Fallon Building Explained

Fallon Building
Location:1800 Market Street, San Francisco, California, 94102, U.S.
Designation1:San Francisco
Designation1 Date:November 8, 1998
Designation1 Number:223
Built:1894
Built For:Carmel Lodge Fallon
Architecture:Queen Anne
Architect:Edward D. Goodrich

The Fallon Building, also known as the Carmel Fallon Building, is a historic mixed-use building built in 1894 and located in the Castro District of San Francisco, California.[1] [2] It is the home of the San Francisco LGBT Center since 2002.[3]

The building has been listed as a San Francisco Designated Landmark since November 8, 1998.[4] [5] [6]

History

The Fallon Building is located at an intersection corner at 1800 Market Street in San Francisco.[7] The three-story, 6,000-square-foot building was designed by architect, Edward D. Goodrich in a Queen Anne style.[8]

The structure was built in 1894 for Carmel Lodge Fallon (she has many variations of name, also known as Maria del Carmen Juana Josefa Cota Fallon, Martina Castro Fallon, or Carmelita Castro Fallon), a Californio entrepreneur and landowner, she had inherited land in the area of Soquel.[9] [10] She was divorced from Thomas Fallon, a United States Army Commander that had conquered the city of San Jose for the United States in 1846, and he later served as the mayor of the city.[11] Fallon was also the niece of José Antonio Castro, the last Mexican Governor of Alta California; and the namesake of the Castro District and Castro Street.[12] [13]

In December 1996, the San Francisco LGBT Community Center purchased the building. The Fallon Building had been subject to decades long debates on architecture preservation, and subject to many remodels. The group, "Friends of 1800 Market Street" was formed by Jim Siegel and others, named after the address of the Fallon Building with the mission of preserving the architectural heritage of San Francisco, among other things.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Curtius . Mary . 1999-02-17 . A City Torn Between Past and Present . 1 . . 2022-11-25 . 0458-3035.
  2. News: Curtius . Mary . 1999-02-17 . A City Torn Between Past and Present; History: Building Preservation Battles in San Francisco . 13 . . 2022-11-25 . 0458-3035.
  3. Web site: Bajko . Matthew S. . September 6, 2015 . SF LGBT Center Plans Remodel . 2022-11-26 . . en-us.
  4. Web site: City of San Francisco Designated Landmarks. City of San Francisco. 2022-11-24.
  5. Web site: San Francisco Landmark #223: Carmel Fallon Building . 2022-11-25 . noehill.com.
  6. News: Lewis . Gregory . 1998-10-10 . Fallon Building now city landmark . 8 . . 2022-11-25 . 2574-593X.
  7. Web site: Levy . Dan . July 16, 1998 . Landmark Status Puts Gay Center Closer to Reality . 2022-11-26 . . en-US . 1932-8672.
  8. Book: Cerny, Susan Dinkelspiel . An Architectural Guidebook to San Francisco and the Bay Area . 2007 . Gibbs Smith . 978-1-58685-432-4 . 67 . en.
  9. Web site: Michelson . Alan . University of Washington . Fallon, Carmel Building, San Francisco, CA . 2022-11-25 . Pacific Coast Architecture Database (PCAD).
  10. Book: Powell, Ronald . The Castros of Soquel . 2019 . Stanley D. Stevens (introduction) . 9, 12.
  11. Web site: Levy . Dan . November 12, 1997 . Planned Razing of Victorian House Raises Battle Cry in Castro . 2022-11-27 . . en-US.
  12. Web site: 2021-11-04 . The story behind the new names for two historic sites in San Jose . 2022-11-25 . . en-US . 0747-2099.
  13. Book: Martinez, Linda Castro . Encarnación Castro’s Journey In The Anza Expedition 1775-1776: And the Founding of San Francisco and San Jose, California . 2021-07-15 . Covenant Books, Inc. . 978-1-63630-580-6 . 198 . en.