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Chimera readability score 60 out of 100, Graduate reading level.

When friends showed designer Christine Lin a Star Trek–inspired residence on the Zillow Gone Wild listings website to get her honest opinion, she didn’t think twice. “They asked me if the house was too crazy to take on, but I thought it had so much potential,” says Lin, founder and principal of AD PRO Directory design firm Form + Field. “You don’t normally find properties like this in San Francisco.”
Though it may not look like it, the 5,000-square-foot, five-bedroom home in the city’s SoMa neighborhood is more than a century old. The previous owner gut-renovated the three-level structure more than two decades ago, transforming it into their version of the Starship Enterprise. And while the existing aesthetic didn’t perfectly align with their vision, the couple didn’t want to lose its concept entirely. “We tried to respect the home’s history while making it feel both modern and timeless,” explains Lin. “The goal was to weave the space theme throughout in a more subtle way.”
Working with the existing interior architecture—which includes a large skylight illuminating the center of the home and a mezzanine overlooking the kitchen—Lin strategically refined the materials and added a few key functional elements, including a nursery for the couple’s first baby, an office, and a storage-filled laundry and changing room. “The original design had lots of bold color, metal, and other hard finishes, so we brought in warm counterpoints like maple cabinetry and flooring,” says Lin. “We also introduced various wall treatments and wallpapers to help evoke certain moods.”
Indeed, each space makes its own unique statement, beginning with the airlock-inspired entry. The original metal door and porthole windows remain, but Lin traded the gray walls for a gradient wallpaper that recalls the stratosphere. “We invested in a standout light fixture by Mirei Monticelli from Costantini that provides an ethereal feel,” says the designer.
With no formal living or dining room, the double-height kitchen and its dining area serve as the heart of the home. Conceived as a space station atrium, the canteen-like room features the original cabinetry and island, though its formerly bright yellow accents are now a cool silver, and the holographic flooring has been switched out for biodegradable linoleum. To maximize storage, Lin added a wall of maple and stainless steel cabinetry complete with a coffee bar. Bringing the room full circle is a woven painting by Margo Wolowiec that “acts as a window looking back to Earth.”
Upstairs, the monochromatic sandy-hued primary suite is meant to recall the subterranean villages in Dune. “We leaned into this feeling of hidden underground caverns through the use of the limewash and stone in the adjoining bath,” notes Lin. The bath is divided into two sections, both featuring travertine: a vanity and toilet room on one side and a tub and shower area on the other. The walls are treated with the same limewash and a coordinating waterproof plaster, tadelakt, in the shower area.
Meanwhile, another bedroom is equally as cozy, yet it offers a completely different experience. Lin employed an Art Nouveau language to translate the couple’s desire for a “new Earth” concept into a sumptuous guest suite with rich textures, warm tones, and a nod to nature in the form of a botanical wallpaper from Little Greene.
Throughout, custom furnishings mingle with new and vintage pieces, along with a few items that the couple had selected. Together, they arrived at a home that feels utterly tailored to this young family. “This project,” says Lin, “was about honoring the house while pushing the clients’ vision as far as we could take it.”

Facts Only

* Christine Lin is the founder and principal of AD PRO Directory design firm Form + Field.
* A five,000-square-foot, five-bedroom home in San Francisco's SoMa neighborhood was renovated.
* The residence is over a century old with a three-level structure.
* The renovation sought to honor the house’s history while implementing a modern vision inspired by Star Trek.
* Design elements included incorporating warm materials like maple cabinetry and flooring.
* Functional elements added included a nursery, an office, and storage areas.
* The entry features gradient wallpaper replacing gray walls.
* The double-height kitchen is the central area, featuring original cabinetry and an island.
* The primary suite utilizes limewash and stone in the bath.
* A guest suite incorporated Art Nouveau language with botanical wallpaper.

Executive Summary

A designer partnered with a couple to renovate a 5,000-square-foot, five-bedroom home in San Francisco's SoMa neighborhood. The property is over a century old and features a three-level structure. The renovation aimed to respect the home’s history while introducing a modern, cohesive aesthetic inspired by Star Trek. The design process involved strategically refining existing architectural elements, including a skylight and mezzanine. The designer introduced warm materials like maple cabinetry and flooring to balance the original bold finishes of the structure. Key functional additions included a nursery, an office, and specialized storage areas. Specific changes included replacing gray walls with gradient wallpaper for the entry, updating kitchen accents (silver instead of yellow), installing biodegradable linoleum flooring, and treating the primary suite with limewash and tadelakt plaster. The project utilized various design languages, blending themes like subterranean caverns (Dune) and Art Nouveau to create distinct spaces.

Full Take

The narrative of this renovation functions as a sophisticated commentary on how luxury design processes mediate historical context and aspirational fantasy. The project positions the designer not merely as an executor of aesthetic change, but as an architect of personalized history, subtly rewriting the physical record of a century-old structure to align with contemporary desires for novelty and thematic coherence. The adoption of overt pop culture references (Star Trek, Dune) serves to instantly elevate the property beyond mere residential architecture into a bespoke, experiential statement, thereby commodifying the sense of "vision" itself. This approach exploits the tension between the permanence of history and the ephemeral nature of trend, suggesting that true value lies not in the original structure, but in its malleable potential for narrative construction. The reliance on high-end, niche materials (tadelakt, maple, specialized wallpapers) further reinforces the notion that aesthetic choices are investments in status and experiential memory rather than simple functional upgrades.
Patterns detected: ARC-0043 Motte-and-Bailey, ARC-0024 Ambiguity

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text exhibits strong human stylistic signatures, characterized by rich descriptive detail and a cohesive narrative flow derived from specific, experiential knowledge of interior design and architecture.

Signals Detected
low severity: Natural variance in sentence length; human rhythm is present, though organized.
low severity: High emotional and thematic coherence; the tone flows naturally from observation to detailed description.
low severity: Specific, verifiable details (names of designers, materials, neighborhood) suggest grounded sourcing rather than template matching.
low severity: Quotes sound authentic and context-specific; the description is highly specific and avoids general platitudes.
Human Indicators
The text contains high density of specific, verifiable details (e.g., SoMa neighborhood, specific materials like tadelakt, Art Nouveau language) that suggest direct experience or meticulous research.
The narrative voice successfully blends descriptive detail with the designer's perspective, exhibiting an idiosyncratic emphasis on material and concept that is difficult to replicate artificially.