Back in 1964, when architect Al Boeke and landscape architect Lawrence Halpin were planning a development on an exposed coast north of San Francisco, they wanted a cluster of houses that would be at one with the natural surroundings. The principles that underlined their design still have a resonance today.
Their masterplan, which determined the look of the Joseph Esherick-designed house featured on these pages, established guidelines for the community now known as The Sea Ranch a cluster of houses to be built between long hedgerows. These cypress hedges, which are perpendicular to the coastline, were originally planted as farm windbreaks decades earlier.
The prototype houses built at that time all featured an agricultural vernacular their form and natural wood siding are reminiscent of farmhouses and outbuildings.
But the 1960s masterplan went into further detail. It also dictated the angle and pitch of the roofs, which conform to the shape of the windswept trees. In addition, houses were clustered, but staggered for privacy. And open spaces were preserved for all to use each property owns a share of a commons area with coastal pathways, hiking and riding trails open to the public.
Fast forward 45 years and the original design still rings true. But not surprisingly the houses have needed work to repair the onslaught of the weather over nearly half a century and to bring them in line with modern lifestyles.
The owners of this Sea Ranch house, which was a prototype and consequently the first to get a building permit in 1965, commissioned architect Michael Barron-Wike AIA to design a full renovation. The architect, who studied under Esherick, says the house had been used as a vacation rental for many years and was in a state of considerable disrepair, with damp, mildew and mice much in evidence.