1967, Northern California, House
Timber Ridge Rd., junction with Lumber Jack Close, Sea Ranch
Esherick, Homsey, Dodge & Davis
Another Mini–Mod I, prototype house (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 387).
1967, Northern California, House
35183 Harpoon Close, Sea Ranch
Esherick, Homsey, Dodge & Davis
No comment (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 388).
1968, Northern California, House
Sea Gate Rd., S side, bet. Whalers' Reach & Sea Meadow Dr., Sea Ranch
Esherick, Homsey, Dodge & Davis
No comment (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 386).
1968, Russian Hill, The Cannery (remodeling)
2801 Leavenworth St., San Francisco
Joseph Esherick & Assoc.
Following in the footsteps of Ghirardelli Square, this is a one–building version of the same idea (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 52; 544).
An old warehouse was gutted and given a new interior structure to house shops and restaurants on three levels with an interior court (Woodbridge, Woodbridge and Byrne 2005: 137).
1970, Western Addition, Banneker Homes
Webster-Fulton-Buchanan-Grove Sts., San Francisco
Joseph Esherick & Assoc.
No comment (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 93).
1970, Northern California, House
SE cor. Crow's Nest Dr. & Windsong Ln., Sea Ranch
Esherick, Homsey, Dodge & Davis
No comment (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 388).
1970, North Bay, House
436 Woodland Av., Kentfield
Joseph Esherick & Assoc.
These houses [at 436, 444, and 445 Woodland Ave.] exhibit a range in design concepts of this famous Bay Area firm from early to recent work (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 224).
1972, North Bay, Romano house
Kentwoodlands
Esherick, Homsey, Dodge & Davis
Twelve years later [than the Cary house], the Romano house by Esherick Homsey Dodge & Davis, an elegantly understated but big fragment of a California barn, reflects pressures toward simplification and clarification, even as the light is fractured and sparkled through vertical railings and trellises over the windows. Inside, increasingly relaxed and increasingly nostalgic collections of furniture and juxtapositions of detail are by now allowed within the clear limits of this simple shape. On the shingled exterior the windows again are more than ever specific, not walls of glass but pieces of glass doing the one special thing they were set up to do. They illuminate a highly controlled juxtaposition of dark woods (in the ceilings this time) and white walls, overlaid with a lush array of furniture and pillows and excitement in the bookshelves. There is now play between big and little spaces: main spaces and bays and special places to come to rest or be, very specific again and very softly comfortable in ways that nobody would have accused houses of the quarter century before of having been (Woodbridge 1988: 298, 300-03).
1972, Diamond Heights, Diamond Heights Village
Red Rock Wy., San Francisco
Gensler Assocs./Joseph Esherick & Assocs.;
No comment (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 110).
A well–sited group of shingled buildings that replaced the high–rise buildings of the original plan for Diamond Heights (Woodbridge, Woodbridge and Byrne 2005: 187).
1972, Mission, Far West Laboratory (remodeling)
Folsom at 15th St., San Francisco
Esherick, Homsey, Dodge & Davis/ Fred Osmen
A brick warehouse gutted and re–filled as a government sponsored center for research in inner city educational problems (Gebhard, Winter and Sandweiss 1985: 105).


