Miter House selected to be part of the GRAY x MA+DS Interior Design Tour in San Francisco

Event announcement! On Saturday, October 12 in San Francisco, Levy Art + Architecture is being featured in a new series of home tours showcasing the talents of exceptional interior designers throughout North America, as part of the GRAY x MA+DS Interior Design Tour.

Come and see our Miter House on Kansas Street up close and personal, ask us questions or just enjoy the full-height frameless views of San Francisco, cozy fireplaces and unique central stairwell that mimics a sundial throughout the day.

10am – 4pm
Saturday Oct 12, 2024

Claim your $5 discount on admission for the whole tour with this link: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-2024-bay-area-interior-design-home-more-tour-tickets-1013709631797?discount=LEVYAA24

hashtag#interiordesigntour hashtag#incredibleinteriors hashtag#GRAY hashtag#graymagazine hashtag#welovemodern hashtag#getinspired hashtag#interiordesign

Liberty Hill Home

We initiated this project for our client, completed the initial schematic designs, received permissions, and worked to create a fully-realized architectural expression.

First, we designed and permitted the building expansion to create a 4-story structure with expansive glass panels that capture a 270 degree view.

We then began to collaborate with interior designer, Charles de Lisle.

Working on behalf our our mutual clients, tech CEO Yishai Lerner and his wife Sabrina, we defined and detailed material applications throughout the home. 

This is on full display throughout the house, most notably at the unique kitchen and the extravagant basement.

The kitchen invites you to sit down, or create your next culinary experience.

A modern kitchen with bohemian details.
The custom kitchen island is created with beautiful, inviting redwood.
The basement level features a custom redwood sculptural wall by artist Ido Yoshimoto.

On the lower level, we created this seamless indoor / outdoor space where the room is as much a part of the garden as it is a part of the house. This canvas serves as a backdrop for a wonderful expression of nature, interpreted as a beautiful redwood sculptural wall by @ido_yoshimoto. The piece has such a strong presence that you feel as if you’re next to it, even when the glass is closed. It completes the bridge between indoor and outdoor living.⁠

In the bathrooms, we used operable wood paneling, variegated cast concrete wall and custom cast concrete sink basin.

We also custom-designed and fabricated the winding iron staircase, so it appears to be floating independently of the walls.

We took a monumental space, and brought it to human-scale through carefully-selected organic materials, giving a sense of ease and approachability. You are invited to participate, touch, and interact with the space. 


Project Credits

Principal Architect: Ross Levy, Levy Art + Architecture @levy_aa⁠ ⁠
Project Architect: Karen Andersen⁠
Architecture Team: Shirin Monshipouri, Andrew Sparks, Michael Ageno, Sonja Navin⁠
Interior Design: Charles Delisle @charlesdelisleoffice
Contractor: Blair Burke GC⁠
Site Superintendent: Brad Lord⁠
Project Manager: Nicole Barsetti⁠
Structural Engineer: Daedalus Engineering @daedalusstructuralengineering
Garden Wall: Ido Yoshimoto @ido_yoshimoto
Clients: Yishai and Sabrina Lerner⁠
⁠Photos: Eric Petschek @ericpetschek and Karen Andersen @almost.elfish

Publications

This home was featured in Architectural Digest, Fall 2023: https://www.architecturaldigest.com/gallery/tour-a-stunning-san-francisco-family-home-that-used-to-be-a-total-bachelor-pad

Energizing architecture: how to build your self-powering dream home

ZeroNRG 25

Is your custom home one that you can live in comfortably and feel good about?

In 2010, we completed construction of the first completely self-powering house in San Francisco. That’s right: 100% energy neutral.

Today, more than a decade later, we wish that all homes would be built this way.

Here’s how we did it, and what you can do to improve your own project in a move toward a net-zero (or better!) future.

1) START WITH SOLAR

An eight-kilowatt solar array, grid-connected and net-metered, produces all power necessary for domestic and transportation purposes without any on-site carbon emissions.  The owner, who had been working in the solar industry for over twenty years at the time of construction, was committed to “getting off the pipe” …as in: a house without a gas meter.

2) ALIGN WITH THE SUN

The self-powering home design includes a structure with ample roof area for the panels and a highly-efficient envelope. The floor plan sees open living spaces at the rear of the house, directly adjacent to the garden.  These rooms employ ample, south-facing glazing for maximum solar gain.

