About Page & Turnbull

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So far Page & Turnbull has created 10 blog entries.

45th Anniversary Retrospective-Part IV: Seeking a Larger World

After participating in the decades-long revival of the San Francisco Ferry Building -- which re-opened triumphantly in 2003 -- Page & Turnbull began to cast a wider net. In the 2000s we opened two new offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento, and were challenged with new design opportunities and preservation projects. As the 21st century began to unfold, we asked ourselves: How can our built inheritance shape the future? How can we ally cultural and architectural [...]

By |2019-05-16T11:03:52-07:00May 15th, 2019|Events & Activities|Comments Off on 45th Anniversary Retrospective-Part IV: Seeking a Larger World

Every day is Earth Day!

Lookout Studio. NPS Photo by Michael Quinn. Reflections on the intersection of historic preservation and environmentalism in Page & Turnbull’s vast portfolio of work in the majestic Grand Canyon. When Earth Day took place on April 22, 1970, millions of Americans took to the streets to demonstrate for a healthier planet and a sustainable environment. An eco-political consciousness emerged as people from all backgrounds and party affiliations united for a cause to preserve the [...]

By |2019-05-15T16:37:27-07:00April 22nd, 2019|Events & Activities|Comments Off on Every day is Earth Day!

45th Anniversary Blog Series Part III: Recovering from the Loma Prieta earthquake; a New Life on the Waterfront

San Francisco entered the 1990s literally shaken. The 6.9 magnitude Loma Prieta earthquake rocked the city on Oct. 17, 1989, just months before the decade began. It shook buildings and freeways, including the double decker Embarcadero Freeway that had hidden the Ferry Building from the Market Street artery since 1959. The old Ferry Building, long removed from its original uses, could reveal its face once again. The Port of San Francisco, design and planning community, and [...]

By |2022-03-08T11:58:31-08:00January 10th, 2019|Events & Activities|Comments Off on 45th Anniversary Blog Series Part III: Recovering from the Loma Prieta earthquake; a New Life on the Waterfront

45th Anniversary Series Part I: Splendid Survivors and the Environmental Movement of 1976

The 70’s were a time of social awakening, and San Francisco was at the cultural epicenter of it all. The world had seen the Earth from space for the first time in 1969, and this first glimpse of our universal home helped spark the environmental movement. The first Earth Day took place on April 22, 1970, and Congress passed the Environmental Policy Act that same year. Policymakers were examining ways to better utilize their city [...]

By |2018-08-22T12:28:53-07:00August 16th, 2018|Architectural History, Events & Activities|Comments Off on 45th Anniversary Series Part I: Splendid Survivors and the Environmental Movement of 1976

Why I chose Architecture (or how it chose me)

When I was younger I remember walking through the Ferry Building Marketplace with my family and thinking to myself how great it was to see a landmark building adapted into a multiuse space. Standing in the marketplace I was struck by the opening in the floor above, revealing the exposed steel-framed Beaux Arts style architecture which allowed natural light to flow into the space. This experience was one of a few [...]

By |2018-01-29T18:40:16-08:00January 5th, 2018|Events & Activities|Comments Off on Why I chose Architecture (or how it chose me)

Color/Colour!

Page & Turnbull Office Salons is a quarterly-ish series of conversations about broad themes in architecture and conservation. Designer Lingxiu Chong shares her thoughts on our most recent Salon about Color held in San Francisco with guest speaker, London-based academic and designer Adam Nathaniel Furman. Enjoy this read about Adam’s research into architectural polychromy and how our work celebrates California’s colorful past, present and future!  One of my favorite things about [...]

By |2018-01-22T11:43:56-08:00July 12th, 2017|Events & Activities, Firm News, News|Comments Off on Color/Colour!

The Historic House that Moved Across the Street

The Peabody Werden Duplex Move On June 30, 2016 the East LA Community Corporation (ELACC) took the next step in its preservation efforts of the ca. 1890 Peabody Werden Duplex in Boyle Heights by relocating it to the other side of the street. The Peabody Werden House is a two-unit, two-story residential property in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Constructed ca. 1890, the House is one of the oldest and few remaining examples [...]

By |2018-01-22T14:19:57-08:00July 18th, 2016|Page & Turnbull Projects|Comments Off on The Historic House that Moved Across the Street

Spotted: An Architectural Historian in his Natural Habitat

All in a day’s work Page & Turnbull architectural historian Jonathon Rusch was captured at India Basin doing what he does best—that is, evaluating a historic vernacular landscape—by Landscape Architecture Magazine. Page & Turnbull has been preparing a series of documents […]

By |2017-10-16T12:00:37-07:00July 15th, 2016|Firm News, News|Comments Off on Spotted: An Architectural Historian in his Natural Habitat

Page & Turnbull at Oakland’s Youth Architecture Camp

In June I was fortunate to be able to take part in the third annual Youth Architecture Camp for underrepresented and at-risk children. The camp was started from a collaboration between the AIA East Bay and Fam First Family Foundation as a way to introduce Architecture and design in general to youth in the East Bay. While I was only able to attend one full day and the final presentations, I was truly taken back by [...]

By |2018-01-30T13:29:40-08:00July 12th, 2016|Events & Activities|Comments Off on Page & Turnbull at Oakland’s Youth Architecture Camp

Berkeley Public Library featured in NPS Preservation Brief 14

Page & Turnbull served as the Preservation Architect for the rehabilitation, seismic upgrade and new addition to the historic Berkeley Public Library in downtown Berkeley, CA. The new addition’s compatible design has been featured visually (this picture!) in the National Park Service’s Preservation Brief 14: New Exterior Additions to Historic Buildings: Preservation Concerns. […]

By |2018-01-31T12:55:58-08:00March 13th, 2014|Firm News, News|Comments Off on Berkeley Public Library featured in NPS Preservation Brief 14
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