Construction Site Visit to Santa Rosa
Hello Students,
We are excited to offer a construction site visit. The project is affordable housing designed by Saida+Sullivan. Mimi Sullivan, principal of the firm, also founded the School of Architecture at our university. Mimi has graciously offered this rare opportunity to students.
The project is about 60 miles away in the Historic District of Santa Rosa. This field trip is open to all students in ARH, IAD, LAN.
University shuttle bus will take students to and from Santa Rosa. Shuttle bus will leave from 601 Brannan. If you would like to take the shuttle, please indicate on the sign up sheet.
We will close the sign up soon as we are nearing capacity. SIGN UP HERE!
Shuttle Bus Information
This field trip will take place on Friday 11/1. The university shuttle bus will make a round trip between San Francisco and Santa Rosa. For those riding the shuttle bus, please come to Brannan at 11am (30 minutes before departure time) so that you have time to check out the PPE kit (hard hat, vest, safety glasses) from the Brannan shop on the 1fl. For those getting yourself to Santa Rosa, please pick up PPE in advance or make arrangements to have it brought to Santa Rosa for you.
- Departs from 601 Brannan, San Francisco: 11:30am
- Arrives at 3 W 3rd St, Santa Rosa: around 1pm (depending on traffic)
- Departs from 3 W 3rd St, Santa Rosa: 3pm
- Arrives at 601 Brannan, San Francisco: around 5pm (depending on traffic)
From Saida+Sullivan:
THE STEWART CANNERY
SANTA ROSA
Adaptive Re-use, Affordable, Historic Preservation, Multi-family Housing, Transit Oriented Development
Old and new share a place rich in context between the Santa Rosa Historic District and SMART train station and the Santa Rosa Creek. The Cannery was integral to the food industry that dominated the landscape and immigrant family economy of Santa Rosa for half a century. Behind the fine-grained brick facades rise 129 affordable family homes with onsite amenities and landscaped courtyards purposefully expressed in a contemporary language and industrial details accentuating past and present. The development preserves two historic brick walls, loading docks, metal canopies and a water tower and provides a public pedestrian promenade to the Santa Rosa Creek trail. This building is currently under construction.