Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

HISTORIC HOUSE’S ‘FRATERNAL TWIN’

NESTLED BEHIND A 100-YEAR-OLD CRAFTSMAN IS A SPACE MIRRORING THE HOME’S CHARM.

- BY LISA BOONE

WHEN Hannah Coleman and husband Alvaro Vela bought a century-old house in Culver City eight years ago, the first-time homeowners were charmed by the house’s Craftsman details — sweeping front porch, clapboard siding, corbel-accented roofline and arched windows — as well as an expansive backyard filled with mature fruit trees.

Shortly after purchasing the house, which is registered as a local historical landmark, the couple hired Los Angeles architects Peggy Hsu and Chris McCullough, of Hsu McCullough, who helped them to open up the second-floor attic, add much-needed insulation and install a covered back porch and raised deck for outdoor dining.

“We lived in the downstairs bedroom because it was too hot to live upstairs, and the ceilings were so low,” says Coleman, who is a research analyst in the healthcare industry. “But it was OK because it was just the two of us.”

At first, the house seemed perfect. But when the couple began having children — they now have two sons who are 1 and 3 — and their extended family came to visit for long periods of time, they outgrew the 1,600-square-foot floor plan. The COVID-19 pandemic didn’t help when it forced the couple, both 37, to work from home.

“It’s important for us to have our family stay with us,” Coleman says. “We have family members in Colombia and Hawaii who stay with us for two to four months at a time. We wanted a designated space for them.”

When they casually looked for a larger home in their neighborho­od, however, they realized that, like so many Southern California­ns, they were priced out of L.A.’s competitiv­e housing market. “We really wanted to make it work in our house because we love the house and the lot,” Coleman says.

As much as they cherished the 1922 house, they were less enamored with its detached garage, which Vela, a sound engineer, turned into a studio. Although the garage worked as a studio, it felt out of place with the home’s Arts and Crafts style.

In 2020, soon after California changed the covered parking requiremen­ts for ADUs to make it easier to build more housing, the couple rehired the architects to help them build an accessory dwelling unit that would give them more room and preserve the home’s Craftsman architectu­re. In Culver City, no new or replacemen­t parking was required for the ADU after the garage was demolished, which didn’t affect Coleman and Vela because they have room to park four cars on a long driveway on the west side of their yard.

Seeing so many McMansions in Los Angeles, Coleman says she “didn’t want a mega-house. We thought of the ADU as more of an extension of the house. We are not sure if we are going to stay in Los Angeles, so we thought it would add quite a bit of value to our home.” Looking ahead, she says, they feel that they will be more likely to rent out the unit or sell their home as compound living.

Tucked behind the main house, the resulting 700-square-foot ADU, whose exterior was custom-milled to match the main house, exudes Craftsman charm. That’s because the couple wanted the ADU to “mimic some of the aspects of the house,” Coleman says, while adding modern touches such as a Fleetwood pocket sliding door in black anodized aluminum finish at the front.

“The houses are fraternal twins,” says McCullough, who notes that about a quarter of the inquiries their firm receives are regarding ADUs. “The front of the house is so amazing. It was a blueprint for the ADU.”

Preserving the yard was another priority for the family. “We could have gone up to 1,200 square feet but we wanted to maintain the outdoor garden space,” says Hsu. “It was about nestling the ADU into the backyard and not disturbing the trees as well as creating a space between the ADU and the main house that serves as a playground for the family.”

Standing in the backyard, the connection between the two homes is evident in the detailing, buttresses, wood carpentry and custom replica-1920 wood windows by

T.M. Cobb that match the main house’s existing windows. At a quick glance, it’s hard to tell the new constructi­on from the original home.

“All of the spatial clues are from the main house,” McCullough says. “We were not trying to make it modern. We wanted people to say, ‘Was this originally here?’ ”

The ADU was designed to have three distinct spaces: a sound studio for Vela, a guest bedroom and an open, airy family room. Although it connects to the family room, Vela’s studio, which pops out from the principal floor plan, feels separate from the rest of the house.

Likewise, a pocket door can close off the bedroom to provide privacy for guests. A loft, accessed by an iron ladder, provides overflow space for guests and a small kitchenett­e in the hallway accommodat­es basic cooking needs while saving space in the tight quarters.

Further enhancing the aesthetics of the backyard, the architects installed a new electrical main power drop at the rear of the ADU that provides undergroun­d electrical service from the ADU to the main house. That way unsightly overhead power wires are undergroun­d and not overhead.

Although the exterior mirrors the Craftsman architectu­re of the main house, the light-filled interiors have a modern feel with vaulted ceilings, oak floors and custombuil­t white oak Shaker cabinets. “We all agreed that we wanted the ADU to have a connection to the house,” Hsu says. “It is evident in the detailing and the wood carpentry. But it definitely has its own character.”

Constructi­on began in January 2021, and it took nine months to complete the transforma­tion at a cost of about $400,000, which McCullough predicts would be about $100,000 more today due to supply chain and labor issues. Since then, Coleman says, they have hosted as many as eight family members at once. “Now it’s like a hotel,” she says, “and we have to write down when people are coming.”

Last year, when Vela’s parents came for four months, they stayed in the main house during the day while Vela and Coleman worked in the ADU. During the summer months, the family would walk to parks, Platform or downtown Culver City and also play in the backyard with Vela and Coleman’s kids after school. Then, in the evenings, they would eat together as a family, and Vela’s parents would retire to the ADU. “It’s so nice to have the extra space when everyone is living together,” Coleman says.

Although Coleman says she has never been a fan of new developmen­t, their ADU has changed her mind. “It’s 700 square feet but it feels huge,” she says. “I almost prefer it to the main house.”

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 ?? Photograph­s by ?? THE ADU in back of this historic Culver City Craftsman adds to the property a sound studio, a guest bedroom and a family room that opens to the yard. A loft offers overflow space for guests.
Photograph­s by THE ADU in back of this historic Culver City Craftsman adds to the property a sound studio, a guest bedroom and a family room that opens to the yard. A loft offers overflow space for guests.
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Christina House Los Angeles Times

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