Temple of Wings
CITY OF BERKELEY LANDMARK
designated in 1992
Bernard Maybeck/A. Randolph Monroe, Architects, 1911
Edna Deakin/Clarence Dakin, Architects, 1924
In one of Berkeley’s more eccentric experiments in living, Charles and Florence Boynton built their family residence as a version of a Greco-Roman temple with no walls. Two circular, open air porches were ringed by 34 concrete Corinthian columns. Canvas shades were hung between the columns in bad weather. A curving roof formed the building’s “wings,” and a central open terrace served as a stage where Mrs. Boynton, a girlhood friend of Isadora Duncan, taught generations of dance students.
The Berkeley Fire of 1923 burned all but the columns and the home was rebuilt with more conventional rooms. It was remodeled again after the Boynton family sold it in 1994 to the Getty family.
Berkeley Historical Plaque Project
2000