California has been a hotbed of architectural changes and innovation. From the wacky to the sublime, this list shows the wide range of architectural experimentation and aesthetics in the Golden State.
Earlier versions of the descriptions of these buildings first appeared in 1001 Buildings You Must See Before You Die, edited by Mark Irving (2016). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.
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First Church of Christ Scientist
Bernard Maybeck viewed the architectural canon as a style smorgasbord. Gothic, Romanesque, Asian, Arts and Crafts, Classicism—all were there to be sampled, interpreted, and reintroduced as California Craftsman. His belief in pure materials—untreated redwood shingles, exposed reinforced concrete, raw timber trellises—was balanced by unbridled curiosity for new materials, colors, and patterns combined in untested ways. But whereas his contemporary Frank Lloyd Wright knew where to stop before exuberance skids into excess, Maybeck’s church in Berkeley teeters on the brink between cohesive whole and bricolage assemblage.
Maybeck was influenced by Arthur Page Brown while working on his Swedenborg Church of New Jerusalem (1895) in San Francisco. Brown introduced a key feature found later in Maybeck’s work—the incorporation of church and home. Both churches have fireplaces and homespun-style chairs. While central to Brown’s design, Maybeck relegates these to an important but secondary feature with this church.
The wood and concrete exterior is sober in color but no less exuberant in rhythm. A visual mix of Japanese temple and Gothic cathedral, its multilevel, low-pitch gable roof has wide eaves, bargeboards, and trellises. Harlequin-patterned panels and colored diamonds brighten the reinforced concrete between columns and walls. The modular windows are topped with Gothic glazed traceries on the east and west windows. Concrete columns have “nonce” figurative capitals. This mix of classical order with imaginative elements is used to express the soul of the structure and enrich its meaning. This system of “speaking architecture” was taught at the École des Beaux Arts in Paris, where Maybeck studied. It personifies his interplay of the classical with the nonconformist. (Denna Jones)
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Beverly Hills Hotel Refurbishment
The hillside Hollywood sign is not the only famous symbol in Los Angeles. In 1949 Paul R. Williams was commissioned to redesign large parts of the Beverly Hills Hotel. His work included a sweeping drive leading to the signature colors of the portico entry and a green entablature block resting on a narrow pink cornice supported by two round, shell-pink columns. He also spelled out the hotel’s name in his own handwriting on the facade. Williams did all this as an African American in an era when discrimination was openly practiced. Known as the “architect to the stars,” his clients included Frank Sinatra and Tyrone Power.
The signature areas of the present-day hotel were designed by Williams and married to the original Mission-style structure. To fuse Modern on Mission could be a disaster, but Williams’s genius was to create a unique architectural style: a mix of Palladian and French empire made modern by materials, layout, and interplay of radical elements. Williams redesigned the lobby, added the Crescent Wing, and revamped the Polo Lounge and Fountain Coffee Shop. His elegant style can be quickly identified—round columns, circular sweeping staircases curved in tandem with the wall, and Greek temple details among other features. The hotel is a theatrical stage set on which the fantasies of architect and guest are played out. (Denna Jones)
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Hotel del Coronado
The Hotel del Coronado is one of the oldest and largest all-wooden buildings in California, and has been part of San Diego’s history since the 1880s. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1977 for being a fine example of a Victorian seaside resort where architectural style has been allowed to roam free to become a cityscape itself. Built as a luxury hotel, the Hotel del Coronado is located on the island of Coronado, close to San Diego; it is the largest beach resort on the North American Pacific coast ever to be built.
The Hotel del Coronado was the creation of three men. In 1885 retired railroad executive Elisha Babcock, Hampton Story of Story & Clark Piano Company, and Jacob Gruendike, president of the First National Bank of San Diego jointly bought Coronado and North Island for $110,000. Along with Indiana businessmen Josephus Collett, Herber Ingle, and John Inglehart, they formed The Coronado Beach Company. They appointed Canadian architect James Reid to design the beach resort complete with its profusion of turrets and tiered verandas. Construction began in 1887, and it took just 11 months to complete, costing $1 million. Reid later set up an architectural practice in San Francisco with his brother Merritt. The pair were responsible for many buildings erected after the destruction caused by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, including the Fairmont Hotel (1906) and Call Office Building (1914). (Fiona Orsini)
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Diamond Ranch High School
Sitting high on its Californian hillside location, the Diamond Ranch High School fractures the sky with its dramatic silhouette. The 72-acre (29 ha) site that affords such impressive views was fraught with technical difficulties, and it required two years of grading before construction could begin. Because Diamond Bar is a high-risk area for earthquakes, the school called for a flexible design—one that would adhere to the unstable geology of the location and to the constantly changing life of a busy school. The limited budget further influenced Morphosis architect Thom Mayne’s final structure.
