Mortimer Fleishhacker House
Historic house in California, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mortimer Fleishhacker House, also known as the Green Gables Estate, is a historic estate with an English manor house, built between 1911 and 1935, and located at 329 Albion Avenue in Woodside, California.[2] The house has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since September 26, 1986.[3][4] The property has been used to host family weddings, corporate retreats, and historic summits including a United Nations 20th-anniversary gala in 1965.[5] The estate is now 74-acres in size.[6][7][8]
Mortimer Fleishhacker House | |
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![]() Mortimer Fleishhacker House (1933) | |
Location | 329 Albion Avenue, Woodside, California |
Coordinates | 37.432792°N 122.268711°W |
Built for | Mortimer Fleishhacker Sr. Bella Gerstle Fleishhacker |
Architect | Greene and Greene |
Governing body | National Trust for Historic Preservation |
Official name | Green Gables – Fleischhacker |
Designated | September 26, 1986 |
Reference no. | 86002396[1] |

The main house is two stories tall, and was created in an English manor-style with an imitation thatch roof, a gunite exterior, and consisting of ten bedrooms.[9][10] The garden is Italian style and features four levels of terracing and a lily pond, a Roman reflecting pool, and a piano-shaped swimming pool.[9][11] The estate was used and remained in the Fleishhacker family for five generations.[12][5] Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes rented a house on the property with her partner from March 2021 until November 2022.[13][14]
History
Summarize
Perspective
The Fleishhacker family

Mortimer Fleishhacker Sr. (1866–1953) was an entrepreneur who co-founded (with his brother Herbert Fleishhacker) Great Western Power, which later became part of Pacific Gas and Electric and the City Electric Company.[15][16][9] He served as a director of the San Francisco Opera, San Francisco Symphony, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Temple Emanu-El.[17] Fleishhacker also had a home at 2418 Pacific Avenue in San Francisco, California.[17]
Property and landscaping
In 1911, Fleishhacker Sr. and his wife Bella Gerstle Fleishhacker (1875–1963), commissioned Charles Sumner Greene of the architectural firm Greene and Greene to design a country home for them on a 45-acre property.[2][12] This was the largest of all Greene and Greene designs.[9] The interior of the house was designed by Elsie de Wolfe and the San Francisco design house of Vickery, Atkins and Torrey.[18] When designing the home, Greene also took in to account the design of the landscaping and the driveway.[11][19]
The property's rolling green lawns were inspired by the Fountains Abbey of Studley Royal Park in 18th-century England, which Greene had visited in 1909.[19] The garden has natural materials used and design elements that complement the landscape such as terraces, walls, arcades, balustrades, and planting urns.[20] Over the years, the Fleishhacker family built out the estate, adding new structures and land.[6][21]
Film appearances
The estate was filmed as the Martin family home in the 1999 film Bicentennial Man.[22]
See also
References
External links
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