Los Angeles Times

Combo comes with a side of greens

Mixed-use complex on Wilshire will offer a fresh take on the suburban lawn.

- By Kavita Daswani hotpropert­y@latimes.com

The quintessen­tial suburban home — grassy yard in the front, house set toward the back — was the unexpected inspiratio­n for a contempora­ry mixed-use residentia­l complex being built in Beverly Hills.

“I thought, ‘Can we make a building that looks like a house, and set it in nature, in the middle of Wilshire Boulevard?’ ” said Ma Yansong, the Beijing-based architect who is leading the project at 8600 Wilshire Boulevard.

When Ma scoped out the area before coming up with a design, he was struck by the stark contrast between the quiet residentia­l streets off of that stretch of Wilshire and the commercial and retail businesses on the thoroughfa­re.

“In modern cities, nature is so rare. Because of globalizat­ion and urbanizati­on, every big city around the world looks similar,” Ma, 40, said. “They’re all doing the same buildings. We get tired of looking at them, and when we move our eye away from those buildings, we find beauty in gardens, trees, parks. We have to be able to put them together.”

The defining point of 8600 Wilshire will be its “living wall” — the lower exterior of the building will be covered with droughtres­istant foliage and succulents.

“Living walls are popular in Europe and Australia,” Ma said. “To do them here, we are choosing desert and native plants that don’t consume much water and will give a special texture to the building.”

The plants will be red, yellow and green.

“It should look like a painting, where we have used the colors of the plants to create an artistic facade,” he said.

The developmen­t, Ma’s first in the U.S., broke ground in May and is scheduled to be completed in about 18 months.

He’s splitting the all-white five-story building horizontal­ly; the ground level will hold businesses, above which will be condos and townhouses ranging from 750 to 3,000 square feet, all set around a leafy courtyard.

Slender French balconies and water features will add to what Ma describes as a “village-like” sensibilit­y.

Ma said his idea was predicated on making the building “humanscale, smaller, to help people feel more comfortabl­e.”

The building’s developers, Palisades Capital Partners, went for that approach.

It declined to divulge how much it is spending on the developmen­t, and said it had not yet set prices for the units.

“Architectu­re should be responsive and unique to its location,” the company said in a statement. “The design distills the imagery and magic of Beverly Hills into an iconic statement.”

Above all else, Ma said he wants to foster a sense of community — even in a modern luxury building in Beverly Hills.

Ma, a prominent Chinese architect, runs MAD Studio in Beijing.

In addition to 8600 Wilshire, his studio is concurrent­ly working on a museum in Sao Paolo and his debut European residentia­l project, an apartment building outside Paris overlookin­g 24 acres of greenery.

 ??  ?? walls, seen here in a rendering of the project in Beverly Hills, will be ground-level businesses below housing. MAD Architects BEYOND THE LIVING
walls, seen here in a rendering of the project in Beverly Hills, will be ground-level businesses below housing. MAD Architects BEYOND THE LIVING
 ?? Genaro Molina ?? wondered, “Can we make a building that looks like a house, and set it in nature, in the middle of Wilshire?” Los Angeles Times MA YANSONG
Genaro Molina wondered, “Can we make a building that looks like a house, and set it in nature, in the middle of Wilshire?” Los Angeles Times MA YANSONG

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