Design Things To Do
Design for Dignity
Friday, July 26th, and Friday, August 2nd; 7:30 AM–1:00 PM
AIA|LA’s Center for Communities, 4450 West Adams Blvd. LA, CA 90016
For almost a decade, every year the AIA/LA has hosted a conference about how to address LA’s housing crisis, entitled Design for Dignity, produced by Will Wright, director of government and public affairs at the Architects’ Institute. This year is the ninth outing and it comes with an added attraction — the chance to visit AIA/LA’s new space in a converted bank on West Adams Boulevard.
The conference, taking place on two Fridays, will cover topics including adaptive reuse, upcoming new funding streams, regulatory reform, how to ramp up housing aimed at families, and more. Architects and housing experts in the speaker line-up include Dana Cuff, Patrick Tighe, Tara Barauskas, Shane Phillips, and Alan Pullman (see in Soriano story, below). I’ll moderate one of the panels, The Balancing Act, about the pros and cons of the litany of policies aimed at producing more housing, from Measure ULA to ED1, and the role of thoughtful design in smoothing their path.
It all sounds wonky, yes, but it is hard to understand LA’s housing crisis without getting a grasp on the policy foundation it is built on.
Click here for information and tickets.
Design For Dignity will be held at the new home of AIA/LA and ACLA. Image courtesy AIA/LA.
Read the Tea Leaves
Tea Leaves, Friday, July 26th; 3:00 PM—5:00 PM
Tarot Cards, Friday, August 23rd; 3:00 PM—5:00 PM
Schindler House, 835 N. Kings Road, West Hollywood
Combine your passion for architecture with a search for clarity and direction in life! Tea leaf and tarot card readings will be offered this summer in the restful gardens of the Schindler House.
Readings, led by Krystyn Lambert (tea leaves, this Friday) and Francesca Gabbiani (tarot cards, August 23rd), come with the price of admission to the landmark, and availability is first come first serve. Also, now is the time to sign up for the MAK Center summer Architecture Tour of four houses designed by R.M. Schindler and John Lautner, taking place on August 17th.
Click here for the tea leaf and tarot card readings; click here for the tours.
Clear your mind at a Schindler House tarot card or tea leaf reading. Image courtesy Schindler House
Multifam Glam, Again!
Tour of Multifamily Housing, hosted by Abundant Housing
Saturday, July 27th, 10:00 AM–12:30 PM
Looking for apartment living with style? Then please join me and the team at Abundant Housing for 'Multifam Glam, Again!' for a tour of three multifamily buildings in East Hollywood and the Eastside that show that living well comes in many forms.
Gems include a live-work loft building in Elysian Park by the inventive architect Warren Techentin, and Treehouse Hollywood, a coliving building that lives up to its name with an astonishingly lush rooftop garden (by Sean Knibb), from the team led by the developer Prophet Walker, just anointed an LA Influential by the LA Times.
Click here for information and tickets.
"Glam" live-work building on Sunset by Warren Techentin. Photo by Eric Staudenmaier.
Beyond the Superficial
Tradition and Transformation: Past and Present Influences of Japanese Architecture
Saturday, July 27th, 11:00 AM
SAH/SCC in-person salon series
The Neutra Office Building, 2379 Glendale Boulevard, Silver Lake
At last year’s Modernism Week, architect Takashi Yanai (EYRC), and the architectural historian Sian Winship gave riveting presentations about Japanese architecture and its influence in Southern California.
So it’s great to learn they are back to speak about the topic again, this time in conversation with Victoria Lautman, host of the VISUAL WORLD with Victoria Lautman series for the Society of Architectural Historians/Southern California Chapter (SAH/SCC).
As SAH explains, “Japanese-inspired” is “a catch-all term used to describe and sell homes, emphasizing features like sliding doors, natural materials, the fluidity of indoor/outdoor spaces, and serene gardens or courtyards. But these elements are also interchangeable with those of mid-century Modernism… and extend beyond superficial aesthetics.”
