SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

February 6, 2026

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

Issue link: https://www.southbaydiggs.com/i/1543068

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 23 of 63

24 DIGS.NET | 2.6.26 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 | F E L D M A N A R C H I T E C T U R E P west, each gesture calibrated to the ridge's dramatic fall line. What emerges is a study in horizontal stratification. Stacked planes hover above the Healdsburg hills like geologic layers exposed by erosion, an architectural logic that mirrors the site's own character. This formal strategy does more than look good in photographs; it reorganizes how the family inhabits their property. The relocated pool now runs parallel to the main living spaces, transforming what was once a recreational afterthought into the compositional spine of the entire project. Between main house and pool house, a trellised outdoor room creates exactly the kind of flexible, climate- responsive space that makes Northern California living feel effortless, adjustable shade for punishing summer afternoons, shelter for evening gatherings when fog rolls across the valley floor. e r c h e d a t o p a r i d g e i n Healdsburg wine country, where the dramatic topography unfolds toward Mount Saint Helena on the horizon, a family confronted an architect's paradox: how to rebuild better after fire consumed their mountain home in 2017. The answer lies not in replication, but reinvention, a strategy that has produced The Phoenix, a residence that reads the landscape with uncommon intelligence while addressing the practical and emotional needs of contemporary living. The name carries weight beyond metaphor. This isn't simply about recovery; it's about evolution. The original structure, while serviceable, never quite solved the relationship between dwelling and terrain. Its most glaring failure? A pool marooned downslope, severed from the house by vertical distance and poor planning. Feldman Architecture confronts this legacy head-on, reorganizing the entire site into a composition of elongated, rectilinear volumes that march confidently from east to

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online - February 6, 2026