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JACK'S
RESTAURANT
San Francisco City Landmark #146
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Lincoln was in office and we were still fighting our civil war
while people were dining on lamb chops and onion soup in the
posh French neoclassic Jack's Restaurant. Jack's opened in 1864
by expatriate Frenchman George Voges and was named supposedly
after the Jack rabbits still in the neighborhood.
Rarely do we in the design field get entrusted
with a restoration steeped in so much history. I devoted 2
½ years to bringing this remarkable landmark building
into the 21st century. Jack's has been the quintessential
dining experience in San Francisco for over 140 years. Heads
of state, the very rich, famous actors and writers and local
politicians dine here regularly. In its earliest days Mark
Twain and Brett Harte were known to stop by for a meal; later
the regulars included Cary Grant, Clark Gable, Ingrid Bergman,
and Enerest Hemmingway. Alfred Hitchcock used the restaurant
in his 1957 movie "Vertigo."
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First Floor Interior AFTER
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First Floor Interior BEFORE
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This humble 3 story
brick building not much larger than an ordinary house now
stands in the shadow of the Transamerica building in the heart
of San Francisco's financial district. Traditionally a place
where one could come to be "seen" in the main dining
room, the private stairway to the second floor offered the
option of private dining in 6 small rooms. Here, cigar smoke
deals were cut in the corporate and political worlds. The
private 3rd floor offered the extended option of 4 smaller
rooms each with a private bath for continuing the dining into
further pleasures.
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Stairway AFTER
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Stairway BEFORE
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Jack's was a project that gripped
me on a visceral level from the first moment when I got the
call from my client to meet him there after closing and not
to tell anyone. The intrigue of changing ownership could never
hit the press. The current owner and his family had been running
Jack's for 102 years and there was no one within that family
to turn it over to. My client came as a 19-year-old from Greece
to work as a bus boy at Jack's. Now, 50 years later, he and
his son were buying and restoring Jack's and risking their
fortune in this endeavor.
The agenda for the restoration
was a challange:
1. Double the size of the kitchen
and service functions.
2. Quadruple the bathroom facilities and make them wheel
chair accessible.
3. Install an elevator to all floors.
4. Provide a new grand stairway.
5. Completely fire sprinkle the building.
6. Seismically stabilize the structure with massive
steel columns and braces
and . . . .
7. Do all this without losing any seating capacity.
For me to do all this and meet
the strict San Francisco seismic building code, the structure
had to be completely "gutted" and pieced back together.
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Top Floor Skylight AFTER
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Top Floor Skylight BEFORE
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I interviewed the working staff,
waiters and chefs, some being there over 40 years. For months
I observed how the building was being used by patrons and
staff, from basement to roof top. I spoke to diners and long-term
clients. I spent 3 nights alone in the building looking at
details and feeling its history. The question was always:
"what is fundamental to the spirit of the building that
must be preserved?" Given what I was asked to do, it
was important to get this right.
To make it all happen I had
to:
1. Develop the basement, previously a dark, damp storage
area, into a bright dry modern kitchen prep area.
2. Create a small mezzanine within
the main floor dinning room for extra seating.
3. Bring the 3rd floor brothel on line for dining.
4. Install a 30' by 40' skylight to flood the new stairway
with light and bring more light throughout the building.
Renovating restaurants is a challange,
doing so with an historic landmark was the project of a lifetime.
I hope these photos can bring you some perspective of the
juice and energy that went into the restoration and a hint
of the results that captured the spirit of Jack's.
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Newly-Created Mezzanine Dining
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