The basic plan for the school is startlingly simple: at the top of the hill are the football fields, and at the bottom are the soccer pitches and tennis courts. In between are the buildings themselves, laid out in two horizontal rows with a “street” dividing them. This is where the simplicity of the plan dissolves into a highly sophisticated manipulation of space and expression of conceptual ideas associated with schools and learning. The two rows of buildings are divided into small pockets of space given over to classrooms divided by subject matter and to administration and communal areas. Both rows interact, as children do, and there is a passage of movement between the two. The sense of small, separate areas of space coming together as a whole is effective and lends the building an organic, encompassing feel.
The simple steel frame and metal cladding of the buildings was cost-effective and allowed Mayne to develop the striking form of the school’s components. Viewed as a whole, the buildings take on a sculptural quality with the folded and turned outline of the different roofs, in particular, reflecting the peaks and dips of the surrounding landscape. (Tamsin Pickeral)
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Crystal Cathedral
The roots of American “megachurches” go back some 50 years, but the phenomenon achieved its greatest expansion in the 1980s, in no small part because of the success of the rebuilt Garden Grove Community Church of Orange County, California—now known as the “Crystal Cathedral,” although the church is not actually the seat of a bishopric. The church is so named because its architect, Phillip Johnson, together with his partner, John Burgee, built the main sanctuary around a colossal, star-shaped frame, rising to 128 feet (39 m) at its apex and filled with more than 10,000 panes of glass.
The mirrored panes reflect back 92 percent of the fierce Californian sunlight and are fitted with ventilation strips. This prevents the 3,000-strong churchgoers within from stifling in an oversize greenhouse, while immersing them in a diffuse, slightly ethereal atmosphere. Johnson had been a champion of the use of glass since designing his own Glass House in 1949, and he later created, in conjunction with his mentor Mies van der Rohe, the Seagram Building, the prototype glass skyscraper in New York.
However, much of Johnson’s later work reflected an impatience with pure Modernism and a growing empathy for Pop Art and, later, Postmodernism. The Crystal Cathedral demonstrates this dichotomy—while it is Modernist in its use of industrial materials and geometric planes to exploit space, light, and volume dramatically, it is also defiantly populist and, to many, grandiosely kitsch. (Richard Bell)
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Joshua Tree Monument
Josh Schweitzer’s “monument” is aptly named, for although it is a domestic dwelling, in appearance it is more of a monolith, and it is also an unequivocal statement of the architect’s philosophy. After working for various architectural firms, he established Schweitzer BMI, with which he was subsequently involved in numerous residential and commercial projects. He also designed furniture, fixtures, and fittings.
The monument was built by the architect as a retreat for himself and five friends, and it is located just outside the Joshua Tree National Park. It is a strange area of rugged and barren beauty, a high desert peppered with jagged rock, spiky yucca plants, cacti, and Joshua trees. The house sits amid boulders, its hard geometric form reiterating the unrelenting sharpness of the immediate environment, and its bold colors reflecting the drama of desert life. Schweitzer based the structure around a series of connecting blocks, each containing specific areas for living. In place of conventional windows, irregular holes punched through the external shell allow light to flood into the interior. The holes create geometric patterns inside and afford “snapshot” views of the land or sky. The interior is as simple in form as the exterior, with its colors diluted versions of those of the exterior. The ideology of the building—that of interior and exterior spaces being continuations of each other, and of color and spatial form obliterating the need for historical precedent—is resonant. (Tamsin Pickeral)
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Lovell House
Six years after immigrating to the United States from Vienna, Richard Neutra built Lovell House, which was to forge his reputation. It is also known as the Health House because its owner, Philip Lovell, advocated preventative medicine in the form of good diet and exercise. The Lebensreform movement that swept from Europe to California in the early 20th century influenced both Lovell and Neutra. It promoted the lifestyle Lovell sought and Neutra delivered. This was the first U.S.-built steel-frame house. Neutra chose steel for its strength and superior structural capacity but also for the fact that it was seen as “healthier.” The steep grade prevented a traditional on-site build, so all the components were prefabricated off site. The frame was made in sections and took 40 hours to erect. Neutra’s biographer says work was held to a “decimal tolerance” to avoid costly changes. This suggests that Neutra anticipated the critical need for dimensional variation control. Low variation means a tight fit, fewer defects, and better appearance. Innovations abound in the house: ribbon concrete walls; expanded metal backed with insulation panels; and balconies suspended from the roof frame. The third-level entry terrace has outside sleeping porches. The lower-level gym extends to an outdoor pool, hung in a U-shaped concrete sling. Vast expanses of glass were introduced to deliver sun and vitamin D, and to ensure oneness with the landscape. (Denna Jones)
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Case Study House No. 22
One of the most famous and influential house designs of the late 20th century, Case Study House No. 22 is, for many, the embodiment of the California dream.
