Bell Mews

San Francisco CA | Completed 

1998

Ten cedar-shingled townhomes encircle a semiprivate courtyard, creating a tiny idyllic neighborhood for first-time home buyers in San Francisco.

Located in the historic Western Addition neighborhood of San Francisco on a former gas station site, this development offers affordable two, three and four bedroom townhouses to first-time home buyers The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency facilitated by providing below market rates to qualified families.

This 10 unit high-density design holds the urban street edge with three-story townhouses. They enclose a semiprivate courtyard or “mews”, surfaced with interlocking concrete pavers, that provides access to individual garages and a two-story “cottage” duplex. Private balconies off the kitchens and dining rooms overhang the mews, which extends the public street into the site while buffering it.

The townhouses feature a split-level section, which allows each floor, containing a single room, to be only a half story from the adjacent floors. This also places the first living level a half level above the street for privacy and partial separation from the public sidewalk. The wood-frame structure is finished along the street face with a “green” painted composite siding. To add a variation of texture, the cottages and interior elevations are finished with cedar shingles.


Project Details


Project Number
9411

Address

Ellis and Divisadero
San Francisco, CA
United States



Status
Completed
1998

Number of Units
2 Bedroom
9
3 Bedroom
1

Total 10

Density Ratios
Project
13,000 sf
Site
10,200 sf
Acres
0.20
Units per Acre
43

Parking
Parking Spots
10
Parking Type
Private Garage

Team


Client
San Francisco Housing Development Corporation
Architect
David Baker Architects
Contractor
Nibbi Brothers General Contractors

Keywords