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Design Things To Do
Top Pick: Concrete Pour Party
Of all the ways to build a brand, perhaps one of the niftiest IRL is Thomas Musca’s concrete pour parties. Seven years ago, the Cornell architecture-educated Angeleno founded Cassius Castings, a studio focused on hand-cast concrete pieces “that sit somewhere between furniture and small-scale architecture,” for restaurants, shops, and homes. Their stark but curvy forms evoke a decorative take on beton brut.
Musca then turned the “hyper-analog” fabrication of these pieces into an event. In a bougie variant on barn raising, he holds public pour parties, where he and a team of experts, watched by a curious crowd, mix together cement, plasticizer, and GFRC (glass fiber reinforced concrete), and then pour the goop into a wooden mold. It sets in about an hour.
“That lets the pour unfold almost like a three-act structure: dust → liquid → solid, all within the span of a feature film,” says Musca. “When someone sees the work go from raw materials to a standing object, they gain an intuitive and spiritual connection to the piece.”
Thomas Musca pours concrete at a pour party, Santa Monica, August 2025. Photo by Frances Anderton.
This Thursday, March 19th, Musca and team will take to a sidewalk in Echo Park to pour “one of the tallest and most audacious structures” he has made to date (see below). The sculptural shelving is for Wares Wares Wares, a multi-venue space and vintage store opening on March 21st. Click here for details.
These pours are a lot of fun (though make sure to wear the masks he will have on hand, to protect against the high levels of particulate). “In the groovy 1960s, this was called a happening or a be-in or scene or a bag, as in what's your bag, man?,” says my partner Robin Bennett Stein, adding, “Thomas is a kind of wizard in that he designs community experiences that have an air of promise and connection to humanity.”
Quick Picks
Docomomo's 2026 conference kicks off Tuesday, March 17th, in LA with a sold-out Keynote from Thom Mayne, and runs through Sunday, March 22nd. But tickets remain for some of the other sessions and tours, including one of four buildings by postmodernist Charles Moore, which will put a pep in your step if you love color and complexity.
Fifty years ago, the Cesar Pelli-designed Pacific Design Center opened its doors to the interior design trade. The PDC’s ownership and the LA design industry have changed over the years, but this Wednesday and Thursday, March 18th and 19th, numerous talents — including Thomas Lavin, Brian Pinkett, Erika Heet, Emma deRoche, Cesar Giraldo, and Gulla Jonsdottir — will gather for a special anniversary Westweek 2026.
It’s not always about the City of Angels! This Thursday, March 19th, the mayors of neighboring cities Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Culver City, Inglewood, and West Hollywood will “come together for a candid conversation about their land use priorities and the challenges shaping their cities” at Westside Urban Forum’s 2026 Annual Westside Mayors Forum, at Helms Design Center. With the World Cup and 2028 Olympics and Paralympics on the horizon, expect this to be interesting.
Beverly Hills Civic Center, with Charles Moore addition. Photo by Frances Anderton
There have been many public conversations about rebuilding the houses lost to the Eaton and Palisades fires. Here comes one that takes stock of where things stand while considering the potential for broader changes afforded by the devastation. Join me and stakeholders from Malibu, Pacific Palisades, and Altadena this Thursday at State of the Rebuild at AIA/LA HQ.
Between 2021 and 2023, the famed architectural photographer Iwan Baan turned his lens on Rome and Las Vegas, raising questions about the two seemingly opposed cities — one, perceived as "surreal, thin, dishonest and new;" the other as "authentic, thick, honest, and ancient." Catch the opening of an exhibition and talk by Baan this Friday, March 20th at 6 PM in the SCI-Arc Gallery. Highly recommended.
Competing visions are emerging for the area vacated by the Santa Monica Airport, following its anticipated closure in 2028. This Saturday, March 21st, 9:00–11:00 AM, advocates for affordable housing on a portion of the area that voters hope will become a Great Park, will lead a tour of the airport. Sign up for After The Runway by emailing events@communitycorp.org, and receive the meeting point with your RSVP.
The Ebell of Los Angeles shines light on the hidden stories of Los Angeles’ remarkable women at its Third Annual Public Symposium, taking place next Thursday, March 26th, on The Ebell’s historic Mid-Wilshire campus from 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM. I’ll join a panel about pioneering designers and builders, including Edith Northman, Edla Muir, and homes lived in by Joan Didion, Wanda Coleman, Eve Babitz, and other legendary Angelena writers.
xAbduction, by Cole Case. Image courtesy Track 16.
Painter Cole Case paints Los Angeles in all its sunlight and darkness, such as the “Abduction” of Rosalin Vargas by ICE agents in Pasadena, in his show And it Keeps Coming 'Til the Day it Stops at Track 16 in DTLA. Next Thursday, March 26th, Case will talk with art critic and always astute moderator Shana Nys Dambrot about his art in relation to art history and contemporary LA.
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