The quintessential San Franciscan home used to depict the Tanner family residence in the iconic ‘90s sitcom just hit the market for $6.5 million. While most of the show was filmed at the Warner Bros. Studios in Los Angeles, the exterior shots of the Full House house were shot at 1709 Broderick Street in Lower Pacific Heights, an affluent San Francisco neighborhood rich in history, architecture, and culture. The Victorian home, built by famed architect in 1900, is distinctly San Franciscan, with intricate moldings, bay windows, and a brick stoop.
The 3,700 square foot home features four bedrooms and three and a half bathrooms. It was most recently renovated in 2019 by architect Richard Landry of , an award-winning studio founded in 1987. “The fact that the front is so iconic due to 8 years of being flashed on TV screens around the world made it especially fun to be a part of the project,” William Mungall, an architect with Landry Design Group, tells AD. “We were inspired by the show for the interior as well, opening up the living space to feature the staircase for dramatic entrances and combining several small rooms into a large kitchen featuring a walk-around island similar to the show.” Noteworthy features of the home include the aforementioned gourmet kitchen complete with custom cabinetry, Calacatta Oro countertops, and Viking appliances, a small private English garden, and a two-car garage with a small fitness room.
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The home, which last sold in 2020 for $5,350,000, is being listed by Rachel Swann of The Swann Group, affiliated with the San Francisco Pacific Heights office of Coldwell Banker Realty in Northern California. The property is also listed with the Coldwell Banker Global Luxury program. “This is a rare opportunity to have it all—one of the most loved homes in all of television history, that also just happens to be exquisitely built and finished, in a very posh San Francisco neighborhood,” Rachel Swann tells AD.” In addition to moving into the Tanner family residence, the new owners have the option of securing handprints in concrete stones of the Full House cast, including Bob Saget and . “They are from an event with the cast. They represent epic memories of America’s favorite family that we welcomed into our homes, on a weekly basis on our televisions for decades,” Swann tells AD.