
What we’re about
San Francisco Victorian Architecture and Mansion Tours, as well as Berkeley. Architectural and point of interest walks and hikes/walks on Mt.Tamalpais.
Walking Tours to the most interesting and historic sections of Berkeley and San Francisco, to gain some insight into how our ancestors lived. Exploring pioneer housing, to Italianate Victorians and the later trends and styles, up to modern and post-modern architecture. We’ll hear stories of the people who built and lived in these communities, and how they, the builders and architects (Julia Morgan, Bernard Maybeck, Willis Polk and many more.) influenced both local history and the Bay Area’s architectural identity. Through the architecture we'll see how our urban landscape was peopled and developed. Evidence of our ancestors expressing their hopes and dreams, their belief in themselves, their values and their view of the world around them. How they urbanized the raw land, into creating the greatest transportation networks and subsequently the most powerful economic engine the world has ever seen, California and our Bay Area. It's there from the beginning, waiting to be explored and discovered. *See the current schedule here on Meetup.com.*
All photos are either taken by me, or members, or are paid for through Adobe Stock, on a monthly payment basis.
Do not post or message other members with unsolicited messages. Meetup.com has a Connect feature that can be used within 24 hrs. after an event to mutually contact a member you met on the Event. Use this feature, do not direct message or comment unsolicitedly, directly to another member.
A conversation is needed about Meetup "No Show" issues! The rule of thumb for most Meetup groups is a 50% rate of RSVP no shows. My goal is to handle the No Show issue in a positive way. And conversation is a positive way to find solutions.
There are many causes/reasons for no show behavior. Here are a couple.
Using Meetup RSVPs for shortlisting ones calendar down to a final choice? In other words RSVPing for several interesting Events for a given day. Then when the morning arrives picking the most interesting Event and blowing off the other RSVPs. (Please don't do that.)
There may be a need for Cognitive Behavior Therapy for last minute, "Emotional Reasoning" ie. I don't feel like it, therefore I shouldn't do it, or just going negative about the Event outcome. Seek specific therapy, for getting over ER and negativity, getting over these makes life better.
Here is an important request.
If you are not 100% sure you will attend, DON'T RSVP until you are sure. For those who are indecisive by nature, do the very best you can.
Lastly I think when members attend and are witness to an Event that had 28 RSVPs, that sees 10 actually show up is not a great way for the Event to get started. I know it is initially dis-heartening for me and not a very nice way to get started. Let's talk under the Discussions Tab and seek solutions together.
Note: Your Meetup name should have a least one character that makes it singular to you.
Note: You can control all the emails you receive from this group. Click "You're a Member", go to "Group Notifications", you can opt out of all emails or select types you want to receive. (Taking yourself out of the loop can have drawbacks. Especially when there are late changes to an Event.)
You can bring up a monthly calendar of all the Group's events by month. Go to the Events Tab and click Calendar.
We'll identify these basics about some of the houses; the architect, year built, name of first owner, builder's name, architectural style and maybe a human interest story from the house's history.
Videos of past hikes are available here, We'll be walking in very nice areas, 3 to 4 miles. We'll walk in the shade if too hot and in the sun if chilly. Try to find the fog when the temps rise. Have lunch with a spectacular view and out of the wind. Hopefully with picnic tables and restrooms.
Safety is always my #1 priority. I will be as aware as I can of any danger. But I can't be responsible for your safety. As adults you are responsible for your own personal safety and what you decide to do.
Liability Disclaimer: All participants agree to assume 100% responsibility for their own safety, conduct, and well-being and recognize that possible hazards exist while participating in outdoor activities, and agree to participate solely at their own risk. If you RSVP “Yes” and/or attend any event, it shall be conclusively presumed that you understand and agree to this policy.
Look at some of the over 6000 photos and picture yourself right there. Stay in shape and look ahead to fun days, sign-up for some hikes in the future while on-line here.
The group is for walkers and hikers who love to be immersed in the gorgeous, special places California offers. And while in that immersion, connect not only emotionally to these places, but learn about the natural science and human history of the locations. And to do this with kindness, patience and open heartedly. And best of all to make friends with those we get to know.
But the reality of managing a Meetup group is hard work. It has to be done carefully. Good judgement and basic people managing skills are needed. About roughly, 50% of those signing up for an Event, will actually show up.
