Westside DIGS | Digital Edition Online

August 7, 2020

DIGS is the premiere luxury real estate lifestyle magazine serving the most affluent neighborhoods in the South Bay and Westside of Los Angeles, California.

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14 DIGS.NET | 8.7.2020 A R C H I T E C T U R E + D E S I G N P R O F I L E | W A L K E R W A R N E R TRADITIONAL HAWAIIAN VILLAGES, TYPICALLY ORGANIZED IN LOOSE CLUSTERS, INSPIRED BOTH THE 1.5 ACRE SITE PLAN AND THE ARCHITECTURAL STYLE. Characterized by its angular form, and truly honoring its surroundings, the compound takes advantage of spectacular ocean and sky views. t took three years to build this house, which seems to rest gently on the landscape of the Kona side of Hawaii. Walker Warner Architects, Philpotts Interiors and landscape architect David Y. Tamura Associates combined their talents and vision to bring four independent structures to life, linked to each other by a lush courtyard and a series of walkways and patios. "We call it the Village," says Greg Warner, principal at Walker Warner Architects. Spread over a 1.5-acre site and surrounded by a field of lava and native grasses, the project was inspired by traditional villages of the island, usually organized in loose clusters. The canted steel columns, steep-pitched roofs, and rhomboidal window and door openings "represent a contemporary interpretation of early Hawaiian hale shelters," Warner says. "They're like modernist lean-tos." Characterized by its angular form, and truly honoring its surroundings, the compound takes advantage of spectacular ocean and sky views. Materials also pay tribute to the location, such as the heavily mortared lava rock, inspired by the historic Mokuaikaua Church in nearby Kailua; stained sapele mahogany for window frames; western red cedar for cladding and roof shingles— which resist heat, moisture and insects—and polished concrete flooring to keep spaces cool. Interior areas of approximately 4,800 square feet comprise the cedar-clad main living pod and master suite—adorned with earthy, timber- toned accents and furnished with a Naoto Fukasawa chair and an Eames lounger, among other design pieces—on the ocean side, while guest suites and recreation areas occupy the front (entry and street side) of the property. I

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