The Studio Building dates back to 1905. It stood as the tallest building in
downtown Berkeley in the time of its construction. It was built by Frederick H. Dakin for use by his real estate investment company. The architect was probably Clarence Dakin. The top floor of the building was designed as
artists' studios and included a
gallery space. The building was the original location of the
California College of the Arts, founded by
Frederick Meyer in 1907. The school, known originally as the School of the California Guild of the Arts and Crafts, moved to larger quarters after its first year. Other early tenants of the building included architect
John Hudson Thomas, painters Henry J. Breuer and Evelyn A. Withrow, and photographers
Oscar Maurer and Edwin James McCullagh. The building is five stories tall and built of
masonry with a tiled
mansard roof and rounded upper floor window bays. The first-floor bays, used as shop fronts, were originally built in the form of a series of alternating rounded and pointed arches, although some of these have since been covered. The building's name is set into the tile floor at the entrance, with the image of an artist's
palette created by Frederick's brother, the well-known artist
Edwin Deakin. The building was restored in the late 1970s, and has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1978. ==References==