Budapest Post

Cum Deo pro Patria et Libertate
Budapest, Europe and world news

This Amazing San Francisco House Has a Dazzling Array of Influences on Display

This Amazing San Francisco House Has a Dazzling Array of Influences on Display

A 1926 home draws on Italian, Portuguese, Chinese, and Brazilian motifs. And those moldings!

You would think that someone with as varied an international background as designer Antonio Martins would require a blank-canvas residence to accommodate the breadth of his many influences. After all, he is of Portuguese descent, he was raised in Brazil, he attended university in Switzerland, and he spent a decade living in Hong Kong and Bangkok while working for the Hyatt hotel group before moving to Chicago and eventually to San Francisco.

And yet, when Martins fell in love with this circa-1926 home in San Francisco, it was precisely because it came with its own rich history, whose complexity he wanted to honor. The house, in the now up-and-coming Bayview area of the city, was built by the Santinis-it has been referred to as the Villa Santini-who were a family of Italian immigrants with a successful business making architectural plaster moldings (they stored their surplus on their ground level or else used them in their own home). Attracted to its quirkiness and heritage, Martins first bid on the place in 2015, but lost it to a family moving to the Bay Area from New York. When the family moved back East two years later, he was able to purchase the place. After renovating it in two phases-first, he restored its structure and history (it hadn’t been updated in 30 years), then he converted the former Santini factory storage into a garage and gallery-Martins filled it with a mix of Chinese and European art, antiques purchased at auction, and a few contemporary pieces for contrast.



“You come inside my house and you know who I am-I always say that one day I would love to trash everything and start from zero, but that’s just a fantasy,” explains Martins, who transitioned to interior design, a childhood dream, in 2002 after a successful career in hotel management. “We have so much history behind all of us and that’s how I like to do it.”

Here, Martins walks us through the myriad influences in his San Francisco home.

What drew you to the Bayview neighborhood?


Antonio Martins: I moved to San Francisco from Chicago in 2002, and I lived in a neighborhood called Hayes Valley-it was a changing neighborhood back then. And then Hayes Valley became super popular, and in 2008 I bought a house in an area called the Dogpatch, when no one really knew what the Dogpatch was. And then the Dogpatch became very fancy. So I was like, What is the next neighborhood? The Bayview is just 15 minutes from downtown and it’s one of those transitional neighborhoods-it was originally for people who worked in the shipyard at the turn of the century. Then when the shipyards went down it became a simpler neighborhood. And now there is change going on-artists moving in and some warehouses being done for designers and for furniture manufacturers-so it’s slowly changing.



ED: Were you able to get a lot of historical information on the house when you were restoring and renovating it?


AM: Yes. The agent who sold it specialized in the Bayview, so he had a few things. And then I went to City Hall and the library and I started finding information on the Santini family. I was able to collect quite a lot of information, including photos of the exterior, but nothing of the interiors. The family was pretty well known for their plaster moldings. If you look at the moldings in the living room and dining room, they’re really oversized. They were probably not the type of molding that would have been used in a simple house in this neighborhood. But because they might have made them for a much better house in Pacific Heights or Nob Hill, they probably said, “Oh, let me do a little more linear footage and apply it here.” So it was really interesting to see such a simple house with such over-the-top moldings.

ED: I love the oversized hand-painted tiles in the entryway. What was the idea behind them?


AM: We did these tiles for the San Francisco Decorator Showcase in 2014. They were reproductions of 17th- and 18th-century blue-and-white tiles. But instead of being the small three by three inches, we made them 24 by 24 inches. I had them in my garage for basically four years. And I thought, It’s my history, it’s my story. It was exactly the amount of tiles we needed for that space-we probably had to do three more in white. There are 242 tiles. Nowadays everyone wants wallpaper everywhere, but I had all these handmade pieces in my garage, so why not?



ED: And those antique portraits in the living room-you must have been collecting them for years.


AM: I have one or two from my family. And I helped a friend decorate his house, and he had a lot. And I thought, Oh, this is so fun. I started to collect them from auctions over the past 10 years. And normally I choose just the portrait, the face. I always want something that’s gold-framed, with a black background.

ED: You lived in Asia while you were working for Hyatt. There’s a lot of Chinese art throughout your house. Are those all pieces you picked up abroad?


AM: In Hong Kong there is a place called Hollywood Road, this street with all these antiques. I would basically go every Saturday to Hollywood Road and buy and buy.



ED: The kitchen doesn’t have much culinary equipment.


