Fougeron Architecture’s Translucence House

1960's Bay Area Home Refined Through Translucence and Light

Fougeron Architecture's Translucence House
Fougeron Architecture's translucent home brings natural light in from every angle and direction.

This young family’s urban retreat overlooks the San Francisco Bay. A unique design brings clarity and openness to the home with glass and natural light, as the home explores perceptions of inside/outside, private/public, and light/dark.

This renovation + addition unravels a chapter of ill-considered renovations to create an urban retreat for a young family on a remarkable site. By re-using more than half of the original structure and improving the home’s environmental performance, the project also minimizes the 4000 SF home’s embodied carbon and ongoing carbon footprint.

Fougeron Architecture's translucent home has an amazing view
Geographic location gives this home an amazing view of the city and bay.

The double-wide lot sits atop a bluff and next to a community garden, making for a rare condition in the heart of the city: a large, secluded site, overlooking the city and the bay. The site was filled and leveled in the early 1960’s to accommodate the original house and pool, which was also the scene of legendary parties. Renovations by a subsequent owner led to a messy collection of rooms out of sync with the flow of daily life.

The design brings clarity and openness to the home by taking an almost surgical approach, retaining essential structural elements while introducing new features. A series of interventions break apart the existing box, rewriting the relationships and connections between rooms. Glass and natural light both diffuse and hold together the composition, defining scenes throughout the house that explore perceptions of inside/outside, private/public, and light/dark as well as materiality.

Fougeron Architecture modern dining and living room
The modern living and dining room are enclosed in an all-glass pavilion.

The most visible intervention is the insertion of an all-glass pavilion enclosing a dining and family room. Neither completely indoors nor outdoors, this volume reaches into the rear yard to engage sweeping views of the bay and East Bay hills beyond. A trellis of aluminum and wood shades the space without encumbering the sense of expansiveness.

Fougeron Architecture brown glass staircase and bridge
A brown-glass stair and bridge connect levels and add a dimension of light and color.

An existing two-story volume–once dominated by a bulky staircase–is opened up to create a more befitting entry way and a flexible lounge for the home. A brown-glass stair and bridge float within this space connecting levels and rooms and adding a dimension of light and color. The brown glass, which evokes the modern-era origins of the home, shifts from solid to transparent with the changing light each day.

Fougeron Architecture modern kitchen
The modern kitchen is open and filled with natural light.
Fougeron Architecture firepole
Every child should have a firepole to come downstairs in the morning!

Around this lounge extend two wings of living space: an open kitchen anchors the dining/living pavilion on one side while a guest room and child’s playroom sit opposite. Featured in this playroom, something every child should have – a fire pole that connect the two floors.

Fougeron Architecture curved glass shower by Supreme Glass
A curved glass shower is a secretly provocative gesture to the street below.

The upper floor is expanded and refined. The master suite is reimagined as a singular, light-filled volume extending the full depth of the floor to the outdoors. A curved glass shower pushes beyond the envelope of the house and into the screened front balcony—a secretly provocative gesture to the street below. Particularly in this space, the play of privacy and views, light and shadow, recall California’s Light and Space art movement to which the design pays homage.

Fougeron Architecture Translucence House Front View
The front facade is composed of vertical and horizontal wood boards and slats.

Throughout the house curved forms and playful elements counter the home’s rectilinear form. Finally, a front facade composed vertical and horizontal wood boards and slats, echoes the trellises and partitions, tying together the home’s public and private expressions and replacing an opaque street presence with a wood screen activated by shifting light from day to night.

Fougeron Architecture's Translucence House patio area
The back patio is surrounded by the glass walls of the home.

Fougeron Architecture
Based in: San Francisco, CA
Contact: Anne Fougeron
Photo Credit: Joe Fletcher
Contractor/Builder: Young and Burton Inc.
Landscape Architect: Andrea Cochran
            Landscape Architecture
Structural Engineer: Endres Studio
Colorist: Colour Studio, Jill Pilaroscia

Project neighborhood: Potrero Hill
Original Build: 1960
Renovation + Addition Completed: 2019
Number of Bedrooms: 2
Number of Bathrooms: 2
Approximate Square Footage: 4,038
Custom Cabinetry: Berkley Mills
Curved Glass Shower: Supreme Glass
Stairs and Bridge (glass fabricator):
   Sillers-Treppen

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