Showing posts with label Frick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frick. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Oakland Heritage: Picardy Drive


Saturday was the second to last Oakland Heritage Alliance walking of the 2012 season. Picardy Drive: A Step Back in Time was led by nearby resident Andy Carpentier and focused on the unique storybook homes in what was once known as Normandy Gardens.

We started by viewing houses on an adjacent street that were built just a few years earlier. Most of these were typical California bungalows from 1924 or earlier, but a few houses had features hinting at what was to come, such as steeper, curved roofs. The houses in the area were mostly built on what had been a number of larger estates along Seminary near Mills College, including the F.F. Morse estate. One of the houses near Seminary has the remains of the original fountain from that estate.



A few years later, builder Robert C. Hillen created his collection of "modest mansions" on Picardy Drive. He was an experienced builder who had put up dozens of Arts & Crafts bungalows in Alameda, but this was something different. Aficionados of the storybook style, which features quirky designs and features unique to every house may be wondering how a whole neighborhood of storybook houses was built. R.C. Hillen and architect W.W. Dixon did it by using a variety of floor plans (occasionally flipped) and by using a wide variety of details. Some of the houses have towers (either round or octagonal), others crenelated parapets; still others use variations of roof lines. While some feature arched windows, others have smaller, rectangular windows (and wooden beams) reminiscent of the Tudor style of architecture which influenced the storybook style. It all adds up to a quite a bit of variety amongst the 70 or so houses in the neighborhood.

Despite all the differences between the houses, Hillen and Dixon used several techniques to tie them all together. Besides all the houses being of the same basic style, they had a number of features in common. First, they were built close together, no more than a driveway's width apart. Each house has short side walls to visually connect it to its neighbors, and all the homes were originally built with shake roofs and tinted stucco applied in a unique fashion. The result was a group of unique homes that were all connected. The legacy of that lives on today, as the neighborhood seems more connected than most. Each holiday season, the entire neighborhood displays Christmas lights for all to enjoy, and everyone seems to know everyone and keep an eye out for each other.

Lots more pictures:

Friday, July 23, 2010

signs: Dairy Mart

Dairy Mart

Isaw this sign a long while back, but every time I'd passed it, it was overcast and the sign looked even more worn than it is. The business is long gone, the lot fenced off, but the Dairy Mart sign lives on. I got a shot with a cell phone today on my way back from the Habitat worksite near Tassfaronga today.

Friday, April 9, 2010

signs: Schirmer Liquors

Schirmer Liquors

With the new Habitat for Humanity development in Woodland in East Oakland, I've been slowly branching out from my usual route to the previous development in Sobrante Park. It's not that far away, but Google Maps suggested different routes that were shorter. And the last two weeks I've been picking up my wife's cousin at Coliseum BART for him to come volunteer at Habitat, too. So it was on one of my new meanderings that I found this sign on Seminary. It's currently called Seminary Market, but the great sign still reads Schirmer Liquors. Googling on that turns up this interesting tidbit:
Leslie Ivan SUTTON was born on 19 Sep 1920 in Flagler, Kit Carson Co, Colorado, USA. He Graduated from Flagler High School in 1938 in Flagler, Kit Carson Co, Colorado, USA. He was a Flight Cadet in Army Air Corps in Sep 1940. He was a Captain in the Army Air Corps in Feb 1946. He was a Proprietor of Schirmer's Liquor Store between 1960 and 1982 in Oakland, Alameda Co, California, USA. He died in Jan 1982. He was buried at Flagler Cemetery in Flagler, Kit Carson Co, Colorado, USA.

No idea if the neon still works, but it appears to be in good shape at least on this side of the sign.