AM: I can barely fry an egg.

ED: Has that not changed a bit in the past few months?


AM: Oh my god-I made the best veal ragout last week. And then this week, for the first time, I made a lasagna. And I was like, What is happening to me? In hotel school we took cooking lessons, and my brother is a very famous chef in Lisbon. So I come from a family that’s obsessed with cooking, but I’ve never been able to cook anything.

ED: I love that you have art on the shelves in the kitchen. Could you do that because you knew you wouldn’t have the normal culinary tchotchkes in there?


AM: Yeah, and I also think we all have so much stuff in the kitchen, like appliances we use once a year. So I have less of that, and then decoration and art and sculptures in the mix. I don’t have a refrigerator in the kitchen-I have a little minibar, like from a hotel, and all there is inside is yogurt, Champagne, and Diet Coke. In the garage downstairs I have a big refrigerator, but not in the kitchen.



ED: You put your family heirloom bed in the guest room-why not in your own bedroom?


AM: It was a family bed that was at a cousin’s house, and then she passed away and I inherited it. For me personally, I love small bedrooms. The other bedroom where I sleep, the one with the tapestry, is maybe half the size of the guest room. And in reality those beds are not the most practical thing. I move a lot when I sleep, so it makes the whole thing move around.

ED: Why do you like smaller bedrooms?


AM: I think they’re cozier. The main bedroom I did in a dark blue grass cloth. I love bedrooms that go totally dark. So that other bedroom where I sleep every night, you close the windows and the window treatments, and it gets totally dark for as long as you want to sleep.

ED: So you prefer sleeping in a cave, essentially.


AM: Basically, yes. A little dungeon, a dark cave.

ED: You have that tapestry with various figures above your bed, in addition to the portraits in the living room. Are you a superstitious person?


AM: No. And everyone comes to my house and is like, “Oh my god, there’s so many people staring at you in the living room. Aren’t you scared?” And I’m like, “No, I love it!” But that 17th-century tapestry was just meant to be. The only problem is that I put it up and went to bed the first night. And it smelled like…hell. Because it had not been cleaned in 200 years. It was cheaper to have it restored in Paris by a company called Chevalier, who are the best restorers, than in the United States. The challenge is today that nobody wants this stuff, so I’m so happy that I can now buy all this.

ED: There’s an advantage to having aesthetic tastes that maybe aren’t for the masses.


AM: And if you look at the craftsmanship, in the paintings in the living room or that tapestry, it’s incredible. They are 300 years old and they’ve survived. We are doing a project right now where the clients don’t want anything that is old. So we are going to Paris, London, Milan to buy amazing stuff. You buy a new carpet, it costs more than a 17th-century tapestry, but as you say, it’s a difference of taste. We did a very modern house in Pacific Heights, all-white, all very clean, all very modern. But I was able to sell them on a big tapestry, and they loved it. At first, she was like, It’s so weird. But then they put it up and they loved it. It became a cool contrast.


ED: The toilet chair in the main bedroom also seems quite aged. I assume that’s the original upholstery.


AM: I found that one at auction as well. I was always in love with Rose Tarlow-in her house in L.A., she has a bunch of chairs like this. And I remember since the 1990s looking at Rose Tarlow’s home and thinking, I’m going to get that. It has so much character. The leather is original and it’s cracked and you can see the horsehair underneath.

Take a Tour of Antonio Martins’s 1926 San Francisco Home




ED: I like how you left the banisters in the gallery unfinished. When you were doing the historical renovation, how did you decide what to leave in its original state versus updating?


AM: This is a back staircase-there’s also a front one. And the back handrail was full of different-colored paints. I just loved the texture and the layering in there. When you get an old house, I love to find the personality and keep it. I’m just so sad nowadays-it feels like people buy these old houses and rip them open and make a beautiful Carrara mausoleum. But I always wonder, What are we going to say to ourselves in 20 or 30 years when we’ve ripped open all these houses? They look great, but I don’t want to live in a very modern place, even though I do that for my clients all the time. I just keep trying to find what is interesting from the past. It makes a difference to me.



