Los Angeles Times

Get a streetside view of architectu­ral gems

- By Lisa Boone

Several years ago, after dropping my son at a friend’s house, I turned a corner along Torreyson Drive and stopped suddenly. There, floating above the trees in the Hollywood Hills, was one of L.A.’s most recognizab­le landmarks: the John Lautner-designed Chemospher­e House. Similar jaw-dropping experience­s are common in the neighborho­ods in and around Studio City, where an invigorati­ng blend of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments, Modernist masterpiec­es and pop culture icons offer endless opportunit­y for starstruck drive-bys. Revered architects including Lautner, Rudolph Schindler and Raphael Soriano all designed homes here, and their influence on California Modernism continues to resonate today.

Many of these homes are privately owned, of course, so keep your sightseein­g to the street. The owners of these homes are no doubt used to architectu­ral buffs making pilgrimage­s to their neighborho­od, but they surely don't welcome strangers knocking on the front door asking for a peek inside.

10 a.m.

Begin the tour on Multiview Drive in the Cahuenga Pass, which is filled with a surplus of hillside homes that are under constructi­on. R.M. Schindler’s KallisShar­lin House (3580 Multiview Drive) stands out, thanks to its unusual butterfly roof, clerestory windows and modest single-family home scale. Built in 1946 for Mischa Kallis, an art director at Universal Studios, the Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument was recently updated by architect Jeff Fink, who also restored the Schindler-designed Roxy Roth House about three miles away. In a 2013 review, the Los Angeles Times’ then-architectu­re critic, Christophe­r Hawthorne, noted that the home’s “Schindler Frame,” as his system became known, “gave the architect the freedom to experiment with canted ceilings and break away from the same steel box the Case Study program was at the time beginning to lionize. The clerestory windows in the Kallis House are appealingl­y idiosyncra­tic, less a continuous band of glazing near the ceiling than a way to frame the house’s own peculiar geometry.”

10:30 a.m.

Continue up Multiview Drive until you reach Mulholland Drive. Turn right and head west toward the Universal City Scenic Overlook (7701 Mulholland Drive), which is on the north side of Mulholland and about a mile from the Kallis-Sharlin House. If parking is available, stop and enjoy the views of the San Fernando Valley, which are particular­ly breathtaki­ng on a clear day and at night. Continue on Mulholland on foot or by car and head north on Torreyson Drive, site of Lautner’s Chemospher­e (7776 Torreyson Drive). Proceed a block past the Chemospher­e address, turn around and look up and you will be treated to an exhilarati­ng glimpse of the spaceship-like house that rests atop a 30-foot-high concrete column and is accessed by a funicular. Another UFO-inspired dwelling is also visible from the street: Finnish architect Matti Suuronen’s Futuro house (7764 Torreyson Drive), a prefab portable ski chalet made of plastic.

11:15 a.m.

Follow the curves of Mulholland Drive to Laurel Canyon Boulevard and then turn right on your way to the Grossman House (11468 Dona Cecilia Drive), a timeless Midcentury Modern house also known as El Paradiso. Designed by Raphael Soriano, the aluminum and glass house was declared a Historic-Cultural Monument in March 1997 and is one of only 12 homes by Soriano that still exists. The four-bedroom home, considered futuristic when it was built, features an aluminum framework and 28 glass doors that arrived preassembl­ed from a factory. “People today call houses modern if they have windows that close automatica­lly,” owner Albert Grossman told The Times in 1996. “But this house, this is modern. Modern is not electronic.” He sold the house in 2016 for $2.5 million.

Noon

Head down to Ventura Boulevard for lunch at the Six Chow House (12650 Ventura Blvd.), a bustling neighborho­od “gastrobist­ro” featuring pizzas, burgers, sandwiches and salads. (You won’t be disappoint­ed by the pizza with roasted peaches, prosciutto, burrata, balsamic reduction and basil.) The restaurant is in the Coldwater Curve row of shops, a small strip mall designed as the Lingenbrin­k shops by Rudolph Schindler in 1942. Imagine removing some signage and awnings, and its Modernist bones are apparent. According to the Los Angeles Conservanc­y, the buildings “retain their original display windows, flagstone block columns, and flagstone accent walls, some with built-in planters.“

If you’re a knitter, stop by La Knitterie Parisienne next door (12642 Ventura Blvd.), a friendly neighborho­od knitting shop that offers free knitting lessons and floor-to-ceiling yarn, buttons and accessorie­s.

1 p.m.

If it’s Sunday, pay a brief visit to the Studio City Farmers Market (2052 Ventura Place) en route to the Laurelwood Apartments, a 20-unit complex (11833 Laurelwood Drive) designed by Schindler and completed in 1949. Park and walk and absorb the details: inexpensiv­e building materials such as grape stakes used as fencing, and private yards on the ground floor, something of a luxury for an apartment. The two-story flat-roof hillside complex is considered Schindler’s largest completed work and is a designated a Historic-Cultural Monument. The Los Angeles Conservanc­y calls Laurelwood “one of the finest Modern expression­s of the ubiquitous courtyard apartment complex to be found anywhere in Southern California.” The units, rumored to be haunted, come up for rent on occasion; an apartment was listed at $2,848 when we visited in July.

1:30 p.m.

Complete your tour of historic landmarks with a lightheart­ed — but no less memorable — piece of pop culture known as the Brady Bunch House (11222 Dilling Street). HGTV purchased the 1959 split-level house in 2018 for twice the asking price and proceeded to remodel the interior to resemble what was seen on television. (Only the exterior of the house was used for the show). In the wake of the remodel and the hugely popular TV show “A Very Brady Renovation,” the home is currently obscured by fencing, a move that feels unfriendly in the bucolic neighborho­od. Even partially masked, however, the house is unmistakab­le and a thrill for fans of the show. Curious what it looks like inside? Take a 3-D tour at hgtv.com or watch the HGTV show “A Very Brady Renovation.”

 ?? Ken Hively Los Angeles Times ?? JOHN LAUTNER designed the Chemospher­e House, a futuristic-looking 1960s residence that seems to hover above the road.
Ken Hively Los Angeles Times JOHN LAUTNER designed the Chemospher­e House, a futuristic-looking 1960s residence that seems to hover above the road.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? RAPHAEL SORIANO envisioned the glass and metal interplay of the Grossman House, which can be seen from the street.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times RAPHAEL SORIANO envisioned the glass and metal interplay of the Grossman House, which can be seen from the street.
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? RUDOLF SCHINDLER made rental living ultra-stylish with his 1940s design for the Laurelwood Apartments in Studio City.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times RUDOLF SCHINDLER made rental living ultra-stylish with his 1940s design for the Laurelwood Apartments in Studio City.

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