SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

February 9, 2024

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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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 | T E N S T U D I O manifesting innovative solutions, such as the in-situ casting of the exposed concrete foundations with recycled steel sheets and accurate formwork by interior joiners. The result of this meeting of minds "not only contributed to the local economy, but through experimentation in the procedure of construction, offered new applications for local construction skills," the studio notes. "Left exposed, this reveals the proof of labor and skill in the forces driving construction, while the formal expression demonstrates the human factor in the production of dwelling." The project is as much a house as it is an idea—a continuation of Yugoslavian Modernism, a movement that sought to transform society via the local reworking of progressive technologies and self- determination in design and construction. In that tradition, and with its use of everyday materials and local makers (including a metal workshop close to the site), Avala House was, in the words of the studio, created "in the form of the ideal contemporary home" in order "to create a product of regional significance." And of spectacle besides, with its open steel frame, extravagant glass and four terraces that connect at corners to offer "a new horizon for dwelling." So long as that perspective can shift. The different surface material of each terrace expands possibilities for a variety of use. The boundaries of the steel frame are "constantly challenged by these alterations in material (a hanging net, sheet steel, pre-cast concrete, the open frame) or through the performance of its movable elements," TEN points out. "These allow the house to undergo a total transformation of scale and atmosphere." Among these components is one wall of 10 large pivoting steel doors that allow the living area to swing from a single indoor space to an open embrace of the external. Inside is a space of necessity—a soothing view and little else. A house such as this poses the obvious question: What else is needed? Order is implemented by floor-to- ceiling curtains that partition off the sleeping area from the kitchen, dining, sitting, and bathroom, but the house is assertive in its essentialist feeling. This is also true of Modernist glass houses by the likes of Philip Johnson and Mies van der Rohe— compositions not without complications, but sanctified fascinations to this day. It's tempting to see Avala House as another flirtation with the radically transparent, but not entirely fair—or accurate. "The house inverts the priority of building a traditional protected shelter in nature, by allowing various scenarios of exposure to nature within the building," TEN explains. Is that not the point of indoor/outdoor living? To not just to expand one's space, but to expand within one's space? A space where to view nature is to also live among it. This is Avala House—a reminder that the element of all the great architecture is indeed the elemental. ten.studio 54 DIGS.NET | 2.9.24

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