I tell frequent no-showers to not bother to RSVP anymore and just show-up and surprise us! But some are RSVPing to whatever is interesting and then choose as the weekend approaches. I call it short-listing. I guess it's nice to make the short-lists.
When you compare Meetup to the social clubs of the past. Ski Clubs, Swim Clubs, Yachting Clubs, Country Clubs, Sierra Club, American Youth Hostels etc. Meetup is just Club Lite. Committing in a very personal relationship is a challenge for many. Is the same thing happening here in broader social relationships? Maybe keeping it lite is a way of compartmentalizing, keeping safe emotional boundaries. If friendships develop it will happen over the long term when an amount of certainty has developed?
If your work or life situation is totally stressing you out look for the Forest Bathing moments and Ocean Bathing (at Duxbury Reef) on the hikes that have as a goal reaching a meditative state of mind.
I love doing architectural tours of the Victorian and Mansion areas of San Francisco. Also Berkeley as fascinating residential architecture and the history to go with it as well.
These are very doable hikes for everyone who can hike. If you can manage walking up some very steep hills, can maintain your balance on very rocky, root covered uneven surfaces and have the stamina to walk about five miles you'll do fine. I think the best thing is to have a routine where you are walking everyday including going on these hikes. I've been leading hikes on Mt.Tam since 1995, less so now. So I know the areas very well. And also what to look for and when. let me know if I can answer any questions, as far as getting started?
If the above concerns you let me say this. You have to start somewhere. Walking is very gentle. Come do as much as you can and then come again and do a little more. If you have to stop and go back to your car, just be aware of the return route. There is so much to gain, don't let negative concerns stop you.
The cost of living in the Bay Area is very high. We all have to work, or have had to work, very hard, to afford to live here. One of the mitigating factors is the openness to diversity found here. One aspect of life here we can control is how we access one of the most beautiful outdoor recreation areas in the whole country. Not only the beautiful lands, the Bay and bio-diversity but the weather to allow us to get outside 24/365.
With the above said, utilize our amazing outdoors to forget about work and worries or the ravages of age and everyday cares and achieve a relaxed state of mind and body to the greatest extent you can. That's the goal of this Meetup and has been my personal goal for over twenty-seven years of spending as much time outdoors as I can. I'm never disappointed by this local outdoor experience. As well as the socializing, potential new friends met. Resulting in fulfillment of another vital need, maintaining our emotional well being and staying mentally healthy as well.
The bang for the effort put in, outweighs the driving time effort and the trade-offs, versus something else I could be doing.
It seems many have the impression that to have a fulfilling outdoor experience something very special must be experienced, via thrill seeking. The lure of a waterfall, spectacular views, sunsets, the full moonrise, the very peak of the wildflower bloom, some sort of special outdoor event, an unusual snowfall here, the height of fall foliage, mushrooms in profusion or some other unusual or rare occurrence must be sought to get the bang the effort requires.
Don't get me wrong the above are all fabulous. But they do not result in your having a sustainable, regular program for good health, well being, relaxation and fitness. And the great fallacy is, yes the above are great, but a plain, old regular hike or walk, once or twice a week is so fulfilling all by itself. Not just hit or miss thrill seeking, but a way of life that results in sustainable, ongoing happiness and health.
Liability Disclaimer:
By signing up for this event you agree to assume all responsibility for your own safety, health consequences, conduct and well-being, and you hereby release its organizers, hosts and participants from any and all liability, claims, demands or causes of action that you now have, or may have in the future, for illness, injuries, damages, and/or economic loss of any kind or nature, arising in whole or in part out of the activities, advice, or information contained herein. You are also acknowledging that you are aware and have made your guests aware of the risks, dangers and hazards associated with this type of outdoor activity and freely accept and fully assume all such risks, dangers and hazards.
Upcoming events
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Julia Morgan Arch.Tour-Elmwood Park & Claremont Ct.,Berkeley
2640 College Ave, Berkeley, CA, US(Photo above JM in Paris, 1900, Cathedral Notre Dame in the background.)
We're meeting outside the Julia Morgan Theater on College Ave. at Derby St. This is our first stop on the tour.
(Along the way we'll stop in if open, to see Bernard Maybeck's, First Church of Christ Scientist, a Nat'l Landmark site. Directly across the street is Julia Morgan's 1918 Baptist Theological Seminary. Built of brick to resemble the Ashmolean Library of Oxford. Britain's first public museum and the world's first university museum. note. The Seminary's windows and Tudor details recall the period when the Baptist Church was founded.)
