Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Dark Skies festival installation "treats sound as a primary building material"
    • The latest US edition of Dezeen Agenda features four architecture proposals for New York
    • I Tried On Everything At H&M And These Are My 9 Cute And Affordable Summer Outfits
    • This week we highlighted everything you need to know about Egypt's new capital
    • MillerKnoll unifies its brands under one roof for Chicago Design Week
    • "Opera House of Insects" among students projects from University of Westminster
    • Brandon Haw Architecture completes two metallic skyscrapers on Brooklyn waterfront
    • Forgeworks uses cedar shingles to update 1960s bungalow in Bath
    Home Decor DesignerHome Decor Designer
    • Home
    • DIY Home Decor
    • Garden Design
    • Decorating
    • Home Improvement
    • Interior Design
    • More
      • Plants & Yards
      • Architecture
      • Design
    Home Decor DesignerHome Decor Designer
    Home»Architecture»Lever Architecture grafts hybrid mass-timber structure onto LA garage
    Architecture

    Lever Architecture grafts hybrid mass-timber structure onto LA garage

    Team_HomeDecorDesignerBy Team_HomeDecorDesignerJanuary 2, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    US architecture studio Lever Architecture has renovated a former 1980s warehouse