A diagram of the electric system and a photo of two electric cars charging in the garage
3) USE PASSIVE RADIANT HEATING

On mild days, exposed concrete floors with radiant tubes convey passively-collected heat to the north-facing portions of the house via a small recirculating pump.  We specified Marvin wood windows with High-R-Tripane glazing and sprayed, Biobase, soy foam insulation for R-19 walls and an R-40 roof.  This creates a tight enclosure while also accounting for existing, historic “blind walls” and the inherent problems with air and moisture infiltration that they present.

A three-story stairwell topped with operable skylights is a dramatic vertical space and creates a heat stack, providing all cooling necessary for the moderate San Francisco climate.

The mechanical systems are based on the “all electric” concept.  In the active heating mode, a 2/3 ton electric heat pump provides hot water for the floor system.  A second heat pump provides domestic hot water for showers, laundry etc.

A diagram of the self-powering home featuring radiant heat in the floorboards and throughout the house, alongside a photo of the system located in the garage
4) CHOOSE SMART FIXTURES & APPLIANCES

LED fixtures and high-efficiency appliances lower the total electrical load, while a plug-in hybrid charges in off-hours to balance production and consumption cycles with the net metering approach.  

5) RECLAIM WATER

A gray water reclamation system provides irrigation for a shared backyard vegetable garden and for drought-tolerant landscape features – both at the yard and the street.  

A diagram of the water recycling system  in this self-powering home, shown alongside a photo of the backyard garden and irrigation

GOING FURTHER

This self-powering home project was cutting edge a decade ago. It represents more than a “green” structure. We work at the level of lifestyle: considering transportation, food production and community in this urban setting in a holistic approach while also serving the specific needs and desires of the homeowner.

Being able to “divorce” the local power company and lower your utility bills is a nice perk, of course.

But being environmentally sustainable is just the beginning; this is now our status quo.

Our latest thoughts on the sustainability may be found in our manifesto about modern architecture.

We are designing the future of buildings that not only maintain, but also give back to the environment.

If this resonates with you, let’s talk: book a 20min consultation to talk about the dreams and aspirations you have for your project.


About this Project

Principal Architect: Ross Levy, Levy Art + Architecture 
Architecture Design Team: Karen Andersen and Michael Ageno, Levy Art + Architecture 
Structural Engineer: Shaun Monyihan, SEMCO
Mechanical Engineer: Bill Dakin, Davis Energy Group

This project was Fine Homebuilding’s “Remodel of the Year” in 2013 and also appeared in the April 2013 print edition of San Francisco magazine in “Nothing Never Looked so Goodby Joanne Furio and Lauren Murrow.

Row House Recharged --- comp of Fine Homebuilding magazine featuring a two-page spread about the self-powering home

About Levy Art + Architecture

Levy Art + Architecture firm is an interdisciplinary studio operating at the intersection of architecture, environmentalism and art. Our work is inspired by a commitment to research and sustainability as a basis for the design process. The knowledge derived from this study is embodied in form, structure and light. It defines spaces that transform our daily experience and influence the way we live in urban and natural environments.

    Contact Us

    Miter House on Kansas Street

    As you approach this home, the façade that appears to be solid is revealed as a series of layers.  A combed stone outer cladding gives way to a smooth plaster layer that, in turn, sits atop a shear layer of windows and taught corner glass.  This is a representation of our clients: private people who become familiar over time. 

    Update: Miter House has been nominated for ArchDaily’s Building of the Year Contest! VOTE now through February 15, 2023 to help get this project to the final round.

    The space of the home is similar. A slow reveal is based on an up-and-over movement across the site, and there’s an idea of two structures, front and back. Entering on the ground level, you ascend two broad steps to a central platform. 

    This “space between” houses the central stair. 

    The stair accesses a reverse plan: entry and gymnasium below, bedrooms between, living spaces atop. It’s capped by a roof deck. Materials define interior spaces.  Maple slats and brass clad walls work together to define the central space, filter and reflect light, an experiential relationship that, like the façade, reveals itself through time.   Each side of the structure has its own character and its own view, the front facing east defined by morning light and downtown views through mitered corner windows. The back faces west, the sunset and Twin Peaks viewed through operable glass walls that expand the floor area for indoor-outdoor functions.   Two houses joined by a central spine and revealing themselves through time.

