Granville1500 | LOHA

Los Angeles / United States

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1 Love 437 Visits Published

Santa Monica Boulevard, which for many Los Angeles commuters is no more than an exit from the 405 Freeway, is actually the last piece of Route 66, “America’s Main Street”, that once spanned from Chicago to the Pacific Ocean. In Los Angeles, this wide stretch of roadway linked Downtown, Hollywood, Beverly Hills, and Santa Monica, in a commercial corridor of remnant and outmoded automobile parts stores and showrooms - an archetype of linear, car-centric urban planning. In that stretch which, contrary to reality, seems to have more traffic than residents, is Granville1500.


The new mixed-use, 153-unit, 320,000 SF project will provide affordable housing offered at below market rates to UCLA medical students and staff in addition to academic, commercial, and public functions. Located within 10 minutes of UCLA’s main campus, the project offers a new approach to growth: blurring the boundary and embedding academic life within the urban contexts in which they are positioned. 


Granville1500 intends to intensify the urban experience, mirroring LOHA’s earlier project Westgate1515, located directly across the street. In tandem, these projects aim to reinforce a sense of place while adding to the vitality and energy in this fast-paced, burgeoning neighborhood.


The design breaks down the bulk typical of most mega-block housing projects by showcasing residential and pedestrian experiences right at street level. The block-long parcel was once a car dealership, but now serves as a model for denser, mixed-use developments with a larger social purpose.


With that aim of favoring pedestrian encounters, several strategies are used at ground level to anchor the building to the street. Rather than one massive, imposing facade, three discreet wedge-shaped volumes appear along Santa Monica Boulevard, each of them deftly touching down on the pavement. This lifting effect is achieved through a sequence of large pyramidal carve-outs, shaped like inverted prisms, placed at the corners of the complex. Besides providing breathing room beneath the structure, the gaps push the building back from the property line, with the added benefit of widening the sidewalk.


Granville1500 strengthens LOHA’s commitment to creating spaces for civic engagement in urban developments. The resulting “urban village” strives to engage the public on a stretch of roadway better known for speeding cars and heavy traffic than a lively pedestrian streetscape. The project embraces the culture and ecology of its surroundings and provides students the opportunity to engage with the neighborhood in a more holistic way, whereas college campuses are often closed off from civic life. This project aims to change the conversation of what this neighborhood can be.


 


Team -Architects – Lorcan O'Herlihy (Principal-in-Charge), Judson Buttner (Project Manager), Rosemary Jeremy


Landscape: LA Group Inc.;


Civil – John Labib & Associates;


MEP – Design/Build (none);


Structural – John Labib & Associates;


Interior Design – Ariel Fox Design.


Contractor – Suffolk Construction


 


Exterior


Façade Metal Panels:  Metal Sales T10-C


Façade Plaster:  Omega Products


Windows @ Balcony Doors:  VPI Bellevue Series


Courtyard Floor Tile:  Tile Tech Porce-Stone


Storefront Glazing & Doors:  Arcadia


Exterior Lighting:  Bega,


Residential Units


Flooring:  Kember Ecoklik Wood 


Millwork:  Kember Pressure Laminate


Countertops:  Qortstone


Tile:  Daltile


Lighting:  WAC, Rich Brilliant Willing


Window Treatments:  Mechoshade


Appliances: Whirlpool


Amenity Spaces


Lighting:  Marset, Tech Lighting, Pablo


Floor Tile:  Built-Path. DDS, Roman and Erwan Bouroullec, WOW


Wall Tile: Stone Source


 


Photograpy: Paul Vu


FB: https://www.facebook.com/paulvuphotography/

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    Santa Monica Boulevard, which for many Los Angeles commuters is no more than an exit from the 405 Freeway, is actually the last piece of Route 66, “America’s Main Street”, that once spanned from Chicago to the Pacific Ocean. In Los Angeles, this wide stretch of roadway linked Downtown, Hollywood, Beverly Hills, and Santa Monica, in a commercial corridor of remnant and outmoded automobile parts stores and showrooms - an archetype of linear, car-centric urban planning. In that...

    Project details
    • Client CIM Group
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Apartments / Interior Design / Custom Furniture / Furniture design
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