Joseph Esherick was born on December 28, 1914, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1937 with a bachelor's degree in architecture.[2]
Esherick worked for San Francisco Bay Area architect Gardner Dailey,[2] and, about 1950, began his own practice in the San Francisco Bay Area.[2] He taught at the University of California, Berkeley for many years.[2] Esherick was awarded the AIA Gold Medal in 1989.[3] Following in the tradition of Bay Area architects such as Bernard Maybeck and William Wurster, Esherick designed hundreds of houses, emphasizing regional traditions, site requirements, and user needs.
In 1938, Esherick married architect Rebecca Wood, whom he knew from Pennsylvania.[4] About ten years later Rebecca designed their own home in Kent Woodlands with Joe consulting. The style of the house with a huge gabled roof and large glass walls is stunningly modern. In 1946, Rebecca earned her architectural license and worked for her husband on a variety of projects while raising their three children.[5] By 1951, the couple divorced.[6]
In 1972, Esherick reorganized his office, turning away from houses to more commercial and academic work, with three longtime associates George Homsey, Peter Dodge and Chuck Davis to form Esherick Homsey Dodge & Davis, the winner of the 1986 Architecture Firm Award. The firm continues today as EHDD Architecture. In 1976, Esherick was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member, and became a full Academician in 1990.
Bermak House, Oakland, California, 1963, with architect Peter Dodge
Six Sea Ranch Demonstration Houses (now called The Hedgerow Homes) (in collaboration with landscape architect Lawrence Halprin, three small scale Demonstration houses called "Mini-Mods", as well as other private residences at The Sea Ranch Sonoma County, California, 1967