AI Disclaimer: An advanced artificial intelligence (AI) system generated the content of this page on its own. This innovative technology conducts extensive research from a variety of reliable sources, performs rigorous fact-checking and verification, cleans up and balances biased or manipulated content, and presents a minimal factual summary that is just enough yet essential for you to function as an informed and educated citizen. Please keep in mind, however, that this system is an evolving technology, and as a result, the article may contain accidental inaccuracies or errors. We urge you to help us improve our site by reporting any inaccuracies you find using the "Contact Us" link at the bottom of this page. Your helpful feedback helps us improve our system and deliver more precise content. When you find an article of interest here, please look for the full and extensive coverage of this topic in traditional news sources, as they are written by professional journalists that we try to support, not replace. We appreciate your understanding and assistance.
Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
U.S. and Hungarian Officials Talk About Economic Collaboration and Sanctions Strategy
Technology Giants Activate Lobbying Campaigns Against Strict EU Regulations
Pope Francis Admitted to Hospital in Rome Amid Increasing Speculation on Succession
Zelensky Calls on World Leaders to Back Peace as Tensions Rise with Trump
UK Leader Keir Starmer Calls for US Security Guarantee in Ukraine Peace Deal
NATO Chief Urges Higher Defense Expenditure in Europe
The negotiation teams of Trump and Putin meet directly, establishing the groundwork for a significant advancement.
Rubio Touches Down in Riyadh Before Key U.S.-Russia Discussions
Students in Serbian universities Unite to Hold Coordinated Protests for Accountability.
US State Department Removes Taiwan Independence Statement from Website
Abolishing opposition won't protect Germany from Nazism—this is precisely what led Germany to become Nazi!
Transatlantic Gold Rush: Traders Shift Bullion in Response to Tariff Anxieties and Market Instability
Bill Ackman Backs Uber as the Company Shifts Towards Profitability
AI Titans Challenge Nvidia's Supremacy in Light of New Chip Innovations
US and Russian Officials to Meet in Saudi Arabia Over Ending Ukraine Conflict. Ukraine and European leaders – who profit from this war – excluded from the negotiations.
Macron Calls for Urgent Summit as Ukraine Conflict Business Model is Threatened
Trump’s Defense Secretary: Ukraine Won’t Join NATO or Regain Lost Territories
Zelensky Urges Europe to Bolster Its Military in Light of Uncertain US Backing
Chinese Zoo Confesses to Dyeing Donkeys to Look Like Zebras
Elon Musk is Sherlock Holmes - Movie Trailer Parody featuring Donald Trump's Detective
Trump's Greenland Suggestion Sparks Sovereignty Discussions Amid Historical Grievances
OpenAI Board Dismisses Elon Musk's Offer to Acquire the Company.
USAID Uncovered: American Taxpayer Funds Leveraged to Erode Democracy in Europe Until Trump Put a Stop to It.
JD Vance and Scholz Did Not Come Together at the Munich Security Conference.
EU Official Participates in Discussions in Washington Amid Trade Strains
Qatar Contemplates Reducing French Investments Due to PSG Chief Investigation
Germany's Green Agenda Encounters Ambiguity Before Elections
Trump Did Not Notify Germany's Scholz About His Ukraine Peace Proposal.
Munich Car Attack Escalates Migration Discourse Before German Elections
NATO Allies Split on Trump's Proposal for 5% Defense Spending Increase
European Parliament Advocates for Encrypted Messaging to Ensure Secure Communications
Trump's Defense Spending Goal Creates Division Among NATO Partners
French Prime Minister Bayrou Navigates a Challenging Path Amid Budget Preservation and Immigration Discourse
Steering Through the Updated Hierarchy at the European Commission
Parliamentarian Calls for Preservation of AI Liability Directive
Mark Rutte Calls on NATO Allies to Increase Defence Expenditures
Dresden Marks the 80th Anniversary of the World War II Bombing.
Global Community Pledges to Aid Syria's Political Transition
EU Allocates €200 Billion for AI Investments, Introduces €20 Billion Fund for Gigafactories
EU Recognizes Its Inability to Close the USAID Funding Shortfall Due to Stalled US Aid
Commission President von der Leyen Missing from Notre Dame Reopening Due to Last-Minute Cancellation
EU Officializes Disinformation Code for Online Platforms, Omitting X
EU Fails to Fully Implement Key Cybersecurity Directives
EU Under Fire for Simplification Discussions Regarding Corporate Sustainability Reporting
Shein Encountering Further Information Request from the EU During Ongoing Investigation
European Commission Initiates Investigation into Shein as It Aims at Chinese E-Commerce Regulations
German Officials Respond to U.S. Proposal for Peace Talks with Russia
Senate Approves Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Trump and Putin Engage in Discussions on Ukraine Peace Negotiations Amid Worldwide Responses
Honda and Nissan End Merger Talks
×