A breezeway through the entrance allows separation between the two sides of the house.
Across from the living room, the record-listening station has custom oak wall shelving fabricated by Maple Key with powder-coated perforated steel record baskets by local studio Boy Boy. An Atelier de Troupe chair sits atop a Faye TooGood Rug by CC Tapis.
The desk folds up and the installation swivels to pull down the bed.
The “deconstructed plaid” custom mural on the walls is by Kelly Zeller. The 2020 Pink luminatin art piece in the hallway is by Letitia Quessenberry for BLSH 13. The BluDot bed is flanked by Bocci 28S wall lights.
The chairs at the kitchen table were rescued from an old church.
A wood stove by Stûv faces Mathias sofas from West Elm in the living area.
Every inch of the home is designed to accommodate the family's needs with ample hidden storage keeping spaces clutter free, complemented by open storage with those items more frequently reached for such as books to read and ingredients to cook with.
An assortment of dining chairs, including vintage iterations on the Eames shell chair by Charles and Ray Eames and Stokke's Tripp Trapp chair, are clustered around a table lit by a pendant lamp by Coco Flip Design Studio.
Barache describes the metal roof as essentially a deformed plane, placing an apple beneath a sheet of paper to demonstrate his point. He chose zinc for its malleability and the high level of the craftspeople who work with it.
This 2,520-square-foot home in Los Angeles is a vibrant residence for a production designer and an artist.
A series of long stairs leads to Maison Amtrak, which is set below street level. The entranceway demonstrates Cohen’s love of Japanese design with a geometric simplicity matched only by the formal elegance of the stained Douglas fir two-by-fours.
A look at the upstairs sitting area.
The interior walls, ceilings, and built-ins are clad in Siberian larch from UPK Concept. Tham placed the glazed openings and doorways to maintain clear sight lines throughout the long and narrow home.
ZeroCabin designs prefab concrete bases, frames and walls to be easily transportable without a vehicle.