Close up, sidewalk looking up view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. Sun is hitting the lowest left blue window and part of the steel, creating a bright reflection. Above the building is a clear blue sky. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CAFront-facing view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. A tree in front of the building is as tall as the second floor. The building is being viewed across the street. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CA

THE HOTEL CASTRO

The program for this urban infill development was to create a Micro Hotel with as many suites as practical, a roof deck, and a café. For each suite, the objective was to create efficient space, a balcony, and connections back into the city.

The concept arose from the thinking that within a tourist hotel visitors should feel they are an integral part of the community and not walled-off by parking structures, gates, and deep lobbies.  There is no front desk to filter the visitor’s experience, nor tourist traps demanding attention.  This concept is intrinsically linked to the hotel’s location, situated in the heart of the well-established Castro District - a tight-knit community of small businesses and long-term residents.

The overall solution is floor plan driven and façade associated. The hotel floor plans stack into a ‘12-pack’ with four suites per floor, each unique. Six have balconies facing the street and the other six the landscaped inner block yards and they average200 square feet. The façade is designed to maximize transparency both literally and figuratively, while at the same time being an overt counterpoint to the neighborhood buildings.  It’s a configuration of alternating glass boxes and recessed balconies framed by a system of custom-fabricated interlocking anodized aluminum channels. The frame system establishes the form of the façade and distinguishes the individual suites while also creating depth and detail.

As the architects, we designed the new building inside and out, yet a decorator designed and selected all of the finishes and furniture.

LOCATION: SAN FRANCISCO, CA

TYPE: NEW HOTEL

SIZE: 12 ROOMS

COMPLETED: OCTOBER 2021

ARCHITECTURAL TEAM

DESIGN PRINCIPAL: Cass Calder Smith, AIA 

PROJECT ARCHITECT: Tim Quayle

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER: Frank Yang

INTERIOR DESIGNER: DLC-ID

 

CONSULTANTS

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: FTF

ENTITLEMENTS: RJR – Daniel Frattin

 

PHOTOGRAPHY: Jose Manuel Alorda

Close up, sidewalk looking up view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. Sun is hitting the lowest left blue window and part of the steel, creating a bright reflection. Above the building is a clear blue sky. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CAFront-facing view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. A tree in front of the building is as tall as the second floor. The building is being viewed across the street. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CAThe Hotel CastroThe Hotel CastroThe Hotel CastroThe Hotel Castro

THE HOTEL CASTRO

The program for this urban infill development was to create a Micro Hotel with as many suites as practical, a roof deck, and a café. For each suite, the objective was to create efficient space, a balcony, and connections back into the city.

The concept arose from the thinking that within a tourist hotel visitors should feel they are an integral part of the community and not walled-off by parking structures, gates, and deep lobbies.  There is no front desk to filter the visitor’s experience, nor tourist traps demanding attention.  This concept is intrinsically linked to the hotel’s location, situated in the heart of the well-established Castro District - a tight-knit community of small businesses and long-term residents.

The overall solution is floor plan driven and façade associated. The hotel floor plans stack into a ‘12-pack’ with four suites per floor, each unique. Six have balconies facing the street and the other six the landscaped inner block yards and they average200 square feet. The façade is designed to maximize transparency both literally and figuratively, while at the same time being an overt counterpoint to the neighborhood buildings.  It’s a configuration of alternating glass boxes and recessed balconies framed by a system of custom-fabricated interlocking anodized aluminum channels. The frame system establishes the form of the façade and distinguishes the individual suites while also creating depth and detail.

As the architects, we designed the new building inside and out, yet a decorator designed and selected all of the finishes and furniture.

LOCATION: SAN FRANCISCO, CA

TYPE: NEW HOTEL

SIZE: 12 ROOMS

COMPLETED: OCTOBER 2021

ARCHITECTURAL TEAM

DESIGN PRINCIPAL: Cass Calder Smith, AIA 

PROJECT ARCHITECT: Tim Quayle

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER: Frank Yang

INTERIOR DESIGNER: DLC-ID

 

CONSULTANTS

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: FTF

ENTITLEMENTS: RJR – Daniel Frattin

 

PHOTOGRAPHY: Jose Manuel Alorda

THE HOTEL CASTRO

The program for this urban infill development was to create a Micro Hotel with as many suites as practical, a roof deck, and a café. For each suite, the objective was to create efficient space, a balcony, and connections back into the city.

The concept arose from the thinking that within a tourist hotel visitors should feel they are an integral part of the community and not walled-off by parking structures, gates, and deep lobbies.  There is no front desk to filter the visitor’s experience, nor tourist traps demanding attention.  This concept is intrinsically linked to the hotel’s location, situated in the heart of the well-established Castro District - a tight-knit community of small businesses and long-term residents.

The overall solution is floor plan driven and façade associated. The hotel floor plans stack into a ‘12-pack’ with four suites per floor, each unique. Six have balconies facing the street and the other six the landscaped inner block yards and they average200 square feet. The façade is designed to maximize transparency both literally and figuratively, while at the same time being an overt counterpoint to the neighborhood buildings.  It’s a configuration of alternating glass boxes and recessed balconies framed by a system of custom-fabricated interlocking anodized aluminum channels. The frame system establishes the form of the façade and distinguishes the individual suites while also creating depth and detail.

