1011 Cove Way
Beverly Hills, CA 90210, USA

  • Architectural Style: Bungalow
  • Bathroom: 9
  • Year Built: 1971
  • National Register of Historic Places: N/A
  • Square Feet: 8,335 sqft
  • National Register of Historic Places Date: N/A
  • Neighborhood: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Area of Significance: N/A
  • Bedrooms: 7
  • Architectural Style: Bungalow
  • Year Built: 1971
  • Square Feet: 8,335 sqft
  • Bedrooms: 7
  • Bathroom: 9
  • Neighborhood: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Date: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Area of Significance: N/A
Neighborhood Resources:

Property Story Timeline

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Mar 09, 2022

  • Charmaine Bantugan

Familian House

The Familian House in Beverly Hills is nothing if not dramatic, full of contradictions between heavy and light elements and sprawling across a massive area. Celebrated architect John Lautner designed the house for Gary and Liz Familian, completing it in 1971. His Organic Modern design makes ample use of natural materials, particularly rough-cut stone, to anchor the house to the ground; in Lautner’s trademark style, it also employs vast expanses of glass framed by wood elements to bring views of the outdoors inside. The house’s front façade is low and long, covered with stone cladding topped by a band of clerestory windows so the low-pitched shingled roof seems to hover above the walls. It is dominated by a massive pyramidal formation clad in the same rough gray stone, supporting the stairs up to the main entry and sheltering the house from the street. The house’s interior contains more stone topped by glass, and includes details like built-in wood furniture and stone planters for indoor green spaces. Thick green foliage surrounds the building, lending it the air of an ancient temple in the jungle and enhancing the sense of privacy and safety. The house’s rear façades open up to a large stone-paved patio and swimming pool with additional landscaping, from a lawn area to hanging vines on a stone wall. Lautner designed an addition to the house for new owners in 1987, further increasing its already impressive size and extending its angled, “elongated L” plan. Photo courtesy Architectural Resources Group

Familian House

The Familian House in Beverly Hills is nothing if not dramatic, full of contradictions between heavy and light elements and sprawling across a massive area. Celebrated architect John Lautner designed the house for Gary and Liz Familian, completing it in 1971. His Organic Modern design makes ample use of natural materials, particularly rough-cut stone, to anchor the house to the ground; in Lautner’s trademark style, it also employs vast expanses of glass framed by wood elements to bring views of the outdoors inside. The house’s front façade is low and long, covered with stone cladding topped by a band of clerestory windows so the low-pitched shingled roof seems to hover above the walls. It is dominated by a massive pyramidal formation clad in the same rough gray stone, supporting the stairs up to the main entry and sheltering the house from the street. The house’s interior contains more stone topped by glass, and includes details like built-in wood furniture and stone planters for indoor green spaces. Thick green foliage surrounds the building, lending it the air of an ancient temple in the jungle and enhancing the sense of privacy and safety. The house’s rear façades open up to a large stone-paved patio and swimming pool with additional landscaping, from a lawn area to hanging vines on a stone wall. Lautner designed an addition to the house for new owners in 1987, further increasing its already impressive size and extending its angled, “elongated L” plan. Photo courtesy Architectural Resources Group

1971

Property Story Timeline

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