Architecture is a Life Proposal

Vignettes and moments captured over many months (between January and March of 2018), are strung together by Edward's interview where he describes the deeper ethos behind his practice. He is on a mission to use architecture as a frame for living—a life proposal.

Visit Edward Ogosta Architecture's website to learn more about the project

Location: Culver City, California

Date: 2016

Photographer: Steve King

Edit, Sound Mix, and Color: Reuben Herzl of Groundmaking

Written by: Edward Ogosta

Music: "13 Ghosts II", Written by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, Performed by Nine Inch Nails, ©2008 The Null Corporation, Under Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial Share Alike license

Special Thanks: Kate Ogosta, Audrey Ogosta

Excerpt from Edward Ogosta Architetcure:

Awards:

AIA National Small Projects Award 2018

AIA California Council Residential Design Merit Award 2018

AIA Los Angeles Residential Architecture Citation Award 2017

Architect magazine Residential Architect Design Award 2018

Dwell magazine Los Angeles Home Tours, featured project

American Architecture Prize 2017, Winner: Residential category

Publications:

Los Angeles Times DesignLA magazine, Winter 2018 [cover story]

Architect, December 2018

Project Description:

The Rear Window house is a discreet yet decidedly modern addition + remodel to a seventy-year-old bungalow in a neighborhood abundant with intact dwellings of the same era. Through careful sequencing of new spaces and strategically located apertures, the project opens itself up to become deeply integrated with the rear garden.

While the existing house served admirably as a compact starter home for decades, the current owner’s growing family necessitated building a master suite extension into the backyard, consisting of a new laundry room, closet, library, master bedroom and bathroom. Positioning the addition parallel to the existing garage ensured a snug fit onsite and created an axial path between the buildings leading to the rear yard. To strengthen the connection between old and new, the addition maintains the 3:12 roof slope prevailing in the existing house and throughout the neighborhood. The new volume is entirely skinned with asphalt roofing shingles, which anchors the building to the vernacular materiality of the area while projecting a uniquely contemporary identity. A new covered back porch, concrete platform, and extruded window frames further the sense of horizontal extension into the backyard.

Existing interiors have been updated to be simple and bright, via new skylights, bleached oak floors, and white walls. The project culminates in the master bedroom’s expansive rear window, formed of aluminum-clad plate steel, which cantilevers above a pool of water. The window offers the intensely private experience of sleeping and awakening in nature, and at times the house feels a thousand miles from the city.

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