With a long span of angled panels lining its futuristic facade, this L.A. house near Mulholland Drive looks monumental, almost imposing. But pass through the front gate and enter the main living area, and one feels a remarkable sense of air and light. At a time when so many people are looking for an escape from reality, the home of Don and Debbie Caverhill certainly provides one. After a 1.5-year design process and another 1.5 years of construction, the home by Culver City-based Studio Pali Fekete Architects now stands as a contemporary indoor-outdoor replacement for the old house that once stood on the difficult site. (Christina House / For The Times)
The opposite view: Because of hillside building ordinances and a desire to keep the previous structure’s footprint (think a slice of pie), making the most of the property was a challenge. The striking facade shields the residents from street traffic and harsh afternoon sun, while the back opens up to city views. (Christina House / For The Times)
The view from the other side of those exterior panels: Diffused rays filter through the narrow, transparent panes tucked between the “fins,” as the architect calls them. That controlled light spills down to the main living area below. (Christina House / For the Times)
Visitors enter the house at street level, which is actually the second of three floors. Soft morning sunlight streams through the floor-to-ceiling glass forming the rear wall of the house.
Simplicity was one of the principal design goals. All the house controls -- heating, cooling, lighting, window shades, security and more -- are contained within a control panel near the front door. Ductwork was eliminated by the use of an Airfloor System, which heats or cools rooms through a series of dome-like structures beneath the micro-finished concrete floor surface.
The open plan calls for the living area to flow freely toward the kitchen (that’s the corner of the kitchen island, center of frame) and the dining area beyond. (Christina House / For The Times)
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Looking back toward the living area: The kitchen has the same visual simplicity. The countertops have the streamlined beauty of Caesarstone quartz, and the cabinetry is horizontally laid bamboo.
“People ask me if we used bamboo because it’s green,” Don Caverhill says. “No. It’s because veneer bamboo is fine enough to be like a graphic; it’s very uniform, but you still get a wood feel because of the color variation.”
The finishing details are spare but certainly not spartan. “In Japanese painting, you have one brush stroke that gets branch, leaves and flowers,” Caverhill says. “That’s what we were hoping for -- to have less things do a whole lot more.” (Christina House / For The Times)
From a terrace on the main floor, the dining area lies to the right, and the ground-floor infinity pool sits below. Covered terraces and balconies provide more than 1,000 square feet of indoor-outdoor space protected from the sun and wind but still open to views.
“The first thing we wanted was for the space to feel good -- to be a place where you wanted to hang out -- but it still had to be thoughtful and peaceful,” says Caverhill, who wanted “a real outdoor room that didn’t bake you.”
The open plan, he adds, makes the interiors feel airy: “You can see all the way down from one side of the house to the other.” (Christina House / For The Times)
From the main floor, a central stairwell travels up to the master bedroom and bathroom, a guest room and more terraces. Downstairs: two more guest rooms and a patio leading to the backyard. (Christina House / For The Times)
Here, set down on the slope below street level, the stairs empty to a long fire pit running toward an infinity pool. The covered patio provides another chance to enjoy the outdoors without feeling overexposed to the elements. (Christina House / For The Times)
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The view from down here reveals the size of the home -- more than double its 1,750-square-foot predecessor -- as well as its openness, an attribute that one might not suspect given the house’s unusual presence on the street.
“The slope of the hill is not parallel to the street,” architect Zoltan Pali says. “It wedges, so you get a wedge-shaped plan.” (Christina House / For The Times)
The reverse view. Note the top floor terrace. (Christina House / For The Times)
Up on the top floor, another open-air room yields views of the treetops. (Christina House / For The Times)
Alfresco bathing on the top floor. (Christina House / For The Times)
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“I love the fact that it’s a shell that wraps up like a ribbon,” says Don Caverhill, pictured here with wife Debbie. “When you look at an aerial photograph, and you see all the other roof lines, this looks like it was dropped in from Andromeda.” (Christina House / For The Times)
With pocket doors open and the skyline of downtown Los Angeles in the distance, the new Caverhill home provides what its owners wanted: a design that connects them with the outside world, but on their terms. (Christina House / For The Times)