The Case Study program was initiated by Arts & Architecture magazine in 1945 with the goal of promoting the design of cheap, easily assembled residential homes—the solution to massive postwar housing demand. Editor John Entenza said he hoped it would “lead the house out of the bondage of handcraftism into industry.” In the late 1950s, Entenza approached San Francisco–born architect Pierre Koenig, who had been experimenting with exposed steel frame houses ever since building his own while still a student at USC. After the completion of his first commission for Entenza (Case Study House No. 21), he immediately began work on its successor.
Situated on an awkwardly shaped hillside lot—which had been considered “unbuildable”—Koenig fashioned an L-shaped, single-story building with open-plan rooms and flat roof decks. Combining one exposed steel framework aligned to the plot dimensions with another set over the cliff edge to the southwest, the plate glass windows of the overhang afforded spectacular views over Los Angeles.
Koenig’s principles were about more than eye-catching design, however. He was seeking a truthful aesthetic for simple, mass-produced materials, and he was a lifelong advocate of passive solar heating and energy conservation in the home—values that today are more relevant than ever. (Richard Bell)
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Rosen House
Rosen House was one of the few single-story, steel houses designed by Craig Ellwood that was actually built, another one being Daphne House. The designs were among the first the architect made after absorbing the ideals of Mies van der Rohe. Ellwood commented, “Once I became aware of Mies’s work and studied his designs, my work became more like Mies.”
During his mid-20s, Ellwood worked with the building firm Lamport, Cofer and Salzman, and it was here that he developed a thorough understanding of construction materials. He established his own architectural firm in 1948, quickly achieving great acclaim for his innovative designs, which were based on his acute knowledge of the technical properties of construction materials. In the Rosen House, he brought this knowledge to the fore on many levels, perhaps most visibly in his use of a single vertical steel column to support horizontal steel beams in both directions. This structural feature is part of the external skeleton of the house and appears as a rectangular design detail, marrying the effects of structure and aesthetics.
The house, based upon a nine-square grid with a central open court, was entirely modern in concept but drew on the precedent of the Classical pavilion. The steel skeleton structure of the house was painted white with ceramic-faced, Norman brick panels and glass walls in between. For the interior, and along Mies van der Rohe lines, Ellwood strove for free-floating interior dividers that were unattached to any exterior walls, a feature that was complicated by the necessity for the house to function as a multiperson home. Rosen House is a building that satisfied the architect’s artistic ideals and objectives while remaining a functional and utilitarian family home. (Tamsin Pickeral)
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Disney Concert Hall
The billowing stainless steel forms of the Disney Concert Hall occupy an entire downtown block in Los Angeles; that they house an auditorium seems improbable. Yet these curved, flared, and collided volumes have a visual “rightness” amid the sober boxes of corporate L.A. The stainless steel is mostly satin finished; the original concave, polished finish caused a problematic glare of sunlight, and it had to be altered.
The auditorium is essentially a rectangular box that sits within the block at an angle, disguised all around by the metallic volumes. Frank Gehry created billboard architecture on a spectacular scale throughout his career, and at one place he acknowledged this by exposing the steel armature that supports the panels. Despite a 15-year gestation and astonishing cost, the building is loved both by the city and by musicians.
During major events, the entrance doors can be fully retracted so the street seems to flow into the foyer. Inside, the spaces are generous and complex, the forms as extroverted as those on the outside. Timber “trees” disguise the steel frame and air-conditioning ducts. Roof lights are cleverly placed to bring daylight in and allow internal lighting to illuminate the external forms at night. The auditorium follows the “vineyard” layout, with the audience sitting in terraces around the stage, and it has a tentlike ceiling of Douglas fir. The signage in the building is delightfully subtle: externally, lettering is embossed in the stainless steel with a different grade of satin finish; inside, a wall honoring donors has stainless-steel lettering set into gray felt. (Charles Barclay)
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International Center for Possibility Thinking
The Crystal Cathedral campus at Garden Grove in Los Angeles is home to three monuments of Modernist and Postmodernist architectural design, built by three of the world’s most celebrated architects. The inspiring International Center for Possibility Thinking by Richard Meier sits between the Crystal Cathedral, the first all-glass house of worship, designed by Philip Johnson in 1980, and the soaring Tower of Hope (1968) by Richard Neutra. The three buildings are located in such close proximity that the area between them functions almost as an outdoor room. Together they interrelate, aesthetically, spiritually, and functionally, while retaining the individual characters and expressions of their architects.
