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Won't You Be My Neighbor?
The San Francisco Lesbian Gay Bisexual Community Center is
the world's first gay building.
[Originally published in Architecture,
July 2002]
Edited May 2003
San Francisco’s gay community (the phrase is narrow
for such a diverse group, but it will have to suffice here)
has a long and tempestuous history, and milestones of its
struggles and victories are everywhere. The Twin Peaks bar
was the first gay bar in the country to feature clear glass
windows on the ground floor, rather than obscuring itself
for protection. The AIDS Grove in Golden Gate Park is a sober
commemoration of the thousands who were cut down within the
city. And over time segments of the gay community have adopted
certain neighborhoods as their own. The Castro is associated
with gay men; the Mission District with the lesbian community;
the Tenderloin with the transgendered. The San Francisco Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center -- called
simply "the Center" by its occupants -- is at the
corner of Octavia and Market Streets, the intersection of
all of those neighborhoods. The intersection will soon frame
a new doorway to the city: a boulevard carrying highway traffic
down to grade just south of the Center, planned for 2005,
which will make the building visible to thousands entering
San Francisco each day.
According to board Vice President Dana Van Gorder, the Center
is an alternative to the era “when the gay community’s
activism took place in clubs and bars.” Its mission
is to provide a central resource for the community -- from
counseling to adult education -- and to provide office space
to fledgling non-profits.
San Francisco’s gay community has changed tremendously
over time. After a difficult road toward civil rights -- from
the arrival of the Mattachine Society, a small but groundbreaking
parlor group of gay activists, in 1953, to the assassination
of the city’s first openly gay district supervisor,
Harvey Milk, in 1978, to the galvanizing crisis of the AIDS
epidemic -- it has risen to tremendous prominence in the city.
It has also diversified politically and culturally within
its ranks.
The political landscape reflects this. City leaders recognize
the tremendous voting strength of the community, and must
work to keep abreast of its diversification. The Center was
a rare opportunity for city hall to show support for the community
as a whole, and after city leaders watched a string of fundraisers
draw overflow crowds several hundred people strong at as much
as $1000 a head, it leapt in. Mark Leno, the Castro’s
openly gay supervisor, helped to secure $6 million in city
funding. (His current campaign for state assembly is headquartered
next to the Center.) Federal and state funding provided $1.5
million. The rest of the estimated $15 million came from private
donations -- some of them enormous.
The Center counts among its donors some of San Francisco’s
most progressive and powerful citizens. Entrepreneurs like
George Rosenfield, a mortgage broker, and his partner Chris
Hoover, a business consultant, were among the several who
gave $10,000 or more. James C. Hormel, President Clinton’s
ambassador to Luxembourg, donated $100,000. But the real coup
came in the form of a $1 million donation from the estate
of Charles Holmes, gay porn czar and activist, for whom the
building will be named. The center masterfully shrugged off
any controversy about its benefactor’s past, and held
opening festivities in March. Approximately 2000 people attended.
The Center was first conceived in 1992, when a focus group
of gay men led by Van Gorder and then-District Supervisor
Carole Migden revealed the men had little sense of their personal
future, and a growing sense of isolation. At that time (when
AIDS was ravaging the country), there seemed to be an obvious,
unified need for a central building. The Center’s design
and construction took place during a shift in the identity
of the city’s gay community, however. By the time an
architect was chosen -- Jane Cee and Peter Pfau, who formed
a partnership, Cee/Pfau Collaborative, for the project --
the community was growing more diverse, and its members’
needs more complicated.
“Our community struggles more and more with issues
like diversity, race, and class,” Van Gorder says. “There
are so many emerging needs out there, so we wanted to nurture
new organizations.” Twenty-three tenants rent space
in the center, and to walk past their offices is to see the
future of the gay community in America. Far-ranging organizations
such as the Black Coalition on HIV/AIDS, Bay Area American
Indian Two Spirits (a Native American cultural activities
group), and groups for the deaf, adolescents, and new gay
parents all have facilities here. The center expects at least
4,000 people to use the building per month. Perhaps the most
striking and hopeful sign of times to come is the fact that
the Center does not include an AIDS clinic -- something which
at the height of the epidemic would have been a foregone conclusion.
Cee/Pfau Collaborative’s design had to not only embody
the community’s complicated and shifting identity, but
also adapt to a daunting list of physical complications as
well: the renovation and incorporation of a landmark Victorian
house within the design, a triangular site with a 12-foot
rise, and a diverse and fluid program.
