Saturday, April 30, 2011
Alt Build Expo
Friday + Saturday
May 6 + 7
10-5pm
Santa Monica Civic
Lots of good speakers and things to see, I'm going!
info HERE
Liking The Mirrors
Friday, April 29, 2011
Long Beach Update
bettershelter And WoodSmithe
Recently Nina dropped off some WoodSmithe stools to help stage our Ave 54 home.
bettershelter loves the combination of simplicity and sophistication in these stools.
A great addition to any home!
For stool info please go HERE
Great Use Of Color
This example is quite the opposite.
bettershelter says: BRAVO FOR EASTER COLORS!
pix courtesy of dezeen
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
Best. Signs. Ever.
Monday, April 25, 2011
Great Partition Design
Saturday, April 23, 2011
The Twins
The Twins from skatefairy on Vimeo.
The Sweet Spot!
Personal side projects can lead to new professional opportunities and where the two intersect in the end is perfection.
So true!From Swiss Miss
Friday, April 22, 2011
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Amazing Cover Song
Gawd, perfect.
So many great lines in this song, genius.
Brilliant song, great commentary on California.
bettershelter Promoting Sustainability AND Community
The barns had to be close to 100 years old.
The city said they had to go.
The first 2 barns made it into Schodorf’s Luncheonette (blogged about here already).
We posted the last 2 barns on Craigslist and the wood was picked up for a treehouse project in Silver Lake!
The owner emailed us pix to show us the results.
I was floored, no pun intended!
Slated For Demolition
As an active developer, I don't like people telling me what I can or cannot do with my property.
I was on a panel discussing urban planning and I will never forget one panelist telling the crowd: "You can't save everything" And I agree with that.
Having said all that, it is amazing to me that cities and municipalities don't realize the significance and importance these types of buildings have for their respective communities.
Case in point: the city of Long Beach.
Ugh!
Slated for demolition:"Designed by prominent African American architect Roy Sealy, the hotel was completed in 1963 and originally called the Edgewater Inn. The large site features two sprawling zigzag guest room wings originally housing 200 hotel rooms. These two-story buildings are symmetrically arranged to create partially enclosed courtyard spaces and offer each room a courtyard or ocean view. A separate building houses the public components, including the hotel office, restaurant and lounge spaces, and meeting rooms.
Although the complex suffers from deferred maintenance and later additions, the buildings maintain a high level of architectural integrity, with distinctive features including unique Y-shaped piers supporting a diamond-patterned roofline of the main building; a folded-plate roofline of a circular office wing; decorative concrete block screens; and original diamond-patterned metal railings."
Talk about a diamond in the rough.
Sometimes cities are like the homes I buy; most of the authentic integrity that made the homes so great in the first place has been ripped out to make way for some gross Home Depot remodel.
Hopefully Long Beach realizes what it already has.
Monday, April 18, 2011
Coming Soon To Pasadena
Sunday, April 17, 2011
Coming Soon To Atwater Village
Saturday, April 16, 2011
Art In The Streets
My OCC Class
The fashion dept just moved into an amazing building designed by architecture firm LPA.
We are having an open house Tues, April 19
6-8pm
Hope to see you there!
I'm Loving Macrame
Perfect Home For A Fairy Tale Princess
What 6 year old girl isn't??
I thought of her when I drove by this house.
As seen in Jefferson Park.
PERFECT.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Billy Reid At Home
Love his approach and attitude to his home decorating and his store interiors.
SoLost: Billy Reid at Home in Alabama from Dave Anderson on Vimeo.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011
Cliff May Home Tour
"Cliff May, unlike other architects, did not initially desire to become an architect. In fact, he did not become a certified architect until the last years of his life. His career as a designer began soon after he dropped out of college.
A student who excelled in music, May attended San Diego State College, but due to the Great Depression, dropped out and joined his parents’ neighbors, the Styris family, to design and build furniture.
His work sold so well, he was encouraged to place his Monterey style furniture in a new home that was for sale. The house was soon sold, and it was due primarily to May’s furniture.
May continued to place his furniture in homes, and the homes continued to sell fast.
His popularity encouraged May to decide to design and build a home himself."
He built his first home when he was 23!
The homes were great, lots of well thought out details that still work well for today's homes.
Loving the garage door designs!