    We successfully navigated this project through San Francisco city planning and a rigorous design review process.

    “Ross and his team did a fabulous job on both the architecture and design touches for our new home in SF.  Ross listened deeply to our goals for the project, but offered his expert eye and judgment to create something far better than if he’d simply done exactly as asked.  We’re thrilled with the results and frequently see passers by stopping to admire his work.  Unusual for a talented architect, Ross has a deep understanding of and respect for the craft of building—that knowledge was invaluable for many key decisions we faced. When a materials price spike made a highly visible staircase cost-prohibitive, Ross came up with a creative solution we love!  Equally important, he orchestrated that oh so vital “dance” among planning department, neighbors, and contractor. We loved LAA’s vision and aesthetic, but none of it means a thing if you can’t get it built. Ross’s ability to bring all the parties along was critical to the success of the project.   We choose LAA for their architectural and design talent, but we did not realize just how critical all these other skills are to getting what you really want—a home you love.”

    Architect: Ross Levy⁠ (Levy Art + Architecture)⁠
    Project Team: Michael Ageno, Patrick Donato⁠, Shirin Monshipouri (Levy Art + Architecture)⁠
    Interior Architect / Designer: Frances Weiss⁠ (Levy Art + Architecture)⁠
    Contractor: Colm Brennan at Stronghold Construction
    Structural Engineer: Daedalus Engineering
    Photographer: Joe Fletcher

    Sq ft: 3,707
    Completed: 2020
    All-new construction
    Architecture + interior architecture by Levy Art + Architecture

    Russian Hill Residences

    Exterior corner view of the Russian Hill Residence contemporary single-family home in San Francisco

    In San Francisco, it is unusual to build from the ground up. Even more rare, in the established and historic area of Russian Hill. This project works in scale with the urban landscape and topography of the west slope. Its mass and formal modulation conform with the texture, while at the same time creating a distinct identity. 

    The historical context is embraced by creating vistas and juxtapositions inside and out that underscore the relationship between old and new, adorned but reduced. These moments define a new role for the modern in the space of the original and both benefit.

    In order to enjoy the views of the Golden Gate Bridge and bay, our client requested we incorporate as much uninterrupted West- and North-facing glass as possible.  With this as a starting point, we begin to shape the programmatic needs around this framed view.  The structural language was developed around carving away at the mass and the northwest corner of the building became a dematerialized mitered glass expression. 

    Ross and his team did a terrific job in marrying the modern sustainable design aesthetic we had with the practical aspects of urban family living. He was involved from start to finish in an entire house rebuild and created a spectacular gem of a home for us! Highly recommended!

    While the West face required maximum transparency, the South and East sides needed to provide privacy and thermal control. We created a bipartite composition of forms and a masonry base that anchors the volume to the site.

    The upper level is a continuous band of clerestory glass, further lightening its presence.  The lower floors are is clad in white reinforced concrete panels.   This volume was modeled as a continuous surface, small apertures were treated as penetrations within the regular, horizontal grid. Each opening is lined with protruding stainless steel jambs that accentuate the punctuation of the skin. Larger openings were delineated as interruptions in the horizontal panel grid.  The edges here being concealed as the skin wraps back toward the structure.  In total, we imposed a single system that could be adapted to each orientations reach condition.

    Concerned with passive performance, we offset the ample Western exposure with heavily insulated wall and roof cavities.  The vertical volume was designed to draw the occupants up the stair from terrace level and to serve as a heat chimney, providing naturally driven ventilation up to the penthouse. This shaft serves the dual purpose of organizing space and flows, and conditioning the space and is the primary gesture that brings visitors up the front stair. Conceived as a semi- outdoor experience, it transitions a weather protected passage from grade level to the elevated foyer. 

    The view is introduced in a look through an informal den, which is closable by a series of folding panels: a public space with private potential.  By aligning these two spaces and borrowing the vista, each space was enhanced, the overall horizontal projection at the second floor entry has an equivalent relationship with the vertical volume of the stairwell. 

