Stephen Perlman, an inventor and tech executive, sold one of his first companies, WebTV, to Microsoft in 1997 for about half a billion dollars. At roughly the same time Perlman decided he wanted to create an incubator where artists, scientists, and engineers could create new technology.
He purchased two properties in a converted loft building in San Francisco’s South Beach neighborhood for what he estimates was about $1.5 million, and hired the architect Jim Jennings to convert the space. Given that he was building a space where people could invent things he’d never thought of (“you never know when you start out,” he says) it had to be both flexible and welcoming. “This wasn’t just going to be a workshop,” Perlman says. “It was going to be a beautiful space.” The aesthetic component was particularly important, because he wanted it to be a loft where people could actually live for extended stays.
The interior modifications, over the years, cost roughly $2.5 million to $3 million (“I’m taking a wild guess,” he says as a disclaimer), though that pales in comparison to how much money the space generated: “About $400 million or thereabouts has been put into the companies that were incubated there,” he says.
As his company Rearden continued to grow, though (among the companies it spun off is Mova, a facial animation company that won a technical Academy Award in 2015), Perlman began to run out of space. Now, nearly 20 years after he first moved in, he’s putting the property on the market, listing it with Gregg Lynn of Sotheby’s International Realty for $4.5 million.
The loft, which comprises about 4,000 square feet, took about three years to be completed. After it opened in 2000, an article in Town & Country soon followed (“Digital Domain”).
The article is striking, 18 years later, for its breathless list of Perlman’s “High Tech Toys” which today can be found in any middle class home. The article mentions a $20,000 HDTV, a “digital VCR recorder that can store movies,” video-conferencing equipment, a 3-D printer (“the printer fabricates a physical object,”) and “several” DVD and VCR players.
“In some way,” the article continues, “the loft could be considered a prototype for the living room of the future.”
Scratching the Surface
But, Perlman says, the article only scratched the surface. “I put in a 200 inch projection screen, and when we built it, HD was brand new; projectors cost $200,000 each,” he says. “Now they cost about $3,000.”
Another thing the article missed was the loft’s hidden room. “Every place I’ve built has one,” Perlman says. “I like things like secret rooms and hidden doors, and Jim [Jennings] loved the idea.”
Perlman will often challenge visitors to find it, and while the prospect of the home’s future buyers stumbling across it by accident is an appealing one, Perlman is happy to disclose that the loft’s secret room can be accessed by pulling a bookshelf “just the right way.” Currently, the room is occupied by a safe and the loft’s security system.