Across the Golden Gate, the wooded village of Inverness seems a world away from Berkeley's steep, shingled and stuccoed hillsides--but the two places share a deep architectural and moral lineage.
In this richly documented and gracefully written study, Courtney Linn reveals how the ideals that flourished in early-twentieth-century Berkeley's Arts and Crafts movement--through the work of Bernard Maybeck, Julia Morgan, and the Hillside Club--migrated across the Bay to shape Inverness's cottages, gardens, and enduring relationship to the land. Based on years of archival research, Inverness by Design traces how generations of Berkeley families brought to their summer refuge a devotion to modesty, craftsmanship, and the natural world.