This summer, its all about the outdoor room
Independent film and TV producer Gail Katz (on the sofa) and her husband, attorney Bruce Wessel, called on architect David Hertz to transform their Santa Monica backyard into a comfortable, appealing outdoor room, framed by an open-air pavilion, with a view of the pool. Their kids Nora (19, in foreground) and Jacob (16) use the backyard year-round.--Barbara Thornburg
PAVILION
Dimensions: 12 feet by 12 feet
Materials: Integral-colored, steel-troweled stucco with 2-inch-by-2-inch clear anodized aluminum; Perennials “Very Terry” outdoor fabric at David Sutherland Showroom
Cost: About $150,000
Architect: David Hertz, Santa Monica
Interior design: Hermosillo & Ross, Los Angeles (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
In Southern California homes, indoor and outdoor blur, the color and light of our gardens spilling into our interiors, the energy of kitchens and living rooms splashing onto patios.
Gail Katz, left, chats with husband Bruce Wessel, as he tends to a burger. The kitchen (with grill and small bar) is situated just on the other side of the seating area, so Wessel, the griller in the family, can be part of the party. The deck is made of ipe, a sustainably harvested wood. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Architect Steven Ehrlich and his client, artist Kharlene Boxembaum, have breakfast at one end of the 23-foot-long steel plinth that serves as an outdoor counter at Boxembaum’s modern Beverly Hills home. Boxenbaum thinks of the counter’s shimmery surface -- it’s covered in quartz CaesarStone -- as “functional sculpture.”
COUNTER
Dimensions: Top: 23 feet long, 3 feet wide and 14 inches high; supports: 22 inches high
Materials: Steel and white CaesarStone
Cost: About $15,000
Architect: Erlich Architects, Culver City
Landscape: Nancy Goslee Power & Associates, Santa Monica (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
The Boxembaums, who frequently open their home for charity and political events, love the counter’s versatility. The first function was a catered dinner for 135 people that used the indoor dining room table and the long plinth as buffets. “The glass doors slid away to create one seamless indoor-outdoor space,” says Kharlene. “Everyone just flowed inside and out.” (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
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Culver City architect Steven Shortridge (center) and partner Barbara Callas (left) maximized the compact footprint of the sleek Venice home they designed for film producer John Melfi (right) with outdoor rooms on the first floor and on the roof (shown here). Two lightweight aluminim sunshades offer shelter; Shortridge flush-mounted six brackets into the deck so they can be rearranged according to the angle of the sun. “The sunshades offer more flexibility and don’t pick up the wind like conventional umbrellas,” he says, “and they’re pretty easy to move around.”
SUNSHADES
Dimensions: Round 5-foot shade wiht 1 3/8-inch pole
Materials: Aluminum and Versatex mesh; custom stainless-steel floor brackets and arms
Cost: Brown Jordan Sunshades, $1,490 to $1,850 at Berk’s in Santa Monica; cement-filled aluminum base, $400, and custom brackets, about $4,500 (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Architect Barbara Callas and partner Steven Shortridge relax in the outdoor room off Melfi’s kitchen. The patio is decked out with a built-in teak sofa, dramatic fire pit and custom barbecue. The same acid-washed concrete floor is used inside and out, for a seamless transition. The fire pit’s hot-rolled steel-plate backdrop acts as a partial wall, while new plantings, such as large black pine and assorted olive trees, make up the room’s soft green walls. The landscape was designed by Bent Grass in Venice. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
John Melfi with his spacious, 5- by 7-foot oval cooperage-style hot tub. The raised Boardwalk composite decking surrounding it doesnt splinter and holds up to weather better than natural wood. Australian brushwood on two sides of the hot tub adds texture and offers privacy. An adjacent Boffi shower fixture is mounted next to the tub on an integral blue plaster wall. (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
Los Angeles architect Alla Kosovosky sets the table in the outdoor dining room of her
LIGHTING
Dimensions: 8 feet tall, 2-inch-by-2-inch, with 4-foot arm
Materials: Aluminum with a clear anodized finish; MR16 bulbs
Cost: $750 each
Architect: Alla Kazovsky Architects, Los Angeles (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)