Meier’s buildings have been based on just a few specific concepts, and therefore his works seem a cohesive whole. His projects transcend their geography and location, and his ideals and inspiration are clearly defined in each building he creates. His approach is based loosely on Corbusian precepts—the interrelation of clean lines and geometric form—with an abiding admiration for the color white. The purity of his designs, combined with their essential whiteness, lends them a spiritual element that is present in both his public and domestic works, and it is particularly prevalent in this building. The international center is an imposing four-story building sheathed in a skin of stainless steel and glass, with eight sliding, glass entrance doors that lead into a 40-foot-high (12 m) atrium. The extensive use of clear glass bathes the shining white interior in light, which is characteristically manipulated by Meier. The symbolic significance of Meier’s building as the third part of the “trinity” of buildings on the campus is not lost, and it capacitates the roles of functionality and spirituality with an effortless sublimity. (Tamsin Pickeral)
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28th Street Apartments
The 28th Street Apartments building is an excellent example of the reuse, adaptation, and extension of an existing building, respecting not only its architecture but also its social significance. Originally the 28th Street YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association), the Spanish Colonial Revival building opened in 1926, providing affordable accommodation to young African American men who were migrating to the city and could not stay in ordinary hotels because of racial discrimination.
The new use continues the affordable housing theme. The 56 single rooms have become 24 studio apartments, and there are an additional 25 units in a new wing. These units are designed for a mix of uses: by people with low incomes, by the mentally ill, and by the homeless.
The new addition is shallow enough to be cross-ventilated. It has a perforated metal “veil” on the northern facade facing the existing building, allowing the warm reddish orange of the walls to shine through. This color also extends to the roof garden that has been created on the roof of part of the existing building. On the southern facade there is a screen of photovoltaic panels, which both shade the building and produce energy.
This is a sensitively executed project that recognizes the importance of the original structure and enhances it. While in some senses it is a modest project, it shows just how profound a contribution an architect can make by really understanding both a building and the area in which it is located. (Ruth Slavid)
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Hight Residence
Bart Prince is perhaps the greatest contemporary exponent of the Organic or Responsive approach. His work has been compared with that of Antonio Gaudí, Louis Sullivan, and Frank Lloyd Wright. Prince’s work shows the influence of the desert landscapes of the American southwest. After graduating from Arizona State University college of architecture, Prince befriended Bruce Goff, a former protégé of Wright and a distinguished architect in the Organic school. Working intermittently with Goff in the last decade of Goff’s life, Prince developed his own practice, and by the 1980s he had formulated a style uniquely his own.
Designed as a holiday and weekend retreat, and eventually to become a permanent home, the Hight Residence exemplifies Prince’s “inside out” approach. Prince allows the building’s form to evolve out of a synthesis of its environmental context, the client’s personality, needs, and budget, and his own creative responses. Inspired by the site’s coastal headland, Price fashioned a low, rambling structure with an undulating roof. Acting as a wind buffer on one side, the roof also rises to afford views across the Pacific. Changes of level define different functional areas within, and beams are exposed in contrast to exterior cedar shingles. His work has drawn criticism for ignoring local vernaculars, but Prince’s buildings demand to be engaged with on their own terms. (Richard Bell)
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Hangar One
One of the largest unsupported structures in the United States, Moffett Field’s airship Hangar One has been a landmark on the San Francisco Bay Area skyline since its construction in the 1930s. Built to house the USS Macon, the largest rigid-frame dirigible ever built, the hangar’s network of steel girders is anchored to concrete pilings and encloses a surface area of 8 acres (3.2 ha). More than 1,100 feet (335 m) long, 300 feet (91 m) wide, and ascending 200 feet (61 m) to a curved roof, the structure is so vast that fog occasionally forms within it. Hangar One’s almost unprecedented scale necessitated numerous design innovations. The massive “clam shell” doors were so shaped to help reduce turbulence as the airship maneuvered through them, and their graceful profile seems to place the structure in the late Art Deco school of Streamline Moderne. The crash of the Macon off Monterey in 1935 signaled the end of the government’s commitment to the airship program. However, Hangar One received a new lease of life when it became the home of Navy reconnaissance balloons during World War II. In 1994 Moffett Field was turned over to NASA, but plans to convert Hangar One into an air and space center came to a halt in 2003, when it was discovered that the exterior paint was leaching toxic lead and PCBs into the surrounding soil. In 2019 a restoration plan to be carried out by a subsidiary of Google was announced. (Richard Bell and the Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica)
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Case Study House No. 8
Chicken wire appeared on the June 1950 cover of Arts & Architecture magazine—John Entenza’s publication about modern architecture, which launched the Case Study House movement, which called for modern alternatives to suburban housing. Chicken wire also appears as visible glass reinforcement in the Case Study House No. 8 of Charles and Ray Eames. Its use indicates the role industrial and off-the-shelf materials held for the husband-and-wife team. But it was more than just wire. For the Eameses, it was a collection of holes incidentally held together with wire. This highly original way of looking symbolized their simple yet revolutionary style.