As the architects, we designed the new building inside and out, yet a decorator designed and selected all of the finishes and furniture.

LOCATION: SAN FRANCISCO, CA

TYPE: NEW HOTEL

SIZE: 12 ROOMS

COMPLETED: OCTOBER 2021

ARCHITECTURAL TEAM

DESIGN PRINCIPAL: Cass Calder Smith, AIA 

PROJECT ARCHITECT: Tim Quayle

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER: Frank Yang

INTERIOR DESIGNER: DLC-ID

 

CONSULTANTS

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: FTF

ENTITLEMENTS: RJR – Daniel Frattin

 

PHOTOGRAPHY: Jose Manuel Alorda

Close up, sidewalk looking up view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. Sun is hitting the lowest left blue window and part of the steel, creating a bright reflection. Above the building is a clear blue sky. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CAFront-facing view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. A tree in front of the building is as tall as the second floor. The building is being viewed across the street. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CA

THE HOTEL CASTRO

The program for this urban infill development was to create a Micro Hotel with as many suites as practical, a roof deck, and a café. For each suite, the objective was to create efficient space, a balcony, and connections back into the city.

The concept arose from the thinking that within a tourist hotel visitors should feel they are an integral part of the community and not walled-off by parking structures, gates, and deep lobbies.  There is no front desk to filter the visitor’s experience, nor tourist traps demanding attention.  This concept is intrinsically linked to the hotel’s location, situated in the heart of the well-established Castro District - a tight-knit community of small businesses and long-term residents.

The overall solution is floor plan driven and façade associated. The hotel floor plans stack into a ‘12-pack’ with four suites per floor, each unique. Six have balconies facing the street and the other six the landscaped inner block yards and they average200 square feet. The façade is designed to maximize transparency both literally and figuratively, while at the same time being an overt counterpoint to the neighborhood buildings.  It’s a configuration of alternating glass boxes and recessed balconies framed by a system of custom-fabricated interlocking anodized aluminum channels. The frame system establishes the form of the façade and distinguishes the individual suites while also creating depth and detail.

As the architects, we designed the new building inside and out, yet a decorator designed and selected all of the finishes and furniture.

LOCATION: SAN FRANCISCO, CA

TYPE: NEW HOTEL

SIZE: 12 ROOMS

COMPLETED: OCTOBER 2021

ARCHITECTURAL TEAM

DESIGN PRINCIPAL: Cass Calder Smith, AIA 

PROJECT ARCHITECT: Tim Quayle

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER: Frank Yang

INTERIOR DESIGNER: DLC-ID

 

CONSULTANTS

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: FTF

ENTITLEMENTS: RJR – Daniel Frattin

 

PHOTOGRAPHY: Jose Manuel Alorda

Close up, sidewalk looking up view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. Sun is hitting the lowest left blue window and part of the steel, creating a bright reflection. Above the building is a clear blue sky. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CAFront-facing view of a five story building made of a black steel beam façade, brown wood ceilings and walls, and blue-tinged glass windows and balcony partitions. A tree in front of the building is as tall as the second floor. The building is being viewed across the street. The Hotel Castro - San Francisco, CA

THE HOTEL CASTRO

The program for this urban infill development was to create a Micro Hotel with as many suites as practical, a roof deck, and a café. For each suite, the objective was to create efficient space, a balcony, and connections back into the city.

The concept arose from the thinking that within a tourist hotel visitors should feel they are an integral part of the community and not walled-off by parking structures, gates, and deep lobbies.  There is no front desk to filter the visitor’s experience, nor tourist traps demanding attention.  This concept is intrinsically linked to the hotel’s location, situated in the heart of the well-established Castro District - a tight-knit community of small businesses and long-term residents.

The overall solution is floor plan driven and façade associated. The hotel floor plans stack into a ‘12-pack’ with four suites per floor, each unique. Six have balconies facing the street and the other six the landscaped inner block yards and they average200 square feet. The façade is designed to maximize transparency both literally and figuratively, while at the same time being an overt counterpoint to the neighborhood buildings.  It’s a configuration of alternating glass boxes and recessed balconies framed by a system of custom-fabricated interlocking anodized aluminum channels. The frame system establishes the form of the façade and distinguishes the individual suites while also creating depth and detail.

As the architects, we designed the new building inside and out, yet a decorator designed and selected all of the finishes and furniture.

LOCATION: SAN FRANCISCO, CA

TYPE: NEW HOTEL

SIZE: 12 ROOMS

COMPLETED: OCTOBER 2021

ARCHITECTURAL TEAM

DESIGN PRINCIPAL: Cass Calder Smith, AIA 

PROJECT ARCHITECT: Tim Quayle

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER: Frank Yang

INTERIOR DESIGNER: DLC-ID

 

CONSULTANTS

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: FTF

ENTITLEMENTS: RJR – Daniel Frattin

 

PHOTOGRAPHY: Jose Manuel Alorda

<< DJERASSI WRITERS STUDIOSLOEWS MIAMI BEACH >>