This handrail at the Museo Thyssen in Madrid Spain wouldn't pass building codes here in the US. Here, the end of a handrail needs to curve back towards the wall to prevent the projecting end from catching onto someone. Never-the-less, I like this detail of capping the wood end with metal highlighting the sensual curve of the wood.
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Halliday & Baillie has solved my problem. I've been looking for a simple elegant handrail that attached seamlessly (at least visually) into the wall. It also needed to attach to the handrail without obstructing the flow of the hand as it glides along the top and inside surface of the handrail. So I've found the solution for the Pine Street handrail. I should get them in about a week.
Polished chrome brackets contrast against the satin stainless steel handrail. The bracket is a little clunky and I don't think wrapping the bracket around the handrail makes for a better design. Not a lot to like or dislike here.
Mission District's Farina Restaurant has open air seating and large windows at its entrance. At night the glow of the restaurant beckons on a dark stretch of 18th Street between happening Valencia Street and Guerrero. There is an outdoor terrace on the second floor and the handrails in the photo above lead you to the second floor dining room and terrace. Constructed as a simple one-piece integrated metal handrail and bracket, it is the most similar to the one I saw in the Villa d' Este at the Tivoli Gardens that I published about a month ago. See that handrail here.
I started this series because I'm planning to replace my clunky handrail at home. My current thought is to have a wood handrail with a bracket similar to this. I like the warm feel of wood compared to metal. Work in starting in a week so I need to finish the design. San Francisco Main Library Handrail and Brackets I'm continuing my examination of handrails and brackets. I wrote about missed opportunities of the San Francisco Main Library and the architect I. M. Pei in May 2011. Since I'm always passing by the Main Library, I was there to pick up a couple of books on the 4th floor and went up the stairs. I hadn't noticed these handrail brackets with the little rectangular box attachment to the wall before. This was an interesting detail as it looks to be specifically designed for this building with its high round atrium "lobby". Beyond its simple geometric shape, I'm trying to discern how it fits into the overall design concept of the library. Not everything needs to have "meaning" but I was just wondering . . . The Department of Public Health at 101 Grove Street is across the street from City Hall at the Civic Center. A sturdy bronze handrail with a curved support bracket is attached to the granite exterior at the entry steps.
Handrail at the Slow Club - San Francisco Could it be that the Slow Club has been around for 20 years? The industrial chic look that exploded on the scene during first dot-com bonanza was spear-headed by restaurants such as the Slow Club at 2501 Mariposa. Bare concrete, steel, and wood, seasoned the space with a studied tough no fuss attitude. It was noisy, crowded and the food prepared in the exposed kitchen was good. The bar at the back of the restaurant is connected to the main dining room by a ramp with these hand rails. Handcrafted angular steel brackets hold up the wood handrail. Notice where the bracket attaches to the wood handrail. If you are truly gripping the handrail, your hand will hit the handrail. This is the same problem with the handrail at the Bakar Fitness Center in San Francisco. Contrast this with the curved handrail brackets at the Brera Museum and at the Tivoli Garden's villa d'Este shown in an earlier blog. Those Italians designers were really thinking! Slow Club Twenty years later, the Slow Club looks the same and still contemporary -- others have caught up. Now it's less crowded, but the food is still consistently good. I'm always there for lunch, never for dinner. In the Realm of the Senses - 4 Handrails6/20/2011 Brera Museum Handrail - Milan, Italy Continuing my exploration of handrails, here is one at the Brera Museum in Milan. Filled with important renaissance masterpieces, it is probably the most important museum in Milan. This handrail bracket is fanciful and ornate in a good way. Lamentation Over the Dead Christ Andrea Mantegna 1480 My personal favorite painting in the Brera is the Lamentation over the Dead Christ by Andrea Mantegna c. 1480. It show a complete mastery of foreshortening, perspective, and emotion. A great masterpiece, it is only one of many in the museum. I'm still looking for a new handrail and handrail bracket for Pine Street. In an attempt to find a wood handrail with a metal bracket that might be available in today's market, I looked at this handrail bracket at the UCSF Bakar Fitness Center in San Francisco's Mission Bay by the Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta. Simple and straight forward, the bracket has no curves and is consistent with the cubist forms of the building. The warm wood tones and brass colored metal contrasts with the intense blue wall. Intense contrasting colors cover all the walls of the center. It's a legacy of Legorreta's time in the office of the master architectural colorist Luis Barragan.
I've never seen a handrail bracket like this on the market and I'm thinking this is custom made. I'll let you know when I find something for Pine Street. Villa d'Este handrail outside of Rome On May 5, 2011, I wrote about how much I wanted to change the handrail in our Pine Street house. One example I saw last year is giving me ideas about what I want to do. This example here is at the 17th century Villa d'Este outside of Rome at the famous Tivoli Gardens. It looks as if the bracket and the handrail are one seamless element without any interruption of flow. In this case the one seamless element is metal so it is still cold to the touch.
The attachment at the wall is hidden behind the plaster - simple and elegant. As much as I like this design, I still want to avoid the cold touch of metal. Wood seems to be the logical response to this concern, but wood brackets would lack the strength and elegance of this metal solution. My solution would need a hard close-grained wood that is smooth and warm to the touch. The bracket would be metal with a shape and elegance like this one. Stay tuned as I explore the world of handrails. AuthorCatagories
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