Their prefabricated house sits on a Los Angeles hillside, which allows the upper floor to open at ground level, while a concrete retaining wall allows the lower level to do the same. Courtyards balance two live-work blocks. The corrugated flat roof is hidden outside, but its wavy raw profile is visible inside. The steel-frame house featured sliding walls and windows, contributing to spacious, light, and versatile spaces.
Color blocks delineated by black perimeters suggest Piet Mondrian. Seemingly minor details, such as the pull-cord triple doorbell, celebrate labor and love of mechanical functions. The main door has a “finger pull” circle above, and opens onto a splay-foot open circular stair. The Eameses’ love of science is evident in the mirroring of the two main living units and in details such as panel voids versus hardscape voids. Case Study House No. 8 demonstrates how the materials and patterns of the ordinary can combine to produce an extraordinary lifestyle. (Denna Jones)
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Kaufmann Desert House
The desert setting is key to the Kaufmann Desert House. Twenty years after he introduced European Modernism to Los Angeles, Richard Neutra imported the suburban garden—manicured lawn and plants that know their place—to the desert habitat. When he tamed the Sonoran Desert, Neutra did what countless others have tried to do before and since—control and alter what they believe to be barren and intolerant.
That the Kaufmann House is iconic is undisputed. That it is innovative is apparent. Seamless windows frame the view. The “gloriette”—a modern medieval keep—is a second-story aerie with three sides of vertical louvers to attract or repel the elements. It neatly sidesteps the one-story zoning restriction and is the main focal point. The house is a series of interconnected blocks in the shape of a serifed cross. Flat roofs create welcome overhangs. A central living area leads to long wings for the bedrooms and bathrooms. Breezeways augment internal galleries and route past patios and pool. Massive drystone walls ensure that the precinct is protected.
Compared to nearby building designs by fellow European Modernist architect Albert Frey that draw inspiration from the desert landscape and attempt to integrate with their environment, Neutra’s Kaufmann House reflects a particularly American belief that nature should bend to humanity’s will. Neutra created a masterpiece. But whether house should master landscape is the question. (Denna Jones)
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Elrod House
The aura of the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever lingers in the Elrod house. Stylistically related to his Chemosphere (1960), John Lautner’s Elrod House is less flamboyant but no less spectacular. Approached by an inclined driveway, the initial view is circumspect. Curved and low, the inside is masked by darkened paneled glass. A guardrail on the protruding lip edge restrains a concrete flat roof.
But wait. It intends to lull. At the end of the drive a massive, patched, copper door leads into a half-circle compound. A low, concrete entrance restrains the circular main structure. Once inside, the house pops. The vast, open living room is scaled with a reduced horizontal profile that keeps the space welcoming. The ceiling resembles a huge, 35-millimeter diaphragm shutter; its multiple blades reach to the peaked aperture and move to make an exposure of the sky. The black slate floor disappears into the night. The glass curtain wall slides open on a suspension system to reveal a half-circle pool patio area that balances the compound entrance form. The desert and mountain vista spill out beneath. A giant boulder outcrop incorporated into the living room is directional to the bedroom annex. Panoramic windows in the master bath are shielded not by curtains but by the exterior boulder landscape. A door leads to a platform hidden in the boulder outcrop, where the house can be viewed from below. What other architects dream, Lautner designed. (Denna Jones)
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Gamble House
The Gamble House, built as a winter residence in Pasadena for David and Mary Gamble of the Procter & Gamble company, is widely considered to be one of the best surviving examples of the Arts and Crafts style in the United States. Charles and Henry Greene designed the house holistically, and they were responsible for every detail, fixture, and fitting, internally and externally. This approach gave the building great continuity in feel and spirit and contributes toward it being a domestic architectural masterpiece.
