Project Details
- Project Name
- Aspect 5 Collection Homes
- Location
-
1243 N Gower St.
CA
- Architect
- AUX Architecture
- Client/Owner
- TAB
- Project Types
- Multifamily
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 11,100 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2021
- Awards
- 2020 AIA - Local Awards
- Shared by
- AUX Architecture
- Team
-
Brian Wickersham, Principal-in-Charge
Matthew Aulicino, Project Manager
- Consultants
-
Architect of Record: AUX Architecture,General Contractor: Calcrete Construction, Inc.,Structural Engineer: Taylor and Syfan Consulting Engineers,Civil Engineer: John Labib and Associates,Landscape Architect: PLACE
- Project Status
- Built
- Style
- Modern
Project Description
11,083 sq. ft., 5-unit multi-family residential project: This four-story project is conceived as a new approach to modern living in the urban center of Los Angeles. The parti diagram of the standard row house-style development is reconfigured to create more end/corner units: rather than five homes with the long sides touching, all the units are rotated ninety degrees so that four of the five units are corner units (rather than two). The resulting shallow footprints make it so that all five of the homes receive light for the full depth of their floor plan. Each three-level unit has 1,600 square feet of living space, large glass windows and a private roof deck with an outdoor kitchen.The building massing is designed to accentuate the verticality of the slender site. Additionally, the visual break between the parking level and the wood frame above is obscured—the board form concrete planter walls are folded up from the landscape to envelope the elevator core and obscure the lines between the podium and housing levels. The homes are clad with white cement board siding on the outward faces of the building, the materiality subtly shifting to white stucco within a series of internal circulation paths that are open to the sky above. These paths are again intended to express verticality, the corridors like slots in a canyon, creating a unique spatial experience. Drought tolerant landscaping is used throughout the site, as well as a rainwater capture-and-reuse system for irrigation. Designed as an alternative to suburban living, residents can reside in the urban center of Los Angeles and enjoy space, light, and indoor-outdoor living within a multi-family experience.