ARCHITECTS
Byben & Skeens
BUILDER/GENERAL CONTRACTOR
LA Green Building, Marc Le Cornet
INTERIOR DESIGN
Sunstone Interiors, Jana Stark
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Nous Engineering, Omar Garza
PHOTOGRAPHS
Taiyo Watanabe, Olivia Hemaratanatorn
AREA
480 ft²
YEAR
2021
LOCATION
Los Ángeles, United States
CATEGORY
Houses
Text description provided by architect.
The client, a filmmaker, and a poet, acquired an eclectically terraced hillside property abutting Angeles. The previous owner decorated the backyard in a lyrical antique style with circuitous crumbling stairs winding up the hill and a hand-made shack on the brink of collapse.
Inspired by the whimsical setting, the client wanted to replace it with a writing studio and guest house that evoked the past but was firmly contemporary.
ByBen & Skeens sought to create a multifunctional interior and exterior space that addressed the client's need for a solitary space for creation that let them feel both at home, and in another world. The 250sqft hut is situated midway up a steep hill just above the main house.
The building is a single room and powder room surrounded by the curved wrapper of the exterior walls. To the west a full-length skylight illuminates the room, the light modulated and defused by a curved wall sweeping into the space below.
The gently curving walls and fileted corners create a curvaceous interior with a hint of classic Hollywood decor. The arched windows and doors avoid views into the house to focus on the surrounding trees and sky creating a sense of escape and emersion in nature.
A pair of French doors open to the exterior rehearsal area to the north while a single door provides a more discrete entrance accessible via a side entrance from the street.
The two entrances allow the room to be used as a guest house and as a place for meetings with collaborators without accessing the main house.
Emerging from the existing house at the lowest level of the hill, ByBen & Skeens placed an open wooden deck to provide a flat-shaded space to enjoy morning coffee and yoga.
Ascending the winding stairs brings you to an open space leading to the building's French door entry. To the east a set of tiered seating risers allows the open space to be used as a stage for rehearsing with actors.
At the top level, stairs lead further into the forested hilltop or up to the top of the building. There, a sun deck is bound by the peaks and arches of the crown-like parapet of the building.
Facing east the deck has an intimate interior feeling produced by the dappled light of a closely overhanging tree canopy while to the south and west it provides clear views of downtown LA and beyond.