, we will never again see such a moment in time.
Bliss and Faville, masters of the Beaux Arts vernacular, designed Guignecourt in on 47 acres with inflections of Italian Renaissance. Francis Hotel on Union Square. All of the lands around Guignecourt entered at Crystal Springs Road including San Mateo's adjacent Baywood, once comprised the Parrott Family estate going back to the s.
Patriarch John Parrott d. Hence, the De Guigne era at these lands. Musk is only the second owner to possess the land in nearly years. The early subdivision of Carolands in the s and beyond would introduce a wave of original estates breaking into smaller parcels.
Berkeley-trained William Wurster credits include Bromfield c. Many of Wurster's designs were complemented by the landscape architecture of Thomas Church throughout the ss.
Dailey should be considered the Godfather of Peninsula modern architecture as we know it, as his concepts were ahead of their time in the s. Unusually tall windows and doors, integration of home and garden, and unadorned sleek lines were all signature precursors of modern design. Hillsborough examples by Gardner Dailey include the c. The application has since been withdrawn, according to town officials.
But behind those walls and gates often sit comparably modest ranch-style homes, built after the original mansions burned down or were demolished. The land covered what is now Hillsborough, Burlingame and much of San Mateo. One such acquisition by Francis Carolan and Harriet Pullman Carolan resulted in Crossways, a room mansion on an elaborate acre estate that required an army of staff. Later, they moved up to a massive parcel on which the famous Carolands Chateau was built.
But for decades the mansion, once an architectural jewel, fell into disarray because it was too expensive to manage. The estate was purchased in by Charles and Ann Johnson, who spent millions to restore it. With the opening of the Burlingame Country Club in , the mid-Peninsula region became increasingly appealing to San Francisco residents who desired elegant leisure activities.
San Francisco architect Lewis P. Hobart well-known for his residences--city and country--for the Bay Area's wealthy, designed this Renaissance Revival dwelling for the merchant Joseph Donohoe Grant This was the second Grant House on the Hillsborough property, the first having burned.
Porter Garnett, in his book Stately Homes of Calfiornia , described what had been done with the first house site: "Shortly after passing the entrance gate, the road skirts the site of the old Grant residence, destroyed by fire some years ago.
The foundation walls have been reconstructed, and the place converted into a large swimming pool, adjoining which the masonry of what was the first story of the house now supports a rustic pavilion overlooking the plunge. The old garden with its lawns and geometrical parterre may be seen here, but the artificial planting soon merges into the natural wildness through which one passes for about a half a mile to the site of the present dwelling.
The publisher, Little, Brown and Company, published Garnett's descriptive architectural survey to sell to tourists traveling to the Bay Area to attend the Panama Pacific International Exposition of that year.
In general, Garnett noted the decorative restraint with which Hobart approached the commission: ""Mr. Grant's house, which was designed by Mr. Lewis P. Hobart, is in its ground plan a simple rectangle. Its proportions, whether regarded in relation to the surroundings or not, are most agreeable.
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