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Take a Tour of California House designed by GLUCK+

A Mid-Century Designed Hollywood Hills Home is a dream come true shaped by GLUCK+ architecture studio team:

California House designed by GLUCK+
Photography by © Paul Vu

Architecture studio GLUCK+ have designed this stunning private residence located in Hollywood Hills. The “California House” is a nod to mid-century modern design. The glass pavilion has three main sections with expansive views of the surrounding landscape. Take a look at the complete story after the jump.

California House designed by GLUCK+
Photography by © Timothy Hursley

From the architects: The site is spectacular, a steep north-facing hillside with unobstructed views of the mountains beyond and a 180-degree panorama from the Hollywood sign in the east to the Burbank airport in the west.

Building on this site, long considered unbuildable, presented two challenges: first, to minimize the impact of the house on the landscape and second, to create sufficient flat area to be comfortable for outdoor activities.

California House designed by GLUCK+
Photography by © Paul Vu

The solution bifurcates the building, each half with its distinct tectonic and programmatic function. The lower floor is carved into the hill and with its expanse of green roof, it creates a strong ground-plane, or bench, in the steeply sloping land. Bedrooms, bathrooms, storage, media room and other family and utility spaces are arrayed along the hillside. This section, though large, is meant to be essentially invisible.

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This invisibility contrasts with the strong sculptural form that the house presents to the viewer. A glass sided pavilion creates a loft-like space for the communal activities of living, cooking, dining, entertaining, and so on. Everything here is configured to maintain the simplicity and openness of the space. Kitchen and spatial divisions never touch the ceiling so that it seems to float above on independent steel supports. Three solid wood-faced “boxes” (the only interruption in the glass) contain “messy” program elements, including closets, fireplace, TV screen, pantry, kitchen office, and powder room, maintaining the integrity of the large space.

Photography by © Paul Vu
Photography by © Paul Vu
Photography by © Paul Vu
Photography by © Paul Vu

California House designed by GLUCK+

Like a vast parasol, the roof of the house is a rectangle with upturned edges that extend well beyond the footprint of the rectangular pavilion.

The roof is twisted in relation to the glass rectangle, making it seem to float and creating shade in and outside the house. Depending on the time of day or season of the year, at one corner or another, there is always either shade or sunlight to be found.

Photography by © Paul Vu
Photography by © Paul Vu
Photography by © Paul Vu
Photography by © Paul Vu
Photography by © Paul Vu
California House designed by GLUCK+
Photography by © Timothy Hursley

NOTES ON SUSTAINABILITY:

The house takes full advantage of its hillside location and meets California’s exacting energy requirements. Over half the house is buried into the hillside to passively cool and heat the house. Large glass sliders on the upper level open on all sides for cross ventilation, such that the house rarely requires mechanical air conditioning even at the height of summer. Solar panels hidden on the upturned roof produce more electricity than the house uses and a large cistern captures rainwater for landscape irrigation. Borrowed light also fills the heart of the lower level through the open stair leading down to the family media lounge and through ground skylights at the end of the primary suite corridor and bath.

Project Information
PROJECT: California House
LOCATION: Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles CA
SIZE: 7,500 SF New Building , 2 stories
SITE AREA: 145,500 SF
YEAR: November 2019

PROJECT TEAM:
Architecture and Construction by GLUCK+ – gluckplus.com
Austin Anderson, Ross Galloway, Peter Gluck, Matthew Harmon, Narin Hagopian, Gonzalo Moran

CONSULTANTS
Civil and Structural Engineer: Peck
Geotechnical Engineer: Schick Geotechnical
Mechanical Engineer: IBC Engineering Services, Inc., CES Engineering
Lighting Design: Lux Populi
Interior Design: Insight Environmental Design
Landscape Design: Hoerr Schaudt
Expeditor: Kimberlina Whettam and Associates

PHOTO CREDITS
Timothy Hursley – www.timothyhursley.com
Here and Now Agency – Paul Vu  – www.hereandnowagency.com
Brandon Shigeta – www.brandonshigeta.com

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