■-북아메리카 건축물/♣-------미국

Richardson Apartments / David Baker + Partners

이종국 2012. 11. 9. 13:24

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Richardson Apartments / David Baker + Partners

 

 

Architect: David Baker + Partners

Location: 365 Fulton Street, San Francisco, California, USA
Project Team: David Baker FAIA LEED AP (design principal);

Peter MacKenzie AIA (principal-in-charge); Amit C. Price Patel AIA LEED AP

 (project architect); Brit Epperson LEED AP Homes;

Amanda Loper AIA LEED AP; Sara Mae Martens LEED AP; Angela Thomason; John Thompson, AIA
Clients: Community Housing Partnership, Mercy Housing California
Project SquareFootage: 65,419 sq ft
Site Area: 18,906 sq ft/0.47 acres
Completed: September 2011
Landscape Architect: Andrea Cochran Landscape Architects
Photographs: Bruce Damonte

 

 

     

 

 

 

David Baker + Partners worked with Community Housing Partnership and Mercy Housing California to develop the Drs.

Julian & Raye Richardson Apartments, which will provide permanent supportive housing for a very-low-income,

formerly homeless population.

 

 

The building is named in honor of Drs. Julian and Raye Richardson,

local activists and founders of Marcus Books, the oldest black bookstore in the country,

founded in 1960.

 

Richardson Apartments includes 120 permanent,

supportive residential studio units for adult residents coming out of or at risk for homelessness.

Each unit is approximately 300sf and is provided with basic furnishings, a full kitchenette,

an accessible or adaptable bathroom, and a secure telephone line to the front desk.

 

 

The residents’ entrance on Fulton Street features a spacious,

secure lobby with a custom reception station. Beyond the lobby,

 

the south-facing courtyard frames an expansive existing mural—a paint-and-glass mosaic

of dancers adorning the side of the adjacent Performing Arts garage.

 

Connected by an open-air stair, four levels of fully equipped studio apartments sit atop

neighborhood-serving retail and surround the private landscaped courtyard.

 

 

 

Other supportive uses include an on-site medical and counseling center, a residents’ lounge,

and a prominent flexible-use community room.

 

 

first floor plan

 

The rooftop deck includes a living roof, allotment garden plots, solar arrays, and City Hall views.

The corner retail space is slated for BakeWorks, a bakery featuring a work-training program for residents,

and other ground-level retail spaces maintain an active street edge

and connect the building to the busy Hayes Street retail corridor.

 

second floor plan

 

Construction began in February 2010,

with substantial completion in August 2011, and the building opened its doors to tenants in September 2011.