Physically, the Center is made up of three parts. A red stucco
façade wraps around from behind the building to touch
an angled, tinted glass curtain wall at the front, and the
two come together and meet at a landmark Victorian.
The Victorian, known as the Fallon building, is the last Queen
Anne-style house remaining on Market Street (years of fire,
earthquake, and real-estate development wiped out the rest).
The building was in shambles when it was purchased, and the
Center planned to tear it down, in spite of landmark designation.
But preservationists -- mostly drawn from within the gay community
-- fought to save the structure, and only after a year and
a half of vicious argument was a compromise reached: the empty
lot would be developed, the Victorian restored. “It
was the designer/architecture queers versus the political/establishment
queers -- an internal blood feud,” says Tim Kingston,
news editor of San Francisco Frontiers magazine,
a biweekly for the gay community. “It was no small success
that they got through it.”
Cee/Pfau converted the Victorian’s interior for use
as staff offices, and created distinct meeting spaces within
it -- among them, one for youth organizations and another
shared by a senior center and art gallery. The most remarkable
thing about the function of the building is the mix of old
and young, and even in the structure, that mixture is visible.
At the back end of the building, for instance, the façade
of the blue-green Victorian overlaps with the rear façade
of the new structure. (Even now, some preservationists shudder
at the curtain wall. Its slope exposes a party wall of the
Fallon building: a view that no Victorian architect meant
anyone to have.) The Center’s design most directly embodies
the complications of sexual identity in its two new facades:
the curtain wall of tinted glass along Market Street, and
the vivid red stucco wall along Waller Street, with its recessed
windows.
The curtain wall makes those who choose to enter through
its doors visible to an outside observer as they wend their
way through the building. Visitors will be identified with
the Center and its purpose, and must be reconciled to that
identity as a result. The red façade allows a sequential
entry, invisible and private, to those who wish to visit the
center but don’t wish to make their presence a visible
part of the building’s symbolism.
Visibility is also a symbolic theme inside the structure.
From a balcony at the rear of the double-height lobby, occupants
can watch one another as they come and go through the doors
below. A long second-floor bench just inside the curtain wall
allows visitors to sit and watch the pedestrian traffic of
Market Street bob past along the incline -- passing several
feet below the bench at one end, and just underfoot at the
other. The closer one sits to the West, the better chance
one has of being visible to passers by.
More than one grid meets at the triangular site, and, because
they were designing a center intended to serve all neighborhoods,
Cee/Pfau worked to incorporate them all. Two sides of the
building are oriented to the grid of Hayes Valley and the
Tenderloin to the North, while the Market Street face is oriented
to the grid of the South of Market neighborhood. Meanwhile,
hallways on the first and second floors are aligned with Pearl
street, which terminates against Market Street opposite the
center. The building’s interior is anchored to the grid
of the Mission and Castro neighborhoods as a result, and a
visitor standing on the other side of the building can look
through the interior and down the distant lane.
The third floor is almost entirely meeting rooms for the
Center’s various organizations and programs. Ninety
percent of the rooms are multi-use, and Cee and Pfau worked
to capitalize on the relationship between these functional
areas and the unassigned open spaces around them. The result
is an overall fluidity to the layout within a constrained
shell, gathering together people from different parts of the
community. “Your A-gays aren’t normally going
to see eye to eye with your Tenderloin trannies,” says
Frontiers’ Kingston. “So having those folks fetching
coffee and bumping into each other in the halls is good for
the community.”
There is a story that many of the people involved in the
Center like to tell. Sometime in the 1990s, the story goes,
a young man, living near Sacramento, decided to reveal his
sexual identity to his parents. They disowned him, and, not
knowing what else to do, dropped the boy off in the big city,on
the corner of Castro and Market, which features a seventy-foot
rainbow flag. Whether the story is fact or legend (no one
seems to know the boy’s name), it reveals that the Center
has a very powerful symbolic place in the community imagination,
no matter who one speaks to. It's easy to imagine the boy
in the story, and where he would go. At the time, the devastated
young man could only have wandered to a church or a bar. Now
that the Center is completed, however, one can imagine the
young man in the story standing in front of the building.
He knows that he wants to go inside, but he can't decide whether
he will march right onthrough the glass doors, or make his
way around back.
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