SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

October 20, 2023

DIGS is the premiere luxury real estate lifestyle magazine serving the most affluent neighborhoods in the South Bay and Westside of Los Angeles, California.

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26 DIGS.NET | 10.20.23 A R C H I T E C T U R E + D E S I G N P R O F I L E | K LO P F A R C H I T E C T U R E S et atop a boulder-strewn hill in the wine-growing capital of Sonoma, California, a strikingly horizontal residence by San Francisco firm Klopf Architecture keeps a low profile. It does not, however, escape notice. Then again, it couldn't possibly. With a flat roof and wood-beam exterior interspersed with vast expanses of glass that open the 4,068-squre-foot structure to the landscape upon which it lightly sits, the edifice calls to mind the iconic mid-century modern form—one iteration of it specifically. "We had previously worked with the homeowners to remodel and update another mid-century modern home they owned in Sonoma," say the team from Klopf Architecture, including Principal Architects John Klopf and Geoffrey Campen, Lead Designer Ethan Taylor, and Designer Noel Andrade. "As their needs outgrew the house, their aspirations grew alongside. They approached us once again, this time to design a house that was inspired by the original but on a much grander scale to support their space and layout requirements." That the homeowners love mid-century modern style, they add, "It was important for the new house to eschew the rhythm of the post and beam construction style with a more modern and minimalist sensibility for which we are known." Klopf's residential work, which includes d e s i g n i n g m o d e r n i s t h o m e s a n d renovating modern and mid-century homes, bridges modernist design with technical understanding to create aesthetically dynamic and resilient residential infrastructure suited for our time. A hallmark of this project, for example, is the firm's use of exposed beams that travel from interior to exterior, emphasizing the structure's indoor/ outdoor connection; its decision to employ "rain chains" in lieu of frumpy downspouts that rob sleeker architecture of its clarity and crispness is a move more in keeping with today's modern homes. Taking the hilltop location and valley views into consideration, the firm's low-lying design, which does not extend vertically beyond the trees on the site, is meant to complement a terrain dominated by Sonoma's rolling hills. The architecture itself features an earthy palette that grounds the

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