Broadway Cove by LMSA

Located on the Embarcadero and located in the Northeast Waterfront Historic District and adjacent to the historic Telegraph Hill neighborhood, Broadway Cove is a 146,000-square-foot multi-building complex.

Its composed of two elements: 850 Front Street features 125 affordable family units ranging from studio to 3-bedroom units; and 735 Davis Street includes 53 senior units with studio and 1-bedroom configurations.

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Occupying a site of the former Embarcadero Freeway, this new development at 850 Front Street provides affordable homes for families in the San Francisco Northeast Waterfront Historic District.

Directly facing the Embarcadero with stunning views of the Bay, the development at 735 Davis provides affordable homes for formerly homeless to middle income seniors on the site of the former Embarcadero Freeway.

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Taking cues from the historic fabric of the district, the buildings are designed to maximize the facade perimeter through a series of courtyards and a midblock passage that serve both the complex and the neighborhood.

The configuration provides access to natural light and views for all the units. Outwardly, the buildings riff on the historic built fabric of the neighborhood.

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Red brick warehouses built in the 19th and early 20th centuries featuring smaller windows and stature; and “frame and infill” buildings from the early 20th century typified by larger concrete warehouses with larger windows and stature.

Ground floor spaces provides areas for community gathering, commercial space, a YMCA childcare center, live-work flats, and a public mid-block passage that will enrich and serve the larger neighborhood.

Photo © Bruce Damonte

To support the Bay Area’s dwindling critical natural habitat, the project’s stormwater management requirements were taken as an opportunity to provide local fauna a small point of respite and refuge.

At the building’s upper rooftop, a series of planting areas were implemented to provide a small, but fruitful, native habitat. The gardens were inspired by the beautiful and endangered, Mission blue butterfly, a species that relies solely on three varieties of lupine.

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Using lupine albifrons as the basis for the planting design, native species such as eriogonum fasciculatum, mimulus aurantiacus, and salvia clevelandii were added, as well as additional plantings to provide year-round soil coverage.

It is hoped that this habitat will support a host of native species of birds, hummingbirds, bees, and at least eighteen species of native moths and butterflies. Source by LMSA.

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Location: San Francisco, California, USA

Architect: LMSA

Project Team: William Leddy, Aaron Thornton, Mario Russo, Ian Ashcraft-Williams, Cecily Ng, Jen Winnett, John J Son, Howard Russell, Jackie Liu

General Contractor: Cahill Contractors

Co-Developers: BRIDGE Housing Corporation and The John Stewart Company

Size: 146,000 SF

Year: 2021

Photographs: Bruce Damonte, Courtesy of Cameron MacAllister Group

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Photo © Bruce Damonte

Axo

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Generated by Feedzy
error

Enjoyed Archinews Daily? Please spread the word :)