[Images: House in Venice, California, by Bureau AA; photos by Larry Underhill].
This small and breezy house in Venice, California, designed by Robert Choeff and Krystyan Keck of the Bureau of Architectural Affairs, was completed in April 2009.
[Image: House in Venice, California; photo courtesy of Bureau AA].
The house's transparent polycarbonate cladding, used to "expose the interactions" of the building elements, makes the house function like "a structural X-ray," we read in a recent issue of Mark Magazine.
- Tight quarters, a tight budget and further restrictions—including a height limit and required setbacks—navigated the architects toward their design solution: a 54-square-meter trapezoid perched above the existing structure on steel stilts, topped by a roof deck with views in all directions.
[Image: House in Venice, California, by Bureau AA; photo by Larry Underhill].
The interior of the house seems solidly locked in place: "the upper story has no doors," we read, "and its only piece of freestanding furniture is the dining table. Lean work desks and kitchen counters hug the perimeter, and built-in storage spaces double, discreetly, as screens." This includes the bookshelves.
"Where there isn't cabinetry and Sheetrock," Mark Magazine adds, "there's a window."
[Images: Courtesy of the Bureau of Architectural Affairs].
I would feel compelled to add curtains, I'm afraid, and I would probably be a bit nervous with all those books over my head during an earthquake, but with a few minor adjustments I might put in an order for one, too, please...
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