An Unorthodox Houseboat in Sausalito Gives Its Owner Permission to Play

Architect Craig Steely drew from the area’s bohemian history and traditional Chinese motifs to create this unique floating haven.

An Unorthodox Houseboat in Sausalito Gives Its Owner Permission to Play

Architect Craig Steely drew from the area’s bohemian history and traditional Chinese motifs to create this unique floating haven.

In 2017, lawyer Hanna Bui, who had been living and working in Silicon Valley for 20 years, sought a change of pace from suburbia. Her son was off to college, and she longed to live close to water.

"I love to water-ski. I love the water. Water makes me happy," Hanna says. The setting brings up some harder feelings as well, related to struggles of her childhood. In 1979, her family made a harrowing escape from Vietnam. They fled in a boat that took them—stripped by pirates of their belongings—to a coastal village in Thailand, where, for a short while, before the family found refuge in San Francisco, she had the chance to be a carefree teen, wading at the beach.

In Hanna Bui’s Sausalito houseboat, designed by architect Craig Steely, sea creatures seen through an enormous back window animate bay views. Walls of plank siding dry out easily if they get damp, and different levels of bleached oak floors demarcate living areas and a sunken kitchen. Red Line Roset Togo sofas are paired with a suspended bamboo seat.

To regain that feeling, she rented a houseboat in Sausalito’s Richardson Bay for a weekend. In the mornings, the pageant of sea creatures at her doorstep mesmerized her, and soon she decided to purchase the houseboat.

The community around her new home included aging hippies, quirky artists, and well-heeled newcomers who, "like me, don’t want big houses," Hanna says. "In a suburb you drive into your garage and don’t know the neighbors. Here, you talk to everyone. We know each other well. Neighbors paddle over in boats to say hi. By the water, our lives become intertwined during both good and bad weather, and that’s beautiful."

But she still wanted to build something new. One day, looking online for floating house architects, she found a rendering of a houseboat with a moon gate entryway by San Francisco architect Craig Steely. The traditional Chinese circular opening, which symbolizes birth and renewal, resonated with her. Besides, Steely’s moon gate also exhibited the artful virtuosity of the hippie dwellings that made the area famous. Hanna messaged him, and he was keen to develop the idea for her.

Hanna’s bedroom loft floats above the kitchen’s Caesarstone countertop. Serge Mouille sconces complement linear Pure Edge Lighting pendants. Next to the kitchen, and not visible, are the pantry, laundry, and two spare bedrooms and bathrooms arranged around the front garden.
Hanna commissioned the Julia Canright tapestry hanging above a midcentury credenza. Cherner dining chairs are paired with a custom steel table with a live-edge acacia wood top from Ponderosa Millworks.

See the full story on Dwell.com: An Unorthodox Houseboat in Sausalito Gives Its Owner Permission to Play
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