Back in the early 1900s, architect Clarence Ward and builder Neil McLean were commissioned to create this impressive multi-story home for prominent engineer and politician Ferdinand Peterson on a plot of land he purchased from two men who had originally doled out $10 in gold coins for three lots on the aptly named Golden Gate Avenue.
Restored and updated through the years by Sutton Suzuki Architects and Plath Construction, as well as designer Ken Fulk and his team, the so-called Peterson House features six en-suite bedrooms and seven baths spread across a little more than 6,100 square feet of living space punctuated throughout with refinished hardwood floors, high wood-beam ceilings, arched doorways, intricately detailed wainscoting, built-ins, and a central winding staircase.
Also on the main floor is a family/game room sporting a fireplace and French doors spilling out to an entertainment deck, along with a light-filled dining room and an adjacent seating area that has yet more French doors opening out to a terrace displaying picturesque vistas of the Tiburon hillside, Belvedere Cove, and Corinthian Island.
In addition to numerous terraces, patios, and decks, the park-like grounds host a spa, a fire-pit conversation area, and meandering pathways leading through lush gardens filled with roses, hydrangeas, citrus trees, and lavender plants. Per the listing, there’s also plenty of room for an infinity-edge pool or an accessory dwelling unit on the premises.Steve Jobs Gave IBM the Finger in This Bomber Jacket. Now It’s Heading to Auction.
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