Mar 08, 2022
- Dave D
Koenig House #2
Pierre Koenig was an architect of unusual innovative skill and tremendous influence on a generation of modern designers. His many designs, including at least forty-three steel and glass residences, reflected his personal philosophy that industrial methods and materials could be used to produce inexpensive, distinctive, and environmentally friendly homes. The second Mid-Century Modern home Koenig designed for himself and his wife Gloria, completed in 1985, illustrates his ongoing commitment to this idea. Located on a narrow lot, the house starts as a one-story volume with a semi-detached studio and then steps up and back to reach a height of three stories. Koenig designed its steel framing system to be easily assembled on site, and it took workers only a day to erect it. The house is clad in white painted vertical steel siding and features windows carefully sited not to look into the neighbors' properties, but to access views beyond them. At its core is a full-height atrium crossed by landings and stairways, illuminated by clerestory windows. It is acoustically enhanced by carefully planned ceiling heights which help make the entire house an excellent listening and playing environment for the musically inclined owners. As with Koenig's other designs, the microclimate is carefully managed by a ventilation system that works so well a mechanical air conditioning system is unnecessary. The Koenig House #2 is a wonderful example of the architect's ideas put into stunning practice in the latter years of his long career. Photo by Jessica Hodgdon/L.A. Conservancy
Koenig House #2
Pierre Koenig was an architect of unusual innovative skill and tremendous influence on a generation of modern designers. His many designs, including at least forty-three steel and glass residences, reflected his personal philosophy that industrial methods and materials could be used to produce inexpensive, distinctive, and environmentally friendly homes. The second Mid-Century Modern home Koenig designed for himself and his wife Gloria, completed in 1985, illustrates his ongoing commitment to this idea. Located on a narrow lot, the house starts as a one-story volume with a semi-detached studio and then steps up and back to reach a height of three stories. Koenig designed its steel framing system to be easily assembled on site, and it took workers only a day to erect it. The house is clad in white painted vertical steel siding and features windows carefully sited not to look into the neighbors' properties, but to access views beyond them. At its core is a full-height atrium crossed by landings and stairways, illuminated by clerestory windows. It is acoustically enhanced by carefully planned ceiling heights which help make the entire house an excellent listening and playing environment for the musically inclined owners. As with Koenig's other designs, the microclimate is carefully managed by a ventilation system that works so well a mechanical air conditioning system is unnecessary. The Koenig House #2 is a wonderful example of the architect's ideas put into stunning practice in the latter years of his long career. Photo by Jessica Hodgdon/L.A. Conservancy
Mar 08, 2022
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May 22, 2017
May 22, 2017
- Dave D
House by legendary architect Pierre Koenig (VIDEO)
3 beds 3 baths 3,000 sqft For the first time ever, the Brentwood residence of legendary architect Pierre Koenig, FAIA, hits the market! Koenig, the "Rock Star" of Mid-Century Modernism, and genius behind Case Study Houses #21 and #22, two of the most-photographed and chronicled modern homes of that era. Designed and historically archived as "Koenig House #2" by the L.A. Conservancy, this steel and glass masterpiece features tiered setbacks culminating in a soaring 30-foot 3-story vertical atrium crossed by landings, staircases and illuminated by full-height clerestory windows. Meticulously-restored, this 3 BD, 2.5 BA home includes a parlor, media/family room adjacent to Koenig's architectural studio opening to a courtyard with fountain, music room and decks. The ultimate example of an open floor plan, the I-beam steel frame sub-divides the wall panels, vertically and horizontally to define living spaces and levels. Koenig's personal residence was the culmination of his vision of architecture for the modern era.
House by legendary architect Pierre Koenig (VIDEO)
3 beds 3 baths 3,000 sqft For the first time ever, the Brentwood residence of legendary architect Pierre Koenig, FAIA, hits the market! Koenig, the "Rock Star" of Mid-Century Modernism, and genius behind Case Study Houses #21 and #22, two of the most-photographed and chronicled modern homes of that era. Designed and historically archived as "Koenig House #2" by the L.A. Conservancy, this steel and glass masterpiece features tiered setbacks culminating in a soaring 30-foot 3-story vertical atrium crossed by landings, staircases and illuminated by full-height clerestory windows. Meticulously-restored, this 3 BD, 2.5 BA home includes a parlor, media/family room adjacent to Koenig's architectural studio opening to a courtyard with fountain, music room and decks. The ultimate example of an open floor plan, the I-beam steel frame sub-divides the wall panels, vertically and horizontally to define living spaces and levels. Koenig's personal residence was the culmination of his vision of architecture for the modern era.
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