Inaba Williams Architects

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses 

Inaba Williams Architects

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta

CIVIL ENGINEER
Obando & Associates

TITLE 24 CONSULTANT
Title 24 Guys

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
Studio H2o

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Gouvis

EXECUTIVE ARCHITECT
Modative

GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Modative

DESIGN ARCHITECTS
Jeffrey Inaba, Darien Williams, Sharon Leung, Nabila Morales Perez, Yasamin Mayyas, James Brillon, Andrea Macias-yanez

PHOTOGRAPHS
Brandon shigeta

AREA
3900 Ft²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Santa Mónica, United States

TYPE
Houses

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta

“Title 24” (California’s Building Energy Efficiency Standards) inspired the design of the net-zero homes.

We see the state’s recently implemented code as an opportunity to reinvent the Southern California single-family dwelling.

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta

While a midcentury Case Study-type glass house is still possible under Title 24, that home would require high embodied energy materials and consume lots of power, undermining the Energy Standards’ aims.

Instead, the Santa Monica Courtyard Houses assume a different look and feel that is more suitable to current climate conditions.

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta

Having far fewer windows, the outside form reduces the amount of heat gain and lowers energy use while still allowing residents to enjoy indoor-outdoor living – the hallmark of great Angeleno homes.

Following the Title 24 option to use glass on just 20% of the surface area, we concentrated the limited area of windows and glazed doors around the main living spaces.

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta

Rooms facing the courtyard receive generous amounts of daylight from three sides. And, in the two stairwells, skylights and windows are paired together to.

Enclosing less floor area than the maximum allowed by code, the side-by-side homes increase the amount of space people can enjoy outside while decreasing the amount of inside area that requires heating and cooling energy.

Enclosing less floor area than the maximum allowed by code, the side-by-side homes increase the amount of space people can enjoy outside while decreasing the amount of inside area that requires heating and cooling energy.

Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta

Like the buildings which introduced new architectural forms after the passage of New York’s 1916 zoning resolution, we hope the Santa Monica Courtyard Houses serve as a model building that can be repeated and refined in the years to come to dramatize these vertical volumes


Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta


Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
© Brandon Shigeta


Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
Plan - Ground floor
Santa Monica Courtyard Houses
Plan - Second floor

Inaba Williams Architects
T +1 718 5226800
Inaba Williams Architects
68 Jay St #427, Brooklyn, NY 11201, United States