Morgan graduated UC in 1894 with a degree in Civil Engineering, one of her specializations was structural engineering. (This benefited her clients greatly, as was seen after the 06' earthquake in her still standing buildings.)
She arrived in Paris in 1896. A few years later it was reported in the San Francisco Call: Paris, Oct.30,1902 - Julia Morgan of San Francisco passed the examination with honors at the Architectural section of the School of Fine Arts (Ecole de Beaux Arts, Paris France. The first woman to do so. Ironically one of the greatest architects in history, was made to wait two years, taking entrance exams before admission.
By the end of her 45 yr. career she had received over 700 commissions. It was said, "Her rational approach to home design and the public success of her large commissions gave Julia Morgan a solid reputation. It also won her the confidence of her clients. With the hard work, genius, inspiration and true artistic perception to create memorable works.
Over the course of her career, Morgan designed nearly one hundred buildings across California and the nation for women’s organizations. Her commissions included social and civic clubs for women; academic, residential, and recreational buildings; primary schools; orphanages; hospitals, sanitariums,and nursing residences. She also designed more than thirty YWCA buildings, including those in San Francisco and Berkeley.
We'll concentrate on the many Julia Morgan designed houses, churches and buildings in the Claremont Ct. and Elmwood neighborhoods. Unique here are the Julia Morgan ensemble houses, where she creatively and economically placed two houses on one large lot. We'll see several of these ensembles. In fact when JM bought her own house at Washington & Divisadero in SF in 1925, she bought a pair of houses there.
To read more about the many Julia Morgan public buildings, such as the Hearst Castle etc. go to wikipedia. She was one of California's most prolific architects. The first woman to receive the American Institute of Architects highest award, the AIA Gold Medal, awarded posthumously in 2014.
The three projects that immediately solidified her future career as a great architect, engineer and fully capable project/construction manager were the rebuilding of the new Fairmount Hotel after its semi-destruction following the earthquake. The design, engineering and building of the beautiful Bell Tower at Mills College and Carnegie Library there, both of which survived the earthquake without a crack. And the completion on time and within budget of the construction of the Greek Theater at UC for John Gayland Howard, campus architect.
After the last Julia Morgan home we'll find our way back through what I call the "Pacific Heights" of Berkeley.
Look for parking on the smaller side streets. Option for lunch afterward.
Here are some links if you would like to help with Meetup expenses.
Here is a Venmo link., for my account.
Here is my Paypal account. 'herrmann48@comcast.net'
Or use the Donation feature above.6 attendees
Eureka Valley, A Great Victorian Tour
20th St & Church St, San Francisco, CA 94114, San Francisco, Ca, USA marvelous tour of Victorians in Eureka Valley. On our way we'll discover a beautifully restored "Earthquake Cottage", from 1906.
Just imagine house after house of these efflorescent, floriated, flamboyant creations. What inspired the Victorians? Makes for an interesting discussion.
Roughly over 48,000 Victorians were built in SF, (1860s to 1915), with about a third remaining.
Builder, Fernando Nelson's houses stand out in neighborhoods of beautifully authentic Victorians due to his signature gingerbread details. With his sons he produced some 4,000 homes from 1876 until his death in 1953. After the Victorian Era he created developments in the Richmond, Presidio Terrace and West Portal, among others. The two photos below show very similar F.Nelson, Queen Ann row houses. The one with the garages added underneath is in the Castro (for sale listing) the other at Waller and Carmelita St
For a biography of F. Nelson, click.
This link will take you to the history of several of the houses on the tour. Or near the tour.
(Sketches of what is described below will be passed around. We'll also go over a sketch of the interior of a typical Victorian.)
(There are five Victorian Styles. Walking in the Victorian neighborhoods is even more fun when you can identify each of the five styles of Victorians.)
- 1860s -Flat front Italianate- (earliest Victorians). (French 2nd Empire also appear downtown to burn after the '06 earthquake.)
- 1870s -Italianate with slanted bay windows.
- 1880s -San Francisco Stick Style (also called East Lake). Simpler square bay windows now used. Overall much more elaborate decoration, ornament and gingerbread used.
- 1890s -Queen Anne Tower House&Witches Cap, with angled or rounded bay windows & front gable
- 1890s -Queen Anne Row House, 1, 1-1/2 or two stories. Large front gable. Possibly with a moongate entry.
