Hillside House for Healthy Living, Los Angeles Luxury Home, Californian Real Estate, LA Architecture Images
Hillside House for Healthy Living in Los Angeles
Feb 10, 2021
A Hillside House for Healthy Living
Design: Abramson Architects
Location: Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, California, USA
An entrepreneurial family with a passion for healthy living requested a large home on their dramatically sloping 2-acre site. They wanted an informal layout woven into the topography. They also wished to enjoy as much of the site as possible, requiring the inclusion of steps and landscape pathways that lead to more distant parts of the steep site.
Situated on a promontory jutting into the canyon below the Hillside House for Healthy Living retreat boasts multiple vistas of the surrounding canyon and the Pacific Ocean beyond. However, local restrictions allowed for a single story above street level. Responding to these conditions, much of the home’s massing is located on a lower-level that daylights onto the downslope side of the house. This modest massing arrangement allows for neighboring properties to see over the roof of the home.
In three distinct locations, landscaped topography “fingers” heighten one’s awareness of the panoramic scenery. Bridges span over these fingers, extending the natural graded areas into the heart of the home. The design solution offers new perspectives for experiencing the owner’s prized views while providing a glimpse of the topography as it stood before the house was set upon it.
Key products used:
The use of a simple color scheme and contemporary materials is central to the design philosophy. French manor oak flooring, white oak shiplap wall cladding, oil rubbed bronze wall panels, and painted steel show deference to the picturesque surroundings. Pebble and stone accents embrace the nearby mountains resulting in material palette that is modern, yet warm.
What was the brief?
Situated on a promontory point, the Palisades House appears to emerge from below the surface of an otherwise undisturbed canyon rim. An entrepreneur and family with a passion for healthy living, the owners envisioned a large, but informal, home woven into the topography of their dramatically sloping 2-acre site.
A stepped roof plan reduces the 17,000 sqft dwelling’s perceived mass, creating the illusion of several interconnected structures. The efficient footprint occupies less than 19% of the property and preserves the site’s organic flow, including their neighbor’s views to the Santa Monica Mountains and the Pacific Ocean.
What are the sustainability features?
Special measures were taken by the designers and concrete contractors to reduce the thermal bridging typically associated with reinforced concrete walls. Before the concrete was poured, 2” thick rigid insulation was placed into the center of the 14” thick concrete walls. This results in an increased R-value in the walls without sacrificing the look of a monolithic concrete wall. Custom stormwater retention system, hydronic in-floor radiant heating, and dedicated solar panels for heating the pool augment the home’s sustainable features.
What were the key challenges?
The home’s location makes users susceptible to a daily wind pattern that picks up in the early afternoon and recedes during the early evening. A site-specific solution combines recessed track hardware originally designed as a convention center wall system with custom aluminum framed “windscreen” panels clad in perforated metal. Typically stacked against concrete columns when not in use the homeowner can quickly deploy the 4 feet wide top-hung panels into a series of pre-set positions to counteract the winds or mitigate heat gain.
During wildfire season the site is threatened by blazes capable of rushing up the canyon. As such, the residence’s cladding and landscaping elements consist of non-combustible and ignition resistant materials intended to reduce fuel for the fires.
What building methods were used?
Meticulous craftsmanship and authentic building materials are recurring themes best exemplified by the widespread use of board-formed concrete walls, white oak shiplap cladding, and painted galvanized steel doors and windows. A datum of wall elevations was carefully laid out to align the joints of the seemingly random board-formed concrete with the adjacent wood boards that come in 3”, 4”, 5”, and 6” widths. Floors, ceilings, steps, lighting, speakers, keypad controls, and outlets were carefully placed so that no element interrupts a joint in the boards.
How is the project unique?
Since covenants and restrictions allowed for only a single story above street level, many of the home’s rooms are located on a lower level which daylights on the downslope side of the house. The layered design caters to the homeowners’ need for a full-time residence and part-time wellness retreat. Supporting these goals, a “show garage” doubles as an open-air yoga studio and stepped pathways provide full access to distant parts of the steep site.
Hillside House for Healthy Living in LA – Building Information
Design:Abramson Architects
Project size: 17000 ft2
Site size: 87120 ft2
Completion date: 2019
Building levels: 2
Photography: Roger Davies
A Hillside House for Healthy Living, Pacific Palisades images / information received 100221
Location: Los Angeles, Southern California, USA
Culver City Buildings
Contemporary Culver City Architecture
Mayumi Housing
Architect: ShubinDonaldson
photograph : Benny Chan
Mayumi Housing Culver City
Second House in Culver City
Architects: FreelandBuck
photograph : Eric Staudenmaier
Second House in Culver City
Vespertine Culver City Building, L.A.
Design: Eric Owen Moss Architects
image courtesy of architects office
Vespertine Culver City Building, L.A.
Architecture in Los Angeles
L.A. Architectural Projects
Los Angeles Architecture Links – chronological list
Architecture Tours Los Angeles by e-architect
Gardenhouse, Wilshire Boulevard, Beverley Hills, CA
Design: MAD Architects
image Courtesy architecture office
Gardenhouse Wilshire Boulevard
Mirror House, Beverly Hills
Architects: XTEN Architecture
photos : Art Gray
Mirror House in Beverly Hills
Comments / photos for the A Hillside House for Healthy Living, Pacific Palisades page welcome