Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Designer Nest Without Persing View

Calling all t-shirt-wearing bachelors!  This mid-century modern architectural delight nested in The Birds area of 90069 built in 1953, boasts beautiful detailing and privacy.  The 1 bedroom / 1.75 bath home is located at 1432 Oriole Dr, 90069.  Public record shows the house has 2,535sf of living space.  It also shows the home was once a 2 bedroom. 
1432 Oriole Dr, 90069
The listing comes back to market from taking some time off as a rental, with a $3,750,000 designer price tag for this nest above the Sunset Strip!  

 The listing boasts gated privacy on approximately 1/3 acre (approx. 15,750) of usable land.
The seller is also listing the architectural home as a rental for $14,500/month.  In 1996, you could have rented for $5,000.
The clean and beautiful lines of this home keep the space open and full of diffused light through the walls of glass.  The home centers around the outdoors and pool area.  There really isn't anything view-wise up there, but your compound provides tons of natural settings and garden areas. 
The lighting above the sink adds such a beautiful architectural plane to the space.  The kitchen has poured cement floors, walls of glass and direct access to the dining area.
I like this perspective as it features the resources of this building: glass, cement, wood and stone. 
Wet bar and wood burning fireplace are featured in the living space.  Recessed lighting and incredible sound system complement the bachelor lifestyle.  Time to get sexy, folks.
The master bedroom or should I just say, the bedroom is spacious, light and bright.  A second wood-burning fireplace is located in the bedroom along with direct access to the pool area through the walls of glass.
 The light during the day is absolutely lovely. 
Stand back Stevie Nicks because this bathroom and walk-in closet are beyond spacious and roomy.  Handsome and clean.  Just what you want in a bathroom.  With a wet area including floor to ceiling glass that reveals the outdoors and garden provide you zen.

With plenty of outdoor area for entertaining, it's time to fire up the bachelor pad and start living the mid-century modern lifestyle.
The home was originally purchased May 1998 for $875,000.  Quite an investment in appreciation on this mid-century modern listing courtesy of Jonah Wilson, H&H.  It first hit market back in March 2009 at $4,995,000.

Steve Ward
Realtor®, SFR®
Mid-Century Specialist
Historian & Preservation Advocate
modernhomesla_logo  01SMALLBUG.jpg
Keller Williams Realty - Los Feliz
 

DRE Lic #01871422
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR , KWLF
My profiles: Facebook LinkedIn Blogger Twitter YouTube

Let the Solar Shine!

Designed by architect, Volker Traub in 1961, The Warshawsky Residence is now being offered at a very reasonable price for this 2 bedroom / 2 bath mid-century modern home for sale at 2433 Solar Dr, 90046.  In over 1,452sf of living space, you can enjoy the serene landscape of Runyon Canyon with walls of glass leading to the outdoors and a private ridge top garden.  
2433 Solar Dr, 90046

Recognized by Dr. Thomas Hines for making a significant contribution to the Neutra office, Traub has, in the Neutra tradition, masterfully sited the home to capture dramatic city & valley vistas. 
The living area is spacious, light and bright.  The dark stained hardwood floors have been laid in a herringbone pattern, while the fireplace separates the living area from the dining area. 
The wood paneling in the dining area makes the mid-century modern statement with built-in cabinets and drawers.  You have direct access to the kitchen through the doorway.

The kitchen is in need of appliances.  Other than that, you are good to go!  Other areas of the house need much more love and care. 
 I kinda dig this wallpaper in one of the bedrooms.
Talk about a view!  The question is just how many others are trying to enjoy it?  It is Runyon Canyon, after all...
Being that this is a foreclosed home, there are many things that need attention.  Don't be fooled though, with a little TLC, this place will come back to life in no-time!


  The home has a 2-car carport.
Currently listed at $799,990 and the property rests on 5,600sf of land atop a ridge overlooking Hollywood.  Listing courtesy of Robert Walters, Lel Prp, MLS 11-569585.
Steve Ward
Realtor®, SFR®
Mid-Century Modern Architecture Specialist
modernhomeslosangeles
Keller Williams Realty - Los Feliz
DRE Lic #01871422
213.305.8537 direct
steve.ward.la@gmail.com
MODCOM - LA Conservancy Modern Committee

Mid-Century Modern California at LACMA

Among more than sixty cultural institutions across Southern California taking part of the Getty’s “Pacific Standard Time: Art in LA 1945-1980” exhibiting the influences in design from Southern California artists, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) does it’s part with the current exhibition displayed through Sunday, June 3, 2012.  I highly recommend visiting the museum’s Resnick Pavilion to view the latest installation, “California Design,1930-1965: Living in a Modern Way” which explores the influences our state had in shaping the material culture of the country during the mid-century, as California symbolized the good life in America. 

Charles and Ray Eames,  DCW (dining chair wood)

This exhibition is the first major study of California mid-century modern design. With objects—furniture, ceramics, metalwork, film, jewelry, fashion and textiles, architectural drawings, and industrial and graphic design—the exhibition examines the state’s role in shaping the material culture of the entire country. Organized into four thematic areas, the exhibition aims to elucidate the 1951 quote from émigré Greta Magnusson Grossman that is incorporated into the exhibition’s title: California design “is not a superimposed style, but an answer to present conditions…It has developed out of our own preferences for living in a modern way."  Dedicated to specific areas of focus, the exhibit is broken up into “Shaping Modern California”, “Making California Modern”, “Living California Modern”, Selling California Modern”.



