For the San Franciscan who understands what this moment requires.
San Francisco in 2026 is entering one of its defining chapters. This is a home for someone who wants to be here fully — not at a distance, not on the sidelines, but standing inside the city at exactly the right time.
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Residence #502 is refined, warm, and deeply livable. Turnkey in the best sense — not generic, not overdone, but thoughtfully complete. The kind of elegant updates that remove friction from daily life and let you step directly into the experience of the home.
The renovations and built-ins were designed by John Wheatman, the acclaimed San Francisco interior designer known for edited, restrained, poetic interiors. His influence gives this residence something increasingly rare: taste with authority. Not trend. Not imitation. A real point of view.
The office, with its beautiful built-in desk overlooking the Bay, is more than a nice amenity. It is the soul of the residence. A place to write, design, plan, build, read, reflect, and make decisions from a position of calm rather than reactivity.
And just outside that office: a patio. That detail changes everything. A threshold between focus and fresh air. Between intensity and reset. In a city defined by speed and possibility, that kind of pause is not indulgence. It is power.
The rare luxury now is not simply more stimulation. It is having a place that gives you perspective on all of it.
The Comstock stands at the very top of Nob Hill, one of the few places in San Francisco that delivers stature and access at the same time. Beauty, elevation, history, and calm — while keeping the city close in every direction.
Full-service building with doorperson, elegant mid-century lobby, and a community of residents who value discretion and quality.
North for pleasure. Downtown for ambition. Home for clarity.
Russian Hill, North Beach, Fisherman's Wharf. Charm, views, ritual, architecture, restaurants, and the kind of wandering that reminds you why urban life can still feel romantic.
FiDi and SoMa. The working heartbeat of the city — offices, dinners, founders, investors, creators, and all the collisions that matter when a city is reinventing itself.
Grace Cathedral, The Coffee Movement on Washington, Huntington Park, cable cars. A daily rhythm that turns a residence into a ritual.