Click here to buy tickets for the in-person or via Zoom.
Waverly residence by EYRC, where Takashi Yanai is a partner. Photo by Mathew Millman.
"Ghost Signs (Sleight of Hand)"
A video love letter to LA by Modern Time Machines
Zebulon, 2478 Fletcher Dr, Los Angeles, CA 90039
Monday, August 5th, 8:00 PM
Feeling like Los Angeles is changing too fast? Put on your time travel spectacles and take a drive down memory lane, in "Ghost Signs (Sleight of Hand)", a song and video created by Ben Golomb for his band Modern Time Machines. See it at a performance by the band at Zebulon Café Concert on August 5th.
"Ghost Signs (Sleight of Hand)" is a bittersweet love letter to vintage LA, "with time-lapse progressions of dearly departed music venues (The Satellite), Googie buildings (Lytton Savings), Happy/Sad foot sign,” and more, explains Golomb. He spent a decade working on the project, finding rarely-seen images of Silver Lake and Echo Park. A highlight of the video is a cameo by king-of-kitsch Charles Phoenix as a “time machine equipment salesman.”
For a critique of the music video, I turned to hubby Robin Bennett Stein, aka DJ Caviar (see below). He says he loves this one, which he calls garage-Sci-fi. “It's mystical psych and jazz drum-fill texture win the day. Dig the goofy time machine and dilapidated late ‘60s muscle car. Almost old-school hipsteroony!"
Joining MTM in the line-up on August 5th are Happy Hollows and Giant Waste Of Man.
Click here for details. Catch the video on YouTube, here.
Charles Phoenix has a cameo in the Ghost Signs (Sleight of Hand) video.
Soriano in Long Beach
Conversation with Alan Pullman and Wolfgang Wagener in the Garden of the Kimpson-Nixon House
Saturday, August 10th, 10 AM–11:30 AM
Address provided upon RSVP
When Julius Shulman, the venerated photographer of Los Angeles modernism, decided to build his own home, he picked Rafael Soriano, architect and engaging companion, who was passionate about music and adventurous in design.
Soriano had rejected the period revival European styles taught at USC in the 1920s, decamped to work for the radical Richard Neutra, and went on to build a 1950 Case Study House and later created an all-aluminum building system design called “Soria Structures.”
He also designed the 1940 Kimpson-Nixon house in Long Beach, now owned by Studio One Eleven founder Alan Pullman and his family. I’ll talk with Pullman in his home about Soriano’s design, along with Wolfgang Wagener, author of the book, Raphael Soriano. The event is hosted by FORT: LA, which also published this trail about Soriano’s work in LA.
Click here to get tickets. Add the code KCRWDNA for a 25% discount!
Note: More love for Long Beach modernism: Check out the FORT: LA self-guided trail, Ed Killingsworth in Long Beach, and this playlist curated by DJ Caviar about the experience of being inside Killingsworth’s Seeley House. Plus, coming soon from FORT: LA, another trail focused on Long Beach, From “Iowa by the Sea” to “International City”: Three Waves of High-Rise Oceanfront Living in Downtown Long Beach.
The Kimpson-Nixon House, photographed by Paul Vu/Here and Now Agency.
Last but Not Least…
Get your tickets for LA Conservancy tours: Frogtown, City Hall, and Modern by Moonlight
August 3rd–23rd, multiple dates and sites
Member presale through July 23rd; General public sale begins July 24th
Got visitors in town and want to keep them entertained? Send them on an LA Conservancy tour. Throughout August, docents will lead three tours of LA landmarks and distinctive places on multiple dates: Frogtown and the LA River on August 3rd and 10th, the historic City Hall (below) on August 7th, 14th and 21st, and Modern DTLA by Moonlight on the 16th and 23rd.
Click here for all the details.
City Hall, Los Angeles Photo by Frances Anderton.