Airstream
The exhibit explains “in the boom economy of the 1920s, California experiences extraordinary population growth.  As aerial views of Los Angeles demonstrate, millions of new denizens flocked to the state’s urban areas.  All these people needed housing and furnishings: the “Shaping: section focuses on the 1930s because that is when buildings and their contents started to be made in modern ways and in modern styles, even ones on-the-go like the Wally Byam industrial designed Airstream.  In his backyard, the lawyer-turned "How-to" guru Angeleno created his first "Airstream Clipper"  which would become the model to follow for designs to come.

By the onset on World War II, homes and their furnishings were characterized by a particular kind of modernism rooted in California culture and conditions.  The general qualities associated with the state (optimism and democracy, fearless experimentation, and a love of new technology) and those specific to design (an affinity for light and brilliant color, an openness to Asian and Latin influences, and an advocacy of fluid spaces and cross-disciplinary approaches) made California’s best products distinctive.

Richard Neutra, Kaufmann House, 1946
While championing new technologies, innovative materials, and simplified geometric forms, California modernists retained the individuality of the earlier Arts and Crafts movement, the sense of being particular to a place, and a connection to nature.  In contrast to the stern moral dictates of the European international Style, a more humanistic modernism emerged here, one that fully embraced comfort and leisure, and responded directly to the environment.”



After 1945 a burgeoning, newly prosperous population—intoxicated by the power to purchase after the deprivation years of the Great Depression and the wartime rationing of goods—turned the state into America’s most important center for progressive architecture and furnishings. This exhibition explores how the California of our collective imagination—a democratic utopia where a benign climate permitted life to be led informally and largely outdoors— was translated into a material culture that defined an era.  The show features more than 350 works by leading designers including Charles and Ray Eames, Rudolph Schindler and Richard Neutra.
Detail "California Design 10"
Work was collected from various museums and personal collections to create this exhibit.  One of the works on loan from the Pasadena Art Museum (Norton Simon Museum) was an exhibition catalogue from 1968 by designer Robert Ellis.  “California Design 10” was just one of the many catalogues produced to showcase design exploring new advances in technology and design in community-planning approaches as well as in industrial design methods.  It is a catalog from the last exhibit held at the Pasadena Art Museum before moving in its entirety up-state for the new California Exhibition  that ran from July 1-September17, 1968.  "The Guide to the California Collection" catalogs ran from 1955-1984 with archives found at the Oakland Museum of California. 
Detail "California Design 10"
The “California Design 10” catalogs, three in total, are packed with juicy renderings and photos of mid-century modern design and architecture in the triennial survey of the best California had to offer.  Below is a snapshot of one of the inside sections entitled, “Atomville, USA” conceived in 1950.  “The Atomic Age with its high technology of electronics, engineering, communications and transportations, has placed a new burden on us to upgrade our cities and our installations which have been and still are being planned on the last-century concepts.”  The homes and factories created through this movement were designed primarily for a nuclear attack, “Primarily, Atomville gives our people and our production facilities protection from atomic attack.  This undeniable, as primitive versions of this construction have already been endorsed in certain types of installations such as warehouses where weaponry is stored, shelters for the President of the United States, and for Pentagon leaders.”
Opco Company, Ice Gun, c. 1935
Other fun and exciting objects of design included a whacky ice crushing device.  Meet form and function working together: The Ice Gun!  Created in 1935 for a post-prohibition hungry public where the cocktail bar served more than a cocktail, but an array of bar tools with a modern flair. 

Overall, the exhibit is a fantastic overview of the attributes of creatives in California that left a major impact on how we communicated with culture.

The exhibition is organized by Wendy Kaplan, Curator and Department Head, and Bobbye Tigerman, Assistant Curator, of LACMA's Decorative Arts and Design Department.

Check out this free app for iPad and iPhone includes:
  • Access to original video interviews with California Designers.
  • Superb high-resolution images of more than 100 highlights.
  • An interactive map featuring notable locations in the history of California midcentury design.
  • An essay from the curators about the making of the exhibition.
Related Pacific Standard Time Exhibitions Now Open
The House that Sam Built: Sam Maloof and Art in the Pomona Valley, 1945–1985 Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens | huntington.org

The Golden State of Craft: California 1960–1980
Craft and Folk Art Museum | cafam.org

Sympathetic Seeing: Esther McCoy and the Heart of American Modernist Architecture and Design MAK Center | @makcenter.org

Eames Designs
A+D Museum Opens | aplusd.org

Indoor Ecologies: The Evolution of the Eames House Living Room
Eames House Foundation | eamesfoundation.org

In Words and Wood: Sam Maloof, Bob Stocksdale, and Ed Moulthrop
Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation for Arts and Crafts | malooffoundation.org

San Diego’s Craft Revolution—From Post-War Modern to California Design Mingei International Museum | mingei.org

Common Ground: Ceramics in Southern California, 1945–1975
American Museum of Ceramic Art | amoca.org