Title Banner

 

How to Home

Ladies:

Overview
Accessories
Sew Elegant
Shopping Guide
Out of the Closet
Hair & Makeup

 

Gents:

Overview
Shopping Guide

DecoBall Photos 2009
DecoBall Photos 2010

DecoBall Photos 2011

 

 

The Art Deco Preservation Ball 2011

Venue

Berkeley City Club

2315 Durant Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94704

The Berkeley City Club was an amazing venue for our ball on May 7, 2011. Stay tuned to the page for our venue in 2012.

Although Julia Morgan is renowned as the architect of the Hearst Castle at San Simeon, the Berkeley City Club is her most complete castle-like creation. Built in eleven months, this six-story landmark opened in 1930 as the “Berkeley Women’s City Club” with a membership of over 4,500. Originally a social club and residence for women, the Berkeley City Club has been available to both women and men since 1962 and today serves as a club, hotel, dining room, event and conference center. This historic building also hosts guided public tours, art exhibits and provides a beautiful venue for theatre and musical performances.

The building reflects the expanding roles of Bay Area women in the 1920s. The founding group of women, active in civic, social, athletic and philanthropic causes, wanted one impressive, multi-use building rather than several small clubhouses. At the height of her career, Bay Area architect Julia Morgan was a natural choice for the project.

The City Club is known for its steel-reinforced concrete walls and ceilings (artfully fashioned to look like wood), leaded glass windows, interior courtyards and magnificent indoor swimming pool. This building is a blend of Romanesque and Moorish styles of architecture common to the areas surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. Julia Morgan’s engineering skills, evident in the seismically solid building’s exterior, were matched by her attention to the interior designs for furniture, light fixtures, distinctive fireplaces and even dishes.

When the club opened in 1930, its members were jubilant. Eva F. Hicks, Chairman of the Furnishing Committee would exclaim, “Is a castle in Spain realizable? Yes, when four thousand women dream it together!” T.E. Caldecott, then Mayor of Berkeley, congratulated the club members, saying that the building was “indicative of the future of this splendid city” and “an inspiration to all of us.” Indeed, the club would bring great gifts to the Berkeley community, its halls and hearths welcoming East Bay residents to celebrate art, culture and most of all, friendship.

www.berkeleyhistorichotel.com

 

 

 

 

© Art Deco Society of California