    The vertical flow of space continues to the main living space on the third level and ultimately to the pavilion and roof terrace, creating an elevated ground that is essentially replaced atop the structure.  The living space takes advantage of the framed vistas using floor to ceiling glass, presenting an internal horizon to offer a variety of views — both framed and unframed. 

    The ceiling plane is modulated with large coffer, which provides definition for the distinct functions of the space and allows for seamless integration of cove and direct lighting. Linear skylights above the fireplace and across the mid line of the level, combine with the stairwell to even the natural lighting in the space that is dominated by West-facing glass. 

    The open plan is organized where the spaces are only defined by turning a corner, offering hidden places that offer a different experience of place. A breakfast nook enjoys the south sun and looks towards the downtown skyline, a media room is closed by a sliding wall, and a half bath is located discreetly at the rear of the space made more private by a vestibule — a place to pause before re-entering the social space. 

    All of this is capped by a roof terrace that covers almost the entire footprint of the structure.  Here, the view is unobstructed and breathtaking.  It is also a place for growing herbs and riding bikes; it’s the urban oasis envisioned and championed by Gropius and Corbusier.

    Architect: Levy Art + Architecture
    General Contractor: Saturn Construction
    Structural Engineer: SEMCO
    Land Use Consultant: Jeremy Paul
    Photographer: Matthew Millman

    Publications:

    Hermitage Russian Hill: Los Tres Amigos

    Living Room full glass wall in upscale Hermitage San Francisco Home by Architect Levy Art + Architecture

    Three Designers Modernize a Landmark Flat with European Sensibility and Meaning

    Joe, Joe Joe Joe… ever concerned, ever considered, ever conditional.  I’ve known Joe for some time now; we do some of the same sports and our children grew up together (or, in parallel) in the universe of San Francisco adolescence.  Joe is very successful and very involved.

    He was single — more on that later — works downtown and was renting a small house in the shadow of a large high-rise on Russian Hill.  He kept wanting to buy, and I’d looked at things with him over the years, but his radius was small. Really small. About an eighth of a mile, right at the top of the hill.

    Finally, we went to look at a large unit in a small building.  It was spacious but formal, featuring several connected parlor rooms with up-close Bay Bridge and Downtown views.  It was a bit “tired and old” in its aesthetics.  Although the views were outstanding, the doors and windows could not be changed. They were a more traditional version of a punched opening with traditional trim and casings.  The ceilings were high, which is great, but the spaces felt somewhat interior. 

    Our approach was to remove as many divisions as possible and to rearrange the sequence of experiences to take better advantage of the outlooks and to better suit the program for our client. We opened and integrated the living spaces to create a long, connected set of experiences of the view.  We likened this new, very large, space to a Palazzo: the type of redeveloped art gallery you see in European cities in a repurposed historic structure.  The doors casings, walls and ceilings at the perimeter are all preserved, but “whited out,” creating a “gallery backdrop” for a much more contemporary interior. 

    Joe is no longer single as he used to be. Enter his & hers designers: Cindy Bayon and Eche Martinez. Working together, Eche, Cindy and I — Los Tres Amigos — crafted stand-alone moments in the white box environment, redefining the now wall-less volume with architectural, functional and artistic objects.  Cindy and I started the hard surfaces work with space-defining features like the floating dining room ceiling with collapsible chainmail walls.  The master bath was enlarged, made into a grand spa — an exercise in exquisite materiality with Alcatraz views. The master suite was fitted out with an integrated headboard, lighting, and large walk-in, making it more of a private refuge.  

    Each installation reflects an aspect of the clients’ lives: the back lit, white gloss panels that line the entryway represent snow and skiing, wood paneling at the headboard is for nature and farming, and the materialized master bath for sophistication and travel.

    Art is the thing that binds this all together. Working from the lighting into the soft surfaces and art, Eche made the spaces livable and understandable.  The entire home is now inhabited, by people and by objects. The furnishings and works of art create the balance and fullness that this open environment needs.

    Our work is a process and processes take time and perspective.  This team, formed over time and distance, brought real meaning to the project. This kind of meaning and integrity can only be built over time, with layers of vision blended to a seamless whole.

