25 Tanglewood Road, Berkeley

A $2.5 million renovation and expansion led by architect Stanley Saitowitz transformed the former 1940’s ranch house at 25 Tanglewood Road into a “breezy, light-filled contemporary box” (per Met Home in 2005), with 4,250 square feet of living space on a Claremont District double lot.

Stripped down to the studs, the interior was refinished in a palette of drywall, concrete and wood, with walls of glass around the expanded central courtyard.

25 Tanglewood Road Court, Night

The exterior of the four-bedroom home is clad in zinc and horizontal wood siding.  And the property, which includes a detached one-bedroom guest house, is now on the market and listed for $4,250,000.

16 thoughts on “East Bay Modern On The Market For $4.25M”
  1. I usually don’t like Saitowitz but this is well done. Price seems high for the neighborhood given that there’s no view.

      1. I live in the Oakland Hills. It’s not just Frisco in the viewshed. Depending on were you are in the hills, you have Lake Merritt, downtown Oakland, downtown Berkeley, Berkeley Marina, the Bay, the new east span of the Bay Bridge, Golden Gate Bridge, Yerba Buena/Treasure Island, Angel Island, Marin…..

    1. You are correct. He is NOT listed on the California Architects Board. Legally speaking, he is not allowed to call himself an architect and he should not be referred to as an architect. Others in his firm, I suspect, are licensed.

      The term “architect” is a legally defined role, within the construction industry, as one who as passed a state exam for the license.

      1. Well, no, it actually doesn’t. Becoming a licensed architect involves about 7 different tests administered by the state: dealing with construction, technical aspects, engineering, life safety, construction management, and a VERY broad overview of “design”.

        Lots of licensed architect are “terrible” designers. Design is not really legislated by the state. My own personal view is that design is learned from other established, talented designers.

        But design ideology and “style” is very personal and really hard to define.

  2. It’s guess it’s just a pet peeve of mine, but it’s palette, not palate (nor pallet, for that matter).

  3. There seems to be major cracks running through the interior and exterior of the concrete floor surface. Or than that, I really like the flow of this house. The views of the garden/landscape are awesome.

    1. Concrete settles and cracks… it looks like there are not enough properly placed joints to restrict where the cracking happens (with properly spaced joints the cracking would be restricted to the joints).

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