San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Architect going far past twisting towers

- By John King

To understand why Jeanne Gang is a deeply important architect, not just a spinner of eyecatchin­g forms, check out her four Bay Area projects.

There’s Mira, the shimmering condominiu­m tower near the Embarcader­o that swirls upward like a blunt corkscrew. At China Basin, a bayfront parking lot will be transforme­d into offices and housing by a team of architects that Gang helped assemble.

But the Chicago architect and her firm, Studio Gang, also have designed a new campus for California College of the Arts that will emphasize environmen­tal sustainabi­lity. She’s even tackling one of the least glamorous building types of all, a government office building for San Mateo County.

The eclectic mix of projects is a timely reminder that architectu­re should engage broader cultural needs. It also reflects the engaged curiosity of a designer whose work has earned her a spot on the Time 100 and a MacArthur Fellowship, as well as architectu­ral awards and developer commission­s.

“I’m lucky enough to work on projects I’m fascinated by,” Gang, 55, said in a phone interview this month. “And I love my work, so I’m working all the time.”

Studio Gang opened an office last year in San Francisco, a lightfille­d space in Dogpatch that

“The shape has a lot to do with trying to be sustainabl­e.” Jeanne Gang, architect and founder of Studio Gang

now holds six architects. There are 89 staffers in Chicago and another 38 in New York. But unlike firms where branch offices operate with nearautono­my, or where headquarte­rs calls the shots, Studio Gang draws on various staffers as needed.

“Things are pretty fluid,” said Steve Wiesenthal, who heads the San Francisco office. “We really do operate as a single design studio.”

All three offices are engaged in the Mission Rock project, where the San Francisco Giants and developer Tishman Speyer will start site work this winter to turn the team’s parking lot at China Basin into a compact realm of housing towers, office buildings and public space.

Gang conceived the centerpiec­e of the 10.5acre first phase, a 23story residentia­l tower with floors stacked casually like books on their side. She also drew up the list of potential architects that the developer used to decide who to hire. Beside Studio Gang there is Workac of New York, MVRDV from the Netherland­s and Henning Larsen of Denmark. Another New York firm, Scape, is landscape architect for the 5acre waterside park.

It’s an ongoing collaborat­ion of people who shared walking tours of San Francisco and fashioned a set of shared principles — “make podiums into ‘mesas’ that enliven their surroundin­gs” is one — before design work started. “The outcome has been really satisfying but I must admit, there was a deep pit in my stomach,” when Gang proposed the ongoing backandfor­th, said Carl Shannon, managing director of Tishman Speyer’s San Francisco office. “There are some great firms out there that would not collaborat­e (well) this way.”

The egalitaria­n approach by five firms — four of which are led by women — is one that the participan­ts savor.

“There’s been a genuine philosophy of radical sharing, and that’s liberating,” said Kate Orff, the founder of Scape and, like Gang, the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, often called a “genius grant.” “It’s the anti‘master planner’ master plan.”

The project for San Mateo County, in its own way, is equally adventurou­s.

It’s an administra­tion building coupled with a remake of the county’s government campus on the edge of downtown Redwood City. Four stories of offices — shaped from above like an angled elongated doughnut — will sit atop six sculpted columns rising 32 feet to clear room for a freestandi­ng, glassenclo­sed Board of Supervisor­s’ chamber and a groundfloo­r plaza that flows into surroundin­g spaces.

The project, which breaks ground in December, is designed to generate as much energy onsite as the county needs to operate the building. As for the upper floors, which overlap one another, they’re laid out in part to reduce heat gain by deflecting direct sunlight during the day.

“The shape has a lot to do with trying to be sustainabl­e — we’ve been working on the concept of solar carving in all our buildings,” including

Mission Rock’s offkilter tower, Gang said. “Tweaking and pinching can help optimize its performanc­e.”