The brothers designed the house in 1908. They turned to nature for their inspiration and incorporated the Arts and Crafts style, along with details from Asian architecture and knowledge of Swiss design, to create a house in contrast to popular U.S. building styles of the time. Although it is a three-story building, the Greenes used the term “bungalow” to describe it because of its low roofs with broad eaves. Inside, the floorplan is fairly traditional with low horizontal and regularly shaped rooms radiating from a central hall, but the detail and ideals of the house were different. The entire interior is conceived around different types of lustrous wood, including teak, maple, oak, redwood, and Port Orford cedar, buffed to glow with a natural and warming radiance that creates a restful and harmonious effect. This effect was further evoked through the use of stained-glass windows designed to filter soft, colored light into the house. The Greene brothers also developed the concept of indoor-outdoor living, by including partially enclosed porches leading from three of the bedrooms, which could be used for sleeping or entertaining. These spaces, along with the extensive use of wood inside, blurred the boundaries between the interior and the exterior of domestic dwellings. The notion of indoor-outdoor living spaces was one that suited the California lifestyle and location of the house very well. (Tamsin Pickeral)
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Jamie Residence
Perching on a precipitous slope above Pasadena, the Jamie Residence could easily be mistaken for a cantilevered Case Study House from the golden era of California Modernism. Completed in 2000, it was the first joint commission undertaken by Swiss-born Frank Escher and Sri Lankan Ravi GuneWardena.
Presented with the challenge of designing a 2,000-square-foot (186 sq m) family home on such a difficult site, the duo responded with a building that rekindles the west coast Modernist aesthetic and demonstrates a millennial sensitivity to the environment. To preserve the integrity of the site’s topography and flora, the entire structure rests upon just two concrete pillars driven into the hillside. Upon these pillars sit steel beams that support the lightweight wooden balloon frame of the long, low building. Within the house, all the communal rooms are open plan, linking up with the balcony to form a continuous space offering panoramic views of Pasadena below, the San Rafael mountains to the west, and the San Gabriel mountains to the east. The bedrooms are located on the more private, hill-facing side of the house. Recognizing its potential, artist Olafur Eliasson temporarily used the building as “an auratic pavilion of light and color” for an exhibition. (Richard Bell)
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Medical-Dental Office
To call it “Maya mania” may seem excessive, but the frenzy for all things Mayan that gripped the United States during the 1920s was, quite simply, manic. Universities sent expeditions to the Yucatan peninsula, where the archeological equivalent of a gold rush took place. The media romanticized the Mayans as a mysterious civilization that had suddenly vanished. The effect on U.S. popular culture was electric. The First Lady broke a Mayan vase over a bow to christen a ship, Mayan balls were held, and Mayan architecture was encouraged as the new architectural style. Architect Timothy Pflueger saw the potential. The “original” city dwellers, the Mayans had anticipated the development of the skyscraper.
At 450 Sutter Street in San Francisco, Pflueger’s steel frame skeleton with concrete infill rises 26 stories without setbacks. Rounded at the corners, it is clad in monochrome terra cotta tiles. The pattern extends from tile to tile and alternates with solid block areas. Triangular window supports create an upward, zigzag rhythm, and a shadowplay on the facade that references Chichén Itzá’s Kululk pyramid. A bronze entrance canopy leads to a lavish lobby. Imported French marble lines the walls to three-quarter height where they meet the step-vaulted, gilded and silvered ceiling decorated with Mayan glyphs. Bronze chandeliers echo the step-vault style. (Denna Jones)
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Transamerica Pyramid
Today the Transamerica Pyramid is considered a landmark building for San Francisco, yet originally it was a building of much ridicule and protest. In 1969, when architect William Pereira presented plans for the new headquarters of the Transamerica Corporation, his unconventional design was met with a broad mixture of enthusiasm and condemnation.
Pereira, a Los Angeles architect known for movie-set designs and futuristic buildings, had headed the team that designed the Theme Building for Los Angeles International Airport, an iconic 1960s building resembling a flying saucer. The overall form of the Transamerica Pyramid is in the shape of a slender, gently tapering pyramid with two “wings” flanking the upper levels to allow for vertical circulation. The facade is clad in white, precast, quartz-aggregate panels.
