Curved mansion built for SF real estate tycoon hits market for the first time
Briefly

Curved mansion built for SF real estate tycoon hits market for the first time
"The house is perched on Edgehill Mountain, its 10,121 square feet comprising an artistic marriage of both curvilinear and sharp angles. Inside the unique facade are eight bedrooms and five bathrooms in a loft-like interior framed by a 20-foot ceiling. The home has five levels, all served by an elevator. Honey-toned wood, parquet floors, burnished brick and cement glow in the light pouring through tall windows inset across the entire back wall of the home."
"The main floor features a great room with fireplace and glass doors opening to a wrap-around terrace overlooking a near-panoramic view of the city and ocean beyond. On every level, the view from these windows seems to go on forever. These sweeping vistas are part of Forest Hill's unique charm - a neighborhood located in a part of San Francisco that changed rapidly in the early and mid-1900s."
111 Edgehill Way sits perched on Edgehill Mountain and measures 10,121 square feet with an architectural blend of curvilinear and sharp angles. The interior contains eight bedrooms, five bathrooms, a loft-like space framed by a 20-foot ceiling, and five levels served by an elevator. Natural materials include honey-toned wood, parquet floors, burnished brick and cement, with tall windows across the back wall flooding rooms with light. The main floor has a great room, fireplace and glass doors to a wrap-around terrace offering near-panoramic city and ocean views. Forest Hill experienced rapid change in the early and mid-1900s, and historical 1921 images show the area once had no houses opposite Edgehill Mountain.
Read at SFGATE
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