Another aspect of the project that attracted Gang is the idea of using architectu­re to showcase local government — to make it enticing to citizens who might be drawn to a new gathering space in Redwood City’s temperate climate. Or to potential hires who, in Silicon Valley, have no shortage of employment options around them.

“I like that San Mateo is thinking about how, in a democracy, you can make the best workers want to join government rather than a tech firm,” Gang said. “We want to honor that.”

That approach resonates with county officials, who selected the firm after a competitio­n that began with 18 contenders.

“The creativity from Studio Gang fit with the vision of the county supervisor­s,” said Adam Ely, director of the county’s Project Developmen­t Unit. “We want to be able to attract and retain highqualit­y employees and let them feel they’re working in a highqualit­y environmen­t.”

What materializ­es in San Mateo won’t attract the attention generated by Aqua, Chicago’s enthrallin­g 89story clifflike concrete slab from 2009 that put Gang on the architectu­ral map. Or Mira, with its tightly twisted metal form that Gang likens to “migrating bays.”

The county building fits within what the firm calls “actionable idealism” — efforts that take in everything from small public and cultural buildings to research efforts on how innercity police stations might be recast from symbols of official power by adding such community services as health facilities and basketball courts.

Then there’s the expansion of the California College of the Arts, which should begin constructi­on next spring.

Studio Gang has fashioned a project that, as with San Mateo, aims to be carbonneut­ral. But it also will pull all of the school’s craft spaces and industrial labs together. The classroom structures around them will be built of structural timber.

“Firms like Jeanne’s are few and far between,” said David Meckel, director of campus planning for the college. “She’s got these developer projects that are so inventive, and then these more public projects where they’re asking, ‘how do we do something that matters.’ ”

Gang puts it another way.

“I am motivated by the thrill of discovery, so I like thinking about difficult and complex issues,” she said this month. “But then I don’t just want to think about them. I want to do something.”

John King is The San Francisco Chronicle’s urban design critic. Email: jking@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @johnkingsf­chron

“There’s been a genuine philosophy of radical sharing, and that’s liberating.” Kate Orff, founder of Scape

 ?? Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ??
Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle
 ?? Mira SF ?? Above: Mira, the first building on the West Coast designed by Chicago architect Jeanne Gang, is a 39story residentia­l tower near completion at Folsom and Spear streets.
Left: Gang, who opened an S.F. office in 2018, is working on several other Bay Area projects.
Mira SF Above: Mira, the first building on the West Coast designed by Chicago architect Jeanne Gang, is a 39story residentia­l tower near completion at Folsom and Spear streets. Left: Gang, who opened an S.F. office in 2018, is working on several other Bay Area projects.
 ?? Tishman Speyer ??
Tishman Speyer
 ?? Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ?? Mira, the headturnin­g residentia­l tower created by Chicago architect Jeanne Gang, rises in San Francisco.
Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle Mira, the headturnin­g residentia­l tower created by Chicago architect Jeanne Gang, rises in San Francisco.
 ?? Studio Gang ?? Top: A rendering of the proposed first phase of the Mission Rock project, in developmen­t by Tishman Speyer and the San Francisco Giants, with a residentia­l tower designed by Studio Gang (right). Middle: A rendering of the expansion being designed by Studio Gang for the California College of the Arts in San Francisco set to begin constructi­on in 2020. Above: A rendering of the sustainabl­e energy administra­tion building for San Mateo County in downtown Redwood City scheduled to start constructi­on in December.
Studio Gang Top: A rendering of the proposed first phase of the Mission Rock project, in developmen­t by Tishman Speyer and the San Francisco Giants, with a residentia­l tower designed by Studio Gang (right). Middle: A rendering of the expansion being designed by Studio Gang for the California College of the Arts in San Francisco set to begin constructi­on in 2020. Above: A rendering of the sustainabl­e energy administra­tion building for San Mateo County in downtown Redwood City scheduled to start constructi­on in December.
 ?? Studio Gang ??
Studio Gang

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