    Architect: Levy Art + Architecture
    Contractor: Moroso Construction
    Interior Designers: Cindy Bayon & Eche Martinez

    Photographer: Christopher Stark


    Featured in Modern Luxury Magazine: “Sky High” by Maile Pingel (Fall 2021)

    Featured in Architectural Digest: “This Contemporary San Francisco Condo Is A Lesson In How To Live With Art” by Saiqa Ajmal (June 2022)

    Zero Energy House

    ZeroNRG 08
    Architect: Ross Levy⁠ (Levy Art + Architecture)⁠
    Project Team: Karen Andersen (Levy Art + Architecture)⁠
    MEP: Davis Energy Group⁠
    Contractor: n/a
    Structural Engineer: SEMCO
    Photographer: Ken Gutmaker

    This project aims to be the first residence in San Francisco that is completely self-powering and carbon neutral. The architecture has been developed in conjunction with the mechanical systems and landscape design, each influencing the other to arrive at an integrated solution. Working from the historic facade, the design preserves the traditional formal parlors transitioning to an open plan at the central stairwell which defines the distinction between eras. The new floor plates act as passive solar collectors and radiant tubing redistributes collected warmth to the original, North facing portions of the house. Careful consideration has been given to the envelope design in order to reduce the overall space conditioning needs, retrofitting the old and maximizing insulation in the new.

    Nothing Never Looked So Good

    Words by Joanne Furio and Lauren Murrow

    An Edwardian Divorces PG&E

    As the managing director of San Jose–based SunPower corporation, William Kelly unabashedly geeks out about solar panels. But when he set about expanding his family’s 1904 Noe Valley Edwardian, he took things a step further, getting “off the pipe”— eliminating the need for natural gas. Instead, a radiant system of water-filled tubing beneath the floorboards provides heat, and cooking is done on an induction stovetop. San Francisco firm Levy Art and Architecture expanded the home to 2,424 square feet, moving living areas to the south-facing rear of the house to harness the sunlight; a skylight over the glass-encased three-story staircase lets natural light reach from rooftop to basement. Meanwhile, SunPower’s photovoltaic solar panel system channels 7.6 kilowatts of electricity—enough to power the home and the family’s two cars. J.F.

    Originally published in the April 2013 issue of San Francisco.

    Publications:

    ZeroNRG 25
    ZeroNRG Floor Plan
    Schematic of radiant heating system
    Schematic of electric system
    Schematic of water recycling system

    Laidley

    Laidley 01

    Completed in 2002, this new home in San Francisco is conceived as a series of interlocking forms, stepping up the hill and out of the earth to become a transparent glass form bound by the planar structure. This linear language informs the details throughout, appearing in the plan, elevations and custom furniture design. The street level entry opens to a sculpture court where an open, steel and concrete stairway leads to a terrace and the formal front door. All three living levels enjoy panoramic views of the city from the front and the serenity of a Japanese-inspired garden to the rear.

    [Levy Art + Architecture] took on the challenges of a steep site and steep aspirations by homeowners inspired both by having once lived in an R.M. Schindler home and by their longtime friendship with New York set designer Tom John. “First,” said Ross Levy, “we had to distill one vision from these many visions.” The result mixes a view of the city through the glassed front of the house with a look through the glassed back at Japan, with a teahouse and garden perched atop the multi-level yard, and connects indoors to out with doors from the master suite to the garden and exhilarating terraces on each level of the front of the house, making the house feel much bigger than its 2,500 square feet.

    Susan Fornoff in “Design Magicians”

    Publications: • California Home + Design, September 2006, pp. 150-155: “Balancing Act” by Lydia Lee. • San Francisco Chronicle, September 14, 2005, pp. G1,G4: “Design Magicians” by Susan Fornoff. • AIA San Francisco Home Tours 2005.

    In collaboration with Tom John, Interiors. Ken Gutmaker, Photography.

    Ora Way

    Ora 04

    This sixties vintage, split-level in San Francisco was entirely rebuilt inside the original shell, a new house inside the old. The design was an archaeological process, excavating through the existing structure to find the unrealized potential in this volume. The four parallel monolithic walls oriented from front to back are contrasted with glass and wood infill emphasizing the view. Minimalist details and the expression of structure create a synthesis between existing and new materials which complement interior spaces configured to maximize access to the panoramic skyline from multiple levels.

    Publications:
    • 7×7 Magazine, April 2008, pp. 98-103: “Living on the Edge” by Leilani Labong.