Baker and Hamilton Building

The Baker and Hamilton Building listed as a San Francisco Designated Landmark since April 6, 1989;[5] listed as a California Historic Landmark since February 9, 2005;[3] and listed on the National Register of Historic Places since February 9, 2005.

The building was built in 1905 for the Pacific Hardware and Steel Company, and was designed by architects Albert Sutton (1867–1923) and Charles Peter Weeks (1870–1928).

[6] The Baker and Hamilton was founded as a California Gold Rush-era mining supply and hardware store company, by Livingston Low Baker and Robert Muirhead Hamilton in Mormon Island.

The company had a second store location at Front and California Street in San Francisco, active from 1867 until 1906, which was destroyed in the 1906 earthquake.

[7] The building was converted in the year 2000 into office space for Organic, Inc. During the dot-com downturn space went unused, until Macromedia in 2005; and then Adobe Systems moved in during 2007[8] after buying Macromedia.

The Baker & Hamilton sign is visible from the corner of 7th Street and King Street
The Baker & Hamilton sign is visible from the corner of 7th Street and King Street