Frank Mauceri, who built the Cleveland punk label Smog Veil Records over three decades, listed a rare pairing of 1895 Victorian homes at 1330-1332 Greenwich Street — two addresses, one lot, $7.745 million. The compound is now under contract.

On the 1300 block of Greenwich Street in Russian Hill, two Victorian-era homes share a single lot. That's unusual enough in a neighborhood of narrow parcels and stacked rows that the listing calls it, without much stretching, a "mini compound." The seller is Frank Mauceri, founder of Smog Veil Records. He listed 1330-1332 Greenwich St. for $7.745 million; the listing went under contract in mid-June and is now marked pending.

Both homes date to 1895 — built before the 1906 earthquake that erased most of this hill. According to the Compass listing (MLS #426129490), they total 4,447 square feet across five bedrooms and six bathrooms, set on a 3,489-square-foot landscaped lot with climbing roses and bay views. The two structures could hardly look less alike.

At 1330 Greenwich, facing the street, the original bones largely remain: exposed beams, wood floors, a large picture window, and a lower level converted to include a sauna and gym. An elevator connects all three floors. At 1332, tucked behind the front home, a 2017 renovation by architect Jonathan Feldman replaced most of what was there — open plan on the main level, an upscale kitchen looking toward the bay, en suite bedrooms with built-in desks, and a primary suite with skylights, vaulted ceilings, and a deck with sightlines across the Presidio and the Golden Gate. One Victorian preserved, one almost entirely rebuilt, on the same parcel.

Mauceri founded Smog Veil Records in Cleveland in 1991 and ran it for roughly three decades. The label made its name chronicling Ohio's punk and rock underground: Rocket From The Tombs, Peter Laughner, the Mr. Stress Blues Band, the Dead Boys. (Songs by the Dead Boys were later covered by, among others, Guns N' Roses and Pearl Jam.) "My only criteria is for good rock 'n' roll, quality songwriting and an ability to tour," Mauceri told Reno News & Review in one interview. Over the label's run, Smog Veil artists appeared in Rolling Stone, on CBS Sunday Morning, and played stages internationally.

Mauceri moved to the West Coast in the early 2020s and purchased both Greenwich parcels together. The listing, held by John Farnham and Laura Rogers at Compass, offered them as a unit: two separate front doors, two mailing addresses, one lot. The front cottage at 1330 also carries its own MLS entry (#426127961) at $2,495,000, suggesting the sellers were willing to entertain individual-unit offers alongside the compound package.

Russian Hill's high end has drawn notable sellers this year — in April, Robert Fisher's estate listed at $17.25 million. But two pre-earthquake Victorians sharing ground on a single parcel is a different kind of scarcity. Someone walking past 1330-1332 Greenwich tomorrow would see two modest Victorian fronts, nothing that announces the price. On this block, that's standard.