SQUISHED FACADES



During the walk around the neighborhoods of San Francisco, I began finding a series of buildings that had been squished or pinched together in various ways to sites that seemed too small. I kept finding more of these spaces, and learned a little about how they had come into being from too many people trying to settle on the hill I was walking after the the cities devastating earthquake. I also learned a little about the anomalous squishes that came to be purely out of spite for a neighbor and a bit of space that was allowed for legal building.
The tactic while making these collages was mostly an interrogation of the most squished elements I saw. It started with a squished building, and then a look at what on the façade was encouraging this to happen. Was it a door that looked too narrow? Or some gaudy decoration that wouldn’t have fit without being forced? Was it something I hadn’t considered or encountered yet? Each of these questions left me with a different piece of different buildings. When constructed together in this collage, these elements created an embodiment of the squish. Or at least a set of rules I thought were fit enough to be followed again, and that would bring forward elements that made the precedent houses so interesting.





These images below are of the houses I looked at while walking. They were next deconstructed into the collage drawn above.



2017 — Frogtown, Los Angeles