Challenges              
The Clocktower required a substantial renovation and a new seismic system linking, to be financed in a soft real estate market.
     
         
McKenzie, Rose & Holliday Development was determined to create an urban village by connecting the buildings, and retaining the property’s three interior courtyards.
One side of The Clocktower faced the busy, noisy San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.
   
clocktower exterior                    
                   
Framework                      
The timing couldn’t have been more opportune. Aware of the advantages of the 1988 live-work ordinance, McKenzie, Rose & Holliday Development was shopping for properties in San Francisco’s South of Market (SOMA) district to turn into live/work lofts well before San Francisco’s loft craze began. At the same time, Mitsui Fudosan of Japan was also investigating the San Francisco real estate market. After a year’s worth of due diligence, Mitsui Fudosan offered us a significant line of credit to acquire buildings and construct live/work lofts. That’s when the owners of the Clocktower, the preeminent SOMA building that was the former home of Schmidt Lithographic, contacted McKenzie, Rose & Holliday Development about selling the property.
The property represented challenges as well as opportunity. To mitigate the noise from the nearby San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, we created a corridor along the facing wall and oriented most of the units toward the interior courtyards. Preserving the building’s architectural integrity meant creating 44 distinct floor plans and 67 kitchen styles. The 127 units range in size from 500-square-foot studios—San Francisco’s first mini-lofts—to a 3,000-square-foot penthouse. All feature the exposed bricks, concrete columns, and 15-foot ceilings that would become a McKenzie, Rose & Holliday Development signature.
 
       
      living room  
             
courtyard dining area  
Impact                          
McKenzie, Rose & Holliday Development’s vision and experience led to the rehabilitation of a landmark San Francisco building and the creation of a vital new hub in an urban neighborhood undergoing a renaissance.
credits
back
     
     
home company media awards contact home company media awards contact Durkee 601 4th St. 355 Bryant St. Clocktower Goodman2 Arkansas Park 1000 Van Ness Hamilton Park Emeryville Warehouse Scott St. Iron Horse Central Station Blue Star Corner Capitol Lofts home