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Wood Fence
I came across this old fence on College Avenue near the Rockridge Bart Station in Oakland.  There's something quaint and unassuming with this fence.  It's friendly and doesn't try to do too much.  Yet with a few simple touches such as the half round notches and a top rail,  it goes beyond something perfunctory.  The curved and canopied gate creates a nice entry.  Letting the wood age and just do its thing lends a relaxed air to the entire composition. LM
 
 
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Perforated Metal
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Perforated metal has become very popular in recent years and I've seen problems of rust, discoloration, and damage.  This good example shows a heavy guage perforated meted, powder coated and raised on a concrete curb. It has held up quite well. 

It you need to economize and use a lighter guage metal, then use it where there will be no impact.

From the outside, it forms a "solid" surface that provides privacy as well as sun protection on this south facing wall.  From the inside, you still get a fairly good view of the outside environment. 

 
 
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Simple Color Board showing locations
Using color -  particularly paint can be intimidating for many people.  Small chips don't always look the same when put on a large wall and they change when put next to other colors and finishes.  It may be hard to keep in mind an entire pallete of colors and finishes to visualize the whole experience. 

Full color renderings are great, but even with sophisticated computer programs, it isn't that easy to do a quick study for discussions with a client.  
We use a simplified process that works in most cases.  We prepare 3D sketches of the new design and place images of the proposed  colors and materials keyed to their location. 

Together with actual samples we can provide, our clients get a better feeling for the entire look of the space(s).  This allows use to quickly explore options and arrive at better solutions.
 
 
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Manhattan Art Gallery
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Corten steel has been around since at least the early sixties. 

Here it's used to sheath a building in Manhattan.  There's no need to paint the steel as it naturally rusts and forms a natural weather resistant coating.  The coating has a nice patina, but the rust stains the surfaces below.  When it runs onto light colored concrete, the results aren't too nice.  A detail where the rust falls onto something that conceals this discoloring would be a nice touch.

 
 
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Mural at Brenda's Restaurant
Brenda's at Polk and Eddy Streets in San Francisco features great New Orleans style cuisine.  It was an immediate success when it opened and now has doubled its size by taking over the adjoining retail space.

Although newly remodelled, the designers had a vintage looking mural painted on the exposed concrete walls.  The concrete wall had cracks and vestiges of previous embedments.  The last time I was there, I noticed how they positioned the mural so that an existing crack in the wall was placed between "San Francisco" and "California".  That crack with the word "voyage" above made me think about San Francisco being earthquake country. 

Does your building need attention?
 
 
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Calistoga Storefront 1343 Lincoln Avenue
Lincoln Avenue, the mainstreet of Calistoga in the Napa Valley, still retains the small town feeling where people live and work.  Small shops with 3 hour free parking line the streets leading to the spa resorts with natural hot springs.  This handsome weathered storefront features cast iron columns.  They are a reminder of the first explosion of possibilities of the dawning industrial age in the 19th Century that continues to this day.  Change is constant.
 
 
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Berkeley City Hall Council Chambers
On January 26, 2012, the Berkeley Zoning Adjustments Board approved our plans for the renovation of 1040 University Avenue in Berkeley.  The 73 unit 1920's era building is owned by Resources for Community Development, non-profit housing developers located in Berkeley.
 
 
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Granite carved acanthus leaves
710 Ellis Street is in the heart of the rundown Tenderloin Distrist, an area of San Francisco with many long neglected inexpensive residential hotels.  That wasn't the case when these buildings were built.  The entrance to this building is embelished with a carved granite surround featuring a classical Greek acanthus leaf motif. At first I thought it might be glazed tile, but it was actually granite.  There are many undiscovered treasures right in plain site. 
 
 
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#10  Good Design is as Little Design as Possible

Less is better -- because it concentrates on the essential aspects and the products are not burdened with inessentials.  Back to purity, back to simplicity!
Dieter Ram's 10th principle  addresses design on multiple levels in terms of philosophy and aesthetics.  What does he mean by inessentials and does this change by culture and time?  Who is to judge?

I'm searching for good examples.  Please stay tuned. 
 
 
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The Restored Salvation Army Building
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Repaired Glazed Terra Cotta
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Repairing Glazed Terra Cotta
Glazed terra cotta was extremely popular in the first half of the 20th Century.  Clay could be inexpensively molded to complicated shapes and could be glazed to give it a stone-like appearance.  Gladden McBean was a local manufacturer of glazed terra cotta and continues to make ceramic products in Northern California to this day.  I try and keep Gladding McBean in mind because they are local and ceramic tile is pretty sustainable -- earning possible LEED points.

Built in 1937, this building at 9th and Harrison in San Francisco was a Gladding McBean office  building -- just a block from our office.  It is completely clad in glazed terra cotta and is now the home of the Salvation Army.  I once thought glazed terra cotta was great, but if it was chipped it was gone for good.  I had noticed the nicks and chips on the building, but last a few months ago I noticed someone was repairing the damaged terra cotta.  He said it was no problem repairing it.  You fill in the voids and then they can "re-glaze" it in place.  The restoration was completed by Lewis Restoration and Consulting of San Francisco.  Now it looks good to go for another 70 years.