SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

December 12, 2025

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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Every home is a puzzle unto itself. Every site is unique. Every client demands a custom result—not merely because KAA Design is a luxury shop, but because each life is singular and cannot be reproduced. Homes along the Strand in Manhattan Beach exemplify this. The canvas for nearly all of these premier slots is a slender, 33-by-100-foot oceanfront lot. Kirkpatrick and company have designed 35 Strand homes, and no two are alike, not by a mile. Why? Because each home is the reflection of a client's lifestyle—and more. "We're helping mine our clients' story, digging up the essence of why we're doing this," he says. Along the way, the design is meant to "embrace the imperfection, the one eyebrow-raiser that gives each home personality." What flamenco dancers call the pellizco, that spontaneous personal flourish that becomes a signature. A COMMON LINGUA FRANCA What's remarkable is how these principles scale globally. The California lifestyle—indoor-outdoor living, communion with nature, the co-mingling of interior and exterior spaces— has become an international aspiration. But KAA's answer isn't to export a template. They won't drop an LA glass and steel structure, for instance, into the snowy mountains of Aspen or on a Jamaican beachfront. Instead, they source local context: traditions, customs, and materials of place. A Costa Rican home uses native Guanacaste wood, each board requiring new learning about its comely, swirling grain. A Dubai project drew from local sandstone monuments. A new project, not far from Tokyo, is KAA to the core, but designed to be authentically of its place. Same philosophy. Infinitely variable solutions. The board-form concrete throughout certain KAA homes also exemplifies the marriage of machine and craft. One client had a specific vision: a Strand home so rugged that "if a herd of elephants came through, it would be okay"— durability married to beauty. Concrete is industrial, unyielding, structural. But when the formwork is treated with intention—the right wood selected, grain textures pronounced or muted through sandblasting, the pour timed perfectly—the result is a one-off beauty. An industrial surface becomes a textured landscape of light and shadow. Contrast it with warm stone or wood, and suddenly the eye finds elegance in the juxtaposition. This is craft serving machines, machines serving craft. SWITCH OFF: ON This approach connects Kirkpatrick to a design lineage running through Southern California, amplified by his own third-generation Los Angeles credentials. Richard Neutra and Rudolph Schindler bringing Modernist principles to life K A A D E S I G N G R O U P , P H O T O B Y M A N O L O L A N G I S A R C H I T E C T U R E + D E S I G N 12.12.25 | DIGS.NET 59

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