Skip to main content

Kovac Architects - HillClimber House

Kovac Architects

HillClimber House


The HillClimber house in Pacific Palisades - California, confidently combines stone and wood across 3 levels. As the owners describe - “We’re very pleased with our house. Not only does it convey perfectly the aesthetic that we wanted, but it’s also a very functional house. It fits our family perfectly.”

When LA based Kovac architects set out to design a replacement to the existing traditional ranch home, the brief encompassed the needs of the entire family: the young kids wanting larger outdoor play areas and the adults wanting a safe pool area and a secluded getaway for themselves.





Combined with local stone, sustainably harvested red balau wood cladding blends the house into the surrounding trees of the shady canyon. Kovac used a combination of materials and forms to create a simple hierarchy of spaces. Larger, common rooms are distinguished by high angled ceiling planes that open to views and light, while the private spaces feature flat ceilings and dark warm grey concrete floors. Slats are used to filter light into interim rooms and provide privacy. The slats continue as partitions, lightly breaking both internal and external areas.





The lower level incorporates a 3 car garage, storage, main entrance and mechanical.

The children’s bedrooms and primary living spaces are located on the main level, wrapping around an inner courtyard that leads up to the pool area. From the infinity edge pool, water spills over the edge of the uppermost drystack stone wall, providing the backdrop for the garden below. The pool is situated on the highest plane of the site in order to maximise sun exposure in the typically shady canyon. On the lower plane of the garden, a 1,000sf grassy lawn, allowing the family’s two children more than enough room to safely play. The lawn, backed by the cascading water, is hidden from the road. In front are the living and formal dining rooms, along with an eat-in kitchen that has both a breakfast nook and counter bar.













On the uppermost level of the site, a master suite offers the homeowners sanctuary, featuring a cosy sitting area, home office, and a luxurious bathroom with floating dual vanity and innovative rotating mirrors. The master suite opens directly onto a small private garden on the uppermost level of the site, connecting it to the pool and spa area. One of my favourite features is the wooden floor of the large shower unit, with a head height window out across the valley.








The house is light and airy, taking advantage of the hillside to provide various degrees of intimacy and security. The house also allows for a great amount of privacy for each family member. Aside from the intimate bedrooms with en suites, the children and adults have interim semi private spaces. The games room and master sitting room and office, provide less public spaces, which leave the bedrooms sanctum.



Project Type: Private Residence
Principal Designer/s: Michael Kovac (Principal-in-Charge)
Design Team: Thurman Grant (Project Manager), Fang Fang Ekawati, Que Lam, Jamilah Haygood, Deborah Torres (interiors)
Date of commencement of project: July 2002(design); July 2003 (construction)
Date of completion of project: July 2003 (design); September 2005 (construction)
Location of site: Pacific Palisades, CA
Site Area: 17,889sf
Built-up Area: 4783 sf 849 sf garage and work area

via: Kovac Architects

Comments

vultures said…
Mmm, clean yet not sterile. They really made it look like a home.
lavardera said…
OT, but I noticed you recently added "Read More..." code to your blog. I did the same recently but I'm wondering if your code is any different than mine - where did you get yours?

Popular posts from this blog

Arthur Casas - House in Iporanga

Arthur Casas House in Iporanga Thanks to Arthur, Kelen and the team at Arthur Casas , I’ve received an early Christmas present to share with you all. The Immaculate “House in Iporanga” and a new addition to tags, Architect’s Own Houses. “I always wanted a house in the middle of the forest, in a place where I could relax and recharge my energy”, says Arthur. In the form of two large symmetrical cubes embracing an open space, this house was idealised as his dream house. Arthur’s aim was interiors in total synergy with exteriors. Bringing the outside in are 11 meter floor to ceiling glass windows, on both ends of the open central space. Cumaru wood paneling runs from top to bottom in an attempt to match and blend in with is beautiful surroundings “…as if this were ever 100% possible” admits Arthur. As the Cumaru extends into the house, sterile white stucco contrasts, highlighting the wood’s warm color. This simple brown and white palette provides a nice canvas for interesting/...

Andrew Lister - Hughes Kinugawa House

Andrew Lister Hughes Kinugawa House Overlooking an estuary in Waterview, Auckland, New Zealand, this house has great northern views out over the bay. Like its owners, a wonderful blend of Japanese and New Zealand culture the house sings compact Japanese simplicity with a green Kiwi bach twist. Inconspicuously blending in with the surrounding garden of imported succulents, cacti and mature local trees, the raw cedar weatherboards are a greener take on the vernacular white weatherboard planks common throughout NZ. The house consists of two cubes, connected by a wide corridor housing the bathroom and toilet. The bigger brother of the two cubes holding: the eat-in kitchen, living come library and a guest loft above. Double height windows bathe the living area with light, complementing the dark bookshelves and making an optimum reading nook for the couple, which are obviously book fanatics. This part of the house, designed for guests and entertaining has a slightly more Kiwi feel about it...

Hiroaki Ohtani - Kobe Layer House

Hiroaki Ohtani Kobe Layer House Continuing the last posts stripy theme, which is about all these houses have in common, despite the Japanese link. This is Hiroaki Ohtani solution to infill in Japan. The house is made up of pre-cast concrete strips, stacked unevenly to allow stairs, furniture and floors to be inserted in the gaps. It's tight, claustrophobic, yet entirely open. There are no internal doors, apart from the sliding doors to the toilet. Passing the tree in the courtyard, that brings irregualar form to this oterwise linear exterior, you enter on a landing, where you can either traverse to the bedroom, or head downstairs to the basement where a formal dining room and bathroom are housed. Climbing up you reach the living room and galley kitchen with a steep set of stairs taking you to the roof deck, of which half is a glazed panel to bathe the main stairwell with light. The front of the house is a larged glass panel to let more light into the house and the r...