The building’s form was conceptually based on tall redwood and sequoia trees, native to the area, which with their conical form allow light to filter down to the forest floor. Similarly, the Transamerica Pyramid allows greater light to reach street level. Advocates maintained its narrow design would also allow for greater unobstructed premium views around the San Francisco Bay than a traditional tower. Critics claimed the tower was a threat to the integrity of the city and would negatively transform the urban fabric—the tower took up a full city block and required the city to sell an alley in the middle of the block to the Transamerica Corporation. A main point of contention centered on this sale of public space to a private entity. Despite early opposition, however, the public gradually warmed, and today it is one of the city’s best-known buildings. (Abe Cambier)
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de Young Museum
After the San Francisco earthquake of 1989, the de Young Museum was badly damaged and faced an uncertain future. Having first attempted to finance the repair with public funds, the museum’s directors undertook a record-breaking private fundraising effort to build a new home for the collection. Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron are well known for their work with innovative cladding systems, and the de Young Museum is a stunning example. Both inside and out, the visitor is aware of the building’s “rain-screen” skin of perforated and stamped copper panels. The subtle pattern of the 7,200 panels is intended to evoke the dappled light falling through the surrounding foliage. The architects planned for the copper to oxidize in the sea air, resulting in a varied patina of greens and browns. The museum is made up of three parallel rectangles, skewed and parted to allow the landscape to slide in alongside galleries and circulation spaces. At the north end, a nine-story tower twists as it rises to align with the city grid beyond.
In many ways, the de Young rejects classical hierarchy and formal tradition. Instead of symmetry and historical sequence, the visitor can enter the museum from a number of entrances and flow from one area of the collection to another as they wish. The galleries intersect one another at angles that enhance a sense of exploration and create new opportunities for interpretation and comparison of the collection. (Abe Cambier)
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Gehry House
The extraordinary home of Frank Gehry is a house turned inside out, a tumble of skewed angles, walls peeled back, and exposed beams. According to Gehry, his wife first saw a simple Cape Cod–style home on a suburban street in Santa Monica and bought it knowing that he would “remodel” it. The remodeling turned into one of the most innovative approaches to Postmodern house design, and certainly one of the most controversial. Instead of pulling down the old house, Gehry built a new skin around it using cheap materials such as plywood, chain link, and corrugated metal, focusing on making the house appear unfinished—a work in progress. The old house peeps out in places from behind the new deconstructed shell. The apparent casual confusion of the design belies the architect’s highly specified approach. Every deconstructed detail, disjointed angle, window, and roofline was designed for purpose and effect, so the whole is an artwork viewed externally; from the inside looking out, every opening and architectural element offers visual stimulation. Gehry undertook a further renovation of the house from 1991 to 1992 when he smoothed off some of the unfinished quality of the building, streamlined it, and brought it more in line with the clarity of Mies van der Rohe’s buildings. However, his first realization of the house is still the most talked about, effectively launching his career as one of the world’s most original designers. (Tamsin Pickeral)
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Sea Ranch Chapel
Sea Ranch is an architecturally significant 1960s planned community north of San Francisco. Its masterplan instituted guidelines to ensure buildings harmonized with the landscape. In contrast to many U.S. suburbs, the 1,000-acre (400 ha) ranch stipulates no lawns, fences, non-native plants, or painted wood sidings. In contrast to the rectilinear houses—most designed by late Modernist architects such as Charles Moore—the nondenominational Sea Ranch Chapel, designed by the artist and architect James T. Hubbell, is more Wharton Esherick than saltbox, more diminutive exuberance than restraint. On a site near the ocean, a concrete slab foundation supports 12-inch (30-cm) walls infilled with concrete block. Teak siding was dried and molded onto the blocks to create a carapace. Boat-building skills enabled the carapace to curve. A nonequilateral drystone wall supports the offset, asymmetrical upper structure. The nave end highlights a spherical window and introduces the broad, low, weathered cedar shingle roof. From the nave the structure rises and narrows to the apex, where it flips upward like a scaled fish tail. A patinated bronze prow at the nave end pairs with a bronze finial at the roof apex, shaped to reference the Monterey pine. From the finial the roof sweeps dramatically down to the entrance. The tiny interior—360 square feet (33.5 sq m)—is fitted with curved redwood pews, Gaudí-like lights, and a white-plaster petal ceiling. (Denna Jones)
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Snowshoe Cabin
A thin line exists between snow that brings pleasure and snow that accumulates and kills. Soda Springs is a ski resort in the Sierra Mountains near Lake Tahoe and Donner Summit. In a tragic episode of American westward migration in the 1840s, a group of settlers became snowbound at Donner Summit. They resorted to cannibalism to survive. Their main failure was being ill-prepared for snow. Snow in the Sierras is still unforgiving. Preparation is essential.
Snowshoe Cabin is snow-smart. Beneath high peaks, the valley holds snow even in dry winters. Sited on a hill, the cabin’s 1,000-square-foot (93 sq m) footprint is similar to that of a snowshoe. And just as snowshoes enable weight to be distributed evenly to prevent sinking, so the cabin rises above the snowline to achieve the snowshoe quality of “flotation.”
