Groundbreaking Design
It has been nearly half a decade, but the Dwell Home II is back! Construction began this winter in the hills outside Los Angeles, and a true model of domestic sustainability takes shape.

When we reported more than four years ago that the Dwell Home II, designed by Los Angeles–based firm Escher GuneWardena Architecture, would be built on a hillside site in Topanga Canyon, we had no idea that construction wouldn’t begin until the fall of 2008. But patience is a virtue in home design and permitting—–and the commissioning homeowners, Glen Martin and Claudia Plasencia, had enough of that to go around.
The story of the Dwell Home II will doubtless be familiar to long-term readers, but it’s worth looking back at the project to see what the fuss has been about—–especially when the impulse behind the design remains so inspiring. We kicked off the Dwell Home II Design Invitational back in the winter of 2004 with the modest goal of creating a new model for sustainable residential home design. Martin and Plasencia enthusiastically stepped in to volunteer their own plot of land as a future site for the project, and in collaboration with Dwell they picked an original and ambitious home design by Escher GuneWardena. Fast-forward to spring 2009, and the home has broken ground, construction is well under way, and the residents are chomping at the bit to move in.
Martin’s original interest in the project came from an unexpected source. When he moved to California in 1991, it was to Huntington Beach, where he took a job in the aerospace industry, working for McDonnell Douglas on the International Space Station. Martin stayed there for roughly seven years, soon getting involved with “all sorts of interesting stuff,” he says, including collaborative testing projects with NASA astronauts at the Weightless Environment Training Facility over in Houston. McDonnell Douglas’s location in Huntington Beach was the same facility that had developed Controlled Ecological Life Support Systems in the 1960s, including water- and air-recycling technologies.
“I got very familiar with the technological constraints of being in a closed environment,” Martin explains, “and I’ve always kept that in the back of my mind. When it came time to build our own house, and Claudia and I sold our old home, we got thinking about what we really wanted out of the structure.” And what they really wanted was “an integrated system—–not unlike a space station.”
“When we wrote the original creative brief for the design competition,” he continues, still sounding genuinely interested in the process after all these years, “we realized that there were two very different approaches to making a project green. One way is that you just substitute certain materials with a recycled something or other, and you call it green; the other is that you really think about the house itself as a living system. And Escher GuneWardena really thought about the house. They pushed the envelope of home design, and they created something that would capture all the benefits of living in Southern California.”
The home’s many green features include a 360-degree, wraparound veranda that allows for easy indoor-outdoor living; proper site orientation for winter and summer sun exposure; the installation of a backyard leach field instead of an infrastructural connection to the city sewage system; and a radiant floor, which uses small pores at foot level, called floor air channels, as vents for the passive cooling system. Cleverly disguised holes on the outside of the house—–a screen that otherwise appears ornamental—–let cool air into a crawl space located beneath the house, where it circulates before diffusing throughout the rest of the structure via the radiant floor.
Finally, after many long years of financial and bureaucratic delays, Martin and Plasencia’s space station in the Los Angeles hills is taking shape. Martin jokes that they often felt like characters in a Kafka novel—–and, indeed, the lengthy process taught them some surprising lessons about building green in the City of Angels. For instance, even in an era of ecologically responsible home landscaping, Martin and Plasencia were stunned to find that the fire department actively discourages the use of native plant life—–because the desert botany of the region presents far too strong a fire hazard.
Stay tuned: We’ll be checking in regularly with both the homeowners and the project architects to see how construction is progressing.
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I was so pleased to read this information on the Topanga project. I feared it has just disappeared into the bureaucratic and punishing permitting process in the coastal area. I tried to build a small house near there about 5 years ago and just gave up. It was proving too expensive partially because of being cheated by a geology firm and a well known local architect stole my plot plan. I decided to leave the area as a result. I am now in Boulder, CO where the permitting process is a lot simpler and obviously there is no Coastal Commission. I miss CA very much and hope to return in the next few years but would only consider building in the city of Los Angeles which has a streamlined permitting process – relatively speaking. I can't wait until the Martin-Plasencia's home is finished. Please let there be an open house so we Dwell fans can visit. The passive cooling systems sounds fascinating. Good luck to all on this project. Barbara Crowley
This place has been the thorn in the side of our entire neighborhood. It's being built with no sense of preserving the natural environment or resources. To call this place green is a joke! There are only two workers at the sight at any given time. Loud mouthed biggots with no care for the environment whatsoever. This is an architects ego gratification project!
Eamon, your house, as well as the houses of the entire neighborhood, has disrupted the "natural" environment just by its very existence. The difference between these homes, and the Dwell house, is the fact that the Dwell house will use less energy. Less energy means less fuel, less fuel means less pollution. In the given time span in which all of these homes will exist, the Dwell house will contribute more to the environment by polluting less of it. I would also argue that it will serve as an example for future homeowners and architects on the topic of green building, while your home will become an example of the opposite, not so much for representing obsolete technology, but by the mere fact casual observers will be able to look at your house, and then the Dwell house, for immediate comparison. Kind of like comparing two siblings: one dumb and ugly, the other intelligent and beautiful.
Eamon, how American. I'm sure the indigenous people didn't applaud when the first houses went up in this area either
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