Features & "Gingerbread"
Moongate entry
Floral Decor-Garlands, Vases
Fish scale and/or Diamond shingles-
Towers & Witch's Cap-
Stained Glass or Beveled Glass-
Carvings of grotesque faces-
Sunbursts- often painted gold, half or full.
Gables
Newel Posts at the end of railings&Finials on Tower tops&roof peaks-
Woodworking mills South of Market provided the "gingerbread". There was an Old English custom using fancy cutouts of baked gingerbread to decorate wedding cakes. The term gingerbread was subsequently used for the decorating of Victorian houses. The secret ingredient was redwood. It could be carved, sawn, turned on a lathe, incised, or soaked and press- molded into almost any shape.
If you would like a scholarly and detailed explanation with photos, click.
Most of the photos below and listings are taken from the SF Planning Dept. information of 240 pages reviewing Eureka Valley.17 attendees- $10.00

Mansions in Pacific Heights-SF Tour-Alta Plaza Pk.to Lafayette Pk.
West-side of Alta Plaza Park on the side-walk at the intersection of Pierce &Jackson Sts., 2401 Pierce St., San Francisco, CA, USWe are meeting on the sidewalk at the intersection of Jackson St. & Pierce St., SF, along the north-side of Alta Plaza Park.
A new addition includes some local tales of "urban gossip" and legend. Also new, First Timers cannot bring a Guest.
There is available free parking around the neighborhood and no restriction on weekends/holidays. (There is always parking on the very steep streets and usually around Alta Plaza Park for example.) To find a spot quickly look on the steep hilly street of Pierce between Jackson & Pacific Ave, 90 degree parking on the west side of the street here.
The tour is a little longer than in the past with some new additions as we make our way from the far west side of the tour at Vallejo & Normandie (where photo above was taken) to Lafayette Park to the east and return to where we started. (Unless lunch intervenes as we cross Fillmore on the return.)
After the tour visit Fillmore St. where there are lots of shops, restaurants, coffee houses, bars and bakeries and today.
You're welcome to join for lunch. My go to place is, La Mediterranee other places, Janes across the street at Fillmore & Sacramento St. Or Dynasty Dumpling over at Calif.& Divisadero, not likely. If we go there we have to stop afterwards across the street at B Patisserie for coffee and desert. I like Perry's too, but best thing to eat there is the Petrole Soul, other then that not much to recommend but the SF atmosphere of the place is fun.
About midway through the tour we'll stop for a break atop Lafayette Park. The strange 19th century tale of Samuel Holladay and how he got away with building his mansion on the highest point in Pacific Hts., even though his residential real estate "empire", was atop and within Lafayette Park. This is a true tale and will be told with some of the old photos.
They'll be restrooms at the Park and views and we'll describe the surrounding heritage Victorian houses as time allows, but making our way back through some of the best examples of remaining Victorians in SF.
Pacific Heights is best known for being one of the most affluent neighborhoods in San Francisco. This tour highlights the architecture, and some of the people who built, occupied and maintained these grand properties. About 30 of which will be on our tour with a few sentences of information about each property.
The walking tour is 3.5-4.0 miles. With the usual SF hills. I'll be making (I hope!) a memento, video slideshow, using the app, "Relive", everyone gets a link.
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Looking at a San Francisco Victorian, what to look for:
(There are five Styles)
- Flat front Italianate- (earliest Victorians).
- Italianate with slanted bay windows.
- San Francisco Stick Style (also called East Lake). Simpler square bay windows now used. Overall more elaborate decoration.
- Queen Anne Tower House&Witches Cap, with angled or rounded bay windows & front gable
- Queen Anne Row House"Cottage", 1, 1-1/2 or two stories. Large front gable. Possible moon-gate entry.
- Features & "Gingerbread"
- Floral Decor-Garlands (one of many types of decorations known as *"Gingerbread")
- Fish scale&Diamond shingles-
- Towers & Witch's Cap-
- Stained Glass or Beveled Glass-
- Carvings of grotesque faces-
- Sunbursts- often painted gold color, half or full.
- Gables (Queen Anne's) in a variety of material- (mainly redwood)
- Newel Posts and Finials on Tower tops and roof peaks-
We'll see clusters of Victorian homes systematically built for the average working person by a development company, "The Real Estate Assoc." THEA, in business from 1870 to 1880. Not quite magnificent but many still standing.
