Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

THIS FAMILY’S TETRIS-LIKE ADU HAS IT ALL

THE TINY, TWO-STORY SPACE FITS IN AN OFFICE, A POOL HOUSE, A MUSIC ROOM AND A GYM.

- BY LISA BOONE

THERE ARE certain things you can expect from an accessory dwelling unit, or ADU. A small floor plan (300 square feet is not unusual). A bedroom and a bathroom. Lots of skylights to bring in the sun and open up the interior. ¶ An ADU might be used as a guesthouse for friends and family, an office for working remotely, a music room, pool house or gym. ¶ But for lawyer Navine Karim and his wife, Samantha, who is a designer, the 600-square-foot ADU behind their Mid-Wilshire home is a multifunct­ional dwelling that incorporat­es all of these things. ¶ “It’s a little like Tetris,” says Samantha, who worked with Los Angeles-based architect Barrett Cooke of Arterberry Cooke to design a two-story dwelling complete with dining nook, kitchen, laundry and multipurpo­se room. “We kept moving things around until it worked.”

The ADU, which was built over 10 months in 2020 for $186,000, also provides flexibilit­y as the couple looks to the future.

“I can see us moving into the ADU and renting out our main house,” Samantha says. “I love the idea of us living part of the year in the ADU and the other part somewhere else. I also see one of our kids living there. Our adult children may not be able to afford to live in Los Angeles.”

Ten years ago, the family — which includes sons Rahmi, 17, and Amaan, 15 — moved here from Park La Brea Apartments when they found a fixer-upper in a neighborho­od of single-family homes near public transporta­tion.

“We had been looking for something in the neighborho­od for three years, but everything was too expensive,” Samantha says.

The 1922 home, which had a damaged roof, had little curb appeal. “It had sat empty for a year and fell out of escrow three times,” Navine recalls, adding that they had to commit to buying the house as-is. “We had to waive the inspection contingenc­y.”

The couple hired Cooke, whose goal was to streamline the property. “It was a nothing house,” Cooke says of the remodel. “We stripped it and kept it linear with simple lines and smooth stucco.”

When the couple reached out to her again, along with Chris Williams Constructi­on, to help them transform the garage into an ADU, they asked her to design something that would adhere

to the footprint of the garage and complement the clean lines of the modern house.

To help preserve the yard, the Karims opted to go up instead of out. “One story would have been cheaper,” Samantha says, “but it would have eaten up the yard. We enjoy being outdoors and use the outdoor space a lot. Being outdoors is everything.”

“The desire to go two stories, and the requiremen­ts to maintain the roof heights, started to dictate what the shape of the structure would be,” Cooke explains. “The second floor is cantilever­ed toward the pool so it looks like two overlappin­g boxes.”

Sitting on the first floor of the ADU with its northfacin­g sliding glass door overlookin­g the pool, it’s easy to imagine guests never wanting to leave the cozy guest house.

“We are pretty popular,” Samantha says with a smile. “We met in Uganda and have lived all over. We have visitors every month from all over the world. That’s why we added the washer and dryer — because we wanted people to visit. We just had a family of five from Kenya stay with us for 10 days. Friends from Colorado are arriving this week, guests from Germany the following week. People love to come to L.A.”

Cooke designed the structure to be compartmen­talized in a way that makes multipurpo­se living flexible in a small space: The ground floor features a tiny banquette for meals, a full kitchen and a stackable washer and dryer, a bathroom and living space. Simple concrete floors allow a smooth transition from the pool and easy indooroutd­oor access for guests and Mona the dog.

The clean lines, colorful blue kitchen cabinets by Omar Avalos and a fun pop-out window seat that doubles as a bed suit the sunny dispositio­n of the poolside ADU.

Because the ceilings are low, Cooke added open beams to give the interiors more depth. “It’s a trick to make it look like there is more height,” she says.

Up the spiral staircase to the second floor, there is a formal office for Navine, room for a drum set and guitars, a twin bed that lifts up to provide storage, and a queen-size Murphy bed that can accommodat­e guests when the bed is down or make space for a weight bench and dumbbells when the bed is upright.

“I had never been able to work from home,” Navine says, citing his long commute to his office in Venice. “I needed a place where I could work, but I also needed the separation.”

Two slim closets on either side of the bed offer storage for travelers, and a windowless wall on the south side of the ADU provides privacy for guests.

The project has prompted Samantha, who is originally from England, to think a lot about density in L.A.

“I am a big fan of gentle human-scale density for our city and have been volunteeri­ng with the housing advocacy group Livable Communitie­s Initiative,” she says.

“Los Angeles is unusual when you fly over it. It’s flat and spread out. It’s absurd that we have all this land zoned for single families. It doesn’t seem fair that I’m allowed to build my ADU but we’re not able to build affordable housing. We need to make it easier to build multifamil­y housing above local businesses on commercial streets.”

(In September, Gov. Gavin Newsom approved two new laws that allow underutili­zed and vacant commercial buildings to be converted into affordable housing.)

Today the ADU, which is located close to the main house and a covered porch, creates a welcoming compound for the family and their friends.

“It’s such a cool multipurpo­se space,” Samantha says. “It has one of everything. We even attached a movie screen to the outside of the ADU so we can watch movies in the backyard. We use it for so many different things. What’s that saying? ‘If you build it, they will come.’ ”

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 ?? ?? THE KARIMS opted for a two-story ADU to retain use of their yard and pool. The kitchen, top, includes a seating area. Upstairs, a Murphy bed can fold up for extra space. The living room has a window seat that doubles as a bed. Navine can work from home in the office, below.
THE KARIMS opted for a two-story ADU to retain use of their yard and pool. The kitchen, top, includes a seating area. Upstairs, a Murphy bed can fold up for extra space. The living room has a window seat that doubles as a bed. Navine can work from home in the office, below.
 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ??
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times

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