The parents’ bachelor pad
A concrete backyard is re-imagined as a desert oasis sleek enough for a midcentury home
When Amnon and Frances Yariv decided to downsize from an elaborate 1920s Spanish Colonial Revival home, they found the perfect spot. The new house was nearby so they could stay in the Arroyo Seco area of Pasadena, and its pared-down Midcentury Modern aesthetic was in sync with their desire to simplify. The only snag was the withered front lawn and barren backyard.
Fortunately for the Yarivs, their daughter Gabriela, a landscape designer, was able to envision a new garden that would do justice to the clean lines of William Blurock’s 1960s architecture.
“The minute I saw the backyard’s original latticework fence painted that really cool green, I knew this had the potential to be a gorgeous space,” Gabriela recalls.
Gabriela had designed her parents’ previous garden, a property with a dreamy reflecting pond, terraces and roses. This time around, she turned to a sleek 1940s Palm Springs bachelor pad for inspiration. It was created by architect Albert Frey for industrial designer Raymond Loewy, whose credits include the iconic Coca-Cola bottle and TWA, Shell and Exxon logos. She was particularly dazzled by the backyard, which was anchored to the desert by towering cactuses and palm trees and by boulders built right into the pool coping.
The backyard of her parents’ new home, on the other hand, was a disaster. “It was essentially a pool embedded in concrete,” says Amnon, a professor at Caltech.
Careful to preserve the latticework fence and a patio wall of Frank Lloyd Wright-esque textile blocks, Gabriela began the makeover by demolishing an oversize kidney-shaped pool and deck. Some of the footings for the perimeter garden walls were also jackhammered and reinforced to make way for 12- to 15-foot Washingtonia palms, which had to be craned in.
Then she designed a smaller free-form pool, hand-picking granite boulders at Sunburst Decorative Rock in Irwindale before having them lifted into place so that they jut out from the new deck. “I had to plan where everything would go ahead of time because hiring a crane was so expensive,” she says.
Against the white garden walls, Gabriela introduced slender lemaireocereus cactus between the palms to establish a bold vertical rhythm. She punctuated ground-hugging succulents from California Cactus Center in Pasadena with more rocks along the paths and edge of the pool.
The soil was mulched with pea gravel here as well as out front, where a concrete driveway replaced asphalt, and drought-tolerant agaves, euphorbias and Jerusalem thorn trees replaced the turf.
“I loved the color of the paint on the latticework and the house trim so much that I designed the plant palette around it,” Gabriela says.
To that olive green, she added gray and a pale celadon green, combining variegated Agave lophantha, Kalanchoe beharensis ‘Oak Leaf ’ and flower-shaped Sedum clavatum with more commonplace ponytail palms, aloes and dudleyas. Drip irrigation got the plants started; these days only occasional hand watering is necessary.
While the same gray-green hues appear in the ceramic tiles lining the pool, Gabriela deployed ‘California Gold’ and ‘Orange King’ bougainvilleas as accents that tie the garden to the interior decor.
Among the finishing touches were a Kenneth Cobonpue patio sofa and chairs from Janus et Cie, which helped transform a once-unattractive environment into a private resort. “It’s such a small space, but it feels like an oasis,” she says. Her parents second that opinion. Says Amnon: “The patio and garden have become an extension of the living room. Now we like to read and nap outside.”