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[5] [6] McElroy was a wood miller by trade and he built the house between 1860 and 1861. [3] [5] Originally the house was designed with two floors (four rooms on each floor) with a winding staircase in the middle of the building. [7] The McElroy family lived in the house until around the 1880s when the house became a rental property. [5]
The Tobin House is a historic home located in the Lower Pacific Heights neighborhood in San Francisco, California built in the Tudor Gothic Revival style in 1915. It was designed by Willis Polk for Joseph E. Tobin and Constance de Young, daughter of M. H. de Young .
The Feusier Octagon House is located at 1067 Green Street in San Francisco. It was built between 1857 and 1858 by George Kenny, who sold it in 1870 to Louis Feusier. The house was later expanded with a third story, mansard roof, and cupola. [6] As of 2018 it was a rental house, [6] before being put up for sale in 2021 for US$8.6 million. [7]
The house was designed by architect W. H. Lille in a Queen Anne style for Edward Coleman (1830–1913). [2] [3] Coleman was born in Maine, and came to California in 1853 during the California gold rush. [4] He developed a few successful mines in Grass Valley, California. [4] [5] He has a second house also named the Edward Coleman House in Grass ...
The Abner Phelps House is one of the oldest private residences in San Francisco, constructed in approximately 1850 by Abner Phelps and his wife Augusta Roussell with pre-constructed house parts. It is located at 1111 Oak Street just west of Divisadero Street in San Francisco's Haight Ashbury district. The house is not open to the public, and as ...
Photos of house used in 'Home Alone' The "Home Alone" house was built in 1921 and is over 9,000 square feet. It also features four fireplaces, two laundry rooms, two hot tubs, a wet bar ...
The house is on the National Register of Historic Places in San Francisco. The architecture of San Francisco is not so much known for defining a particular architectural style ; rather, with its interesting and challenging variations in geography and topology and tumultuous history , San Francisco is known worldwide for its particularly ...
In 1908 it was purchased by George Chauncey Boardman, a real-estate magnate and president of San Francisco Fire Insurance, whose house had been destroyed in the 1906 earthquake and fire. His widow and other family members lived there until 1923, when it was bought by Charles J. Rousseau, an architect, who subdivided it into 13 apartments.