Periods
1860 - 1870s Italianate: Buildings were vertical in emphasis with rounded classical detail. Earliest had flat windows, with false roof fronts.
1880s Stick Style (also called East Lake): Squared off bay windows appear.
Late 1880s and 1890s Queen Anne : Gingerbread would be applied to both the Stick and Queen Ann styles in San Francisco. Sloping roofs appear. With gables and towers.
Rooflines in the Queen Anne were irregular, combining the witches hat rooftop on a rounded or octagonal tower.
Following the Victorians the next major architectural style were the Period Revival residences popular in the 1920s and 1930s.
If you would like a scholarly and detailed explanation with photos, click.1 attendee 
Architecture Along the Fire Line of the Sept.1923, N.Berkeley Hills Fire
Shattuck Avenue & Berryman Street, Berkeley, CA, USThe North Berkeley Hills fire, on Sept.17, 1923, destroyed 585 houses. Many students, dozens of professors and ordinary Berkeley citizens lost their homes. In some instances professors lost their life's work, up in flames. (Thankfully no one perished, but many were injured.)
(Here's a simple link that will allow you to support the Meetup and add a thank you.)
Today's walk will be about 3 miles. Some steep short uphills. Uneven pavements. Wear sturdy shoes. If you would like more background ahead of time please read the event description below or just come and soak up the info.
The housing on twenty-two blocks was completely destroyed by the fire.
We'll walk along some of the residential blocks that burned down.
The map and photos show the center of the devastation from the intersections of Cedar Ave. & Euclid Ave. to Virginia & Scenic Ave.
We'll set out on this comparative adventure to see what housing looked like in the neighborhoods affected and unaffected by the fire.
The fire map shows Arch St. from Glen Ave to about a third of a block past Vine St. was untouched by the fire. From that point to Hearst Ave. there was complete devastation. Here at mid-block on Arch St. we'll compare an untouched row of houses, to a directly adjoining rebuild of small apartment buildings and other post 1923, mostly period revival style houses and apartments. The photo shows a white victorian on the left and two smallish stucco apartment buildings on the right. The fire line between them. The post 1923 apts. fire-resistent, with red tile roofs and stucco exteriors.
Here is a short summary of the history of housing styles popular in Berkeley.
The 1st bay traditional (brown shingle, with Craftsman features), starting in the late 1890s, less popular by 1920. These craftsman and victorians were the predominant pre-fire houses. The influence of the, "save the hills", living with nature philosophy of the Hillside Club (The clubhouse building was lost in the fire. ) had a marked effect in North Berkeley. A tenet was that houses should blend into the hillsides in color and shape. And be made of natural materials, preferably redwood.
The next popular style (mainly after the fire) were the period revival homes, from the 1920s to 1940s. Period Revival such as Spanish-Mediterranean, English Cottage, Tudor, Classical and Colonial etc. We also see more fireproof, stucco facades used in these. Many with red tile roofs.
Today we may see a modernist home or two also. (3rd Bay Traditional or Bay Area Regional. The Eichler style houses.)
Berkeley has a sprawling variety of urban/suburban, residential architecture done in California. A good sampling of which, can usually be seen in a short walk.
As we walk along the tour route, identifying /house spotting, as we learn the following information for some of the BAHA (Berkeley Architectural Heritage Assoc.) researched houses we pass.
- Architect's name
- Year built & builder's name
- Original owner's name (name of the house)
- Architectural style (victorian, craftsman, period revival, modern etc.)
- Possibly a human interest story from the home's past and/or a unique architectural feature.
The exact ignition source of the fire is uncertain but apparently ignition occurred along the line of the PG&E high-tension line in Wildcat Canyon. A prior drought season and a period of very strong Diablo winds creating very dry conditions and 40mph winds during the fire combined with wood shingle roofs creating windblown fire embers that caused the rapid spread of incineration from house to house.
A footnote. The fact that in the aftermath of the fire, the wood shingle industry's successful campaign to prevent the banning of wood shingle roofs, led directly to the September, 1991, Oakland Hills fire, costing 25 lives and the loss of over 2500 homes, is tragic.
Meet at the intersection of Shattuck & Berryman Sts. Weekdays there is two hour street parking, no limit on weekends. But be sure to check the parking signs before locking up. Buses also run nearby on Shattuck. Walkable from BART.4 attendees
Past events
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