The cabin’s leading edge is a 7-foot (2.1 m) wedge. Built without removing any of the surrounding pines, the steep, enclosed, sided staircase at this north-facing end leads to the main floor. Snowfall needs to top 10 feet (3 m) before this level is affected.
The southwest end, which is 17 feet (5 m) wide, houses the living, kitchen, and entertaining areas in a double-height open space. Two pairs of stacked, two-over-two windows at the corner overlook the valley and the deck on two sides of the cabin. The deck profile bows out like a snowshoe. A sleeping loft wraps around two sides of the living area. Thermal efficiency is assisted by a wood-stove on a tile floor. The sharply pitched roof ensures snow slides off quickly. Deep eaves vary in width and provide winter protection or summer shade. To reach the cabin from the road, the owners ski cross-country for a mile (1.6 km) with provisions. In this beautiful but treacherous environment, they know that preparation is everything. (Denna Jones)
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Schindler-Chace House
The reputation of Rudolph Schindler languished after his death. He was damned by the faint praise of his mentor, Frank Lloyd Wright, who downplayed Schindler’s contribution to his own projects, and overshadowed by a contemporary, Richard Neutra. Designed as a shared studio and home, the Schindler-Chace House, also known as the Kings Road House or simply the Schindler House, is radical yet understated, complex but not complicated. It became a prototype for a recognizably Californian style of building. The concrete foundation/floor and wood frame provide 2,500 square feet (762 sq m) of living space, and an open “sleeping basket” on the main roof echoes the ground floor design. Three interlocking L-shapes pivot from a central fireplace and provide a system of three studios with bathrooms. Each studio is enclosed on three sides by concrete walls; the fourth is open and faces a communal patio and outdoor fireplace. The sunken lawn beyond repeats patterns from the house. Schindler created shelter and space through variance of the flat roofline. Ground-floor rooms rise to a clerestory window ventilation system, and open through sliding canvas doors into the enclosed garden. Japanese elements complete the house’s grammar. Redwood-and-glass corner window-walls flip and repeat in the adjacent space. Concrete walls are panelized with vertical glass slits between. The house, located in West Hollywood, unites the outside world with a shared yet individual interior life. (Denna Jones)
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Chemosphere
This octagonal wonder is John Lautner’s best-known house. Leonard Malin, an aerospace engineer, commissioned the house to perch 100 feet (30.5 m) above the home of his parents-in-law. Clearly, client and architect were well-matched as the house is an engineering wonder. The fact that it is sited on a steep hillside in an earthquake zone adds kudos. Lautner’s site solution was a wood-beam skeleton-cage tied to a steel compression ring mounted on a 5-foot-wide (1.5 m) cast-concrete column with eight steel supports to each vertices. The beams create the ceiling and surge toward the central skylight, like a whale’s ribcage. In a nod to Exhibitionist style, a hinged beam reveals a one-way glass into the shower. Windows circle the octagon equator and separate the roof from the base. All that was left was how to get inside; this was solved by a steep-grade funicular and skybridge.
In 2001 the firm Escher GuneWardena renovated the house for new owner, publisher Benedikt Taschen. Features dropped because they were too costly or technologically impossible in 1960, when Malin’s residence was completed, were reintroduced: razor-thin slate replaced tile; framed windows became frameless glass; ash displaced the vinyl kitchen counter. (Denna Jones)
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Dominus Winery
The Napa Valley is the setting for this building that, though traditional in technique, seems somehow to break all the rules. The Dominus Winery, completed in 1997, was the first of a new generation of wineries in which architecture is asked to add another layer of prestige and glamour to the vintages produced. The massive size of the Dominus building—330 feet (100 m) long, 82 feet (25 m) wide, and 30 feet (9 m) high—is tempered by the use of local basalt, ranging in color from black to dark green. This basalt is packed with differing degrees of density into gabions—wire containers most often used to shore up river banks and sea walls. Here, the Swiss firm Herzog and de Meuron treats the functional gabions as aesthetic objects. The differing densities of stone allow light to pass through, creating delicate patterns within during the hot California daytime and allowing the internal artificial lighting to leak out during the night so that the stones seem to emit starlight. The gabions also work as a thermostat, keeping the temperatures in the storage areas at an even level. The firm is probably best known for their reimagination of a disused power station in London: the Tate Modern. The same understanding of linear geometries can be seen in both Tate Modern and the Dominus Winery, where a simple harmony is achieved through the interplay of horizontal shapes and spaces, rather than by means of extravagant curves or other aggressive architectural gestures. (Gemma Tipton)
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