Middle Lake Restoration published in “SF GATE”
Middle Lake Restoration published in the “San Francisco Chronicle”
Mia Carta published in “Advisor Wine Industry Network”
California Cable Car Turn-Around Vision Plan published in “HOODLINE”
Hoodline featured the California Cable Car Turn-Around Vision Plan in December 2020.
Stanford Public Safety Building published in “ARCHITECT”
SEE ARCHITECT MAGAZINE ARTICLE HERE
Architect Magazine featured the STANFORD PUBLIC SAFETY BUILDING in March 2022. The public safety building landscape is part of a workplace that is inviting, stress mitigating, and provides flexibility for assembly and briefing in its courtyard designed by INTERSTICE (Project Landscape Architects). This is a community place for contemporary police operations. The outdoor courtyard featured is a critical spill-out space for larger briefings, safety events, and informational presentations for the Center while also providing a place for the officers to enjoy on their downtime or gather informally when back at the operations center. In addition the public facing plaza blends seamlessly with the Stanford Campus Streetscape while providing a place of arrival and meeting.
Mia Carta published in “San Francisco Chronicle”
SEE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE ARTICLE HERE
INTERSTICE Architects’ sensual and artfully detailed Wine Tasting room – MIA CARTA located in the heart of Napa was published in the San Francisco Chronicle. Highlighting INTERSTICE Architects’ highly crafted contemporary spaces set within the Historically rich steel and brick “Native Sons of the Golden West” building. INTERSTICE developed the brand identity from scratch for this new small-vintner showroom, designing the prototype urban-tasting experience for the exciting new label featuring a folding glass street frontage connecting the Napa strip to the rich material palette of the luxurious and sensual interior.
Reimagined Cable Car stop at Van Ness and California published in “San Francisco Examiner”
SEE SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER ARTICLE HERE
The cable car turnaround, located on Van Ness Avenue close to INTERSTICE Architect’s Polk Street office, was featured in an article for the San Francisco Examiner. In partnership with a variety of community groups including the Lower Polk Neighbors and the Lower Polk Community Benefit District, INTERSTICE is working to reimagine the existing terminal to better celebrate the cable car’s inherent value to the city of San Francisco while also creating a safer, more easily navigable experience. See more about the cable car stop here.
MIRA SF – Transbay Block 1 published in “San Francisco Examiner”
SEE SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER ARTICLE HERE
INTERSTICE Architects’ MIRA SF rooftops and multitiered streetscapes was published in the San Francisco Examiner about the new, 40-story condominium tower on San Francisco’s Bayfront as the first building in the City to use recycled water from showers and sinks to irrigate its extensive green roofs and multi -leveled landscapes designed by INTERSTICE. Studio Gang (High-rise architects) engaged with INTERSTICE to bring sustainability and water reclamation at high-rise scale to San Francisco on this LEED Gold level development where re-filtered grey water establishes mini urban ecologies on the extensive roofs and within the surrounding streetscapes.
Mia Carta published in “Napa Valley Register”
SEE NAPA VALLEY REGISTER ARTICLE HERE
INTERSTICE Architects’ sensual and artfully detailed Wine Tasting room – MIA CARTA located in the heart of Napa was published in the Napa Valley Register. Highlighting INTERSTICE Architects’ highly crafted contemporary spaces set within the Historically rich steel and brick “Native Sons of the Golden West” building. INTERSTICE developed the brand identity from scratch for this new small-vintner showroom, designing the prototype urban-tasting experience for the exciting new label featuring a folding glass street frontage connecting the Napa strip to the rich material palette of the luxurious and sensual interior.
MIRA SF – Transbay Block 1 published in “Inhabitat”
SEE INHABITAT ARTICLE HERE
INTERSTICE Architects’ MIRA SF rooftops and multitiered streetscapes was published in INHABITAT. The new, 40-story condominium tower on San Francisco’s Bayfront as the first building in the City to use recycled water from showers and sinks to irrigate its extensive green roofs and multi -leveled landscapes designed by INTERSTICE. Studio Gang (High-rise architects) engaged with INTERSTICE to bring sustainability and water reclamation at high-rise scale to San Francisco on this LEED Gold level development where re-filtered grey water establishes mini urban ecologies on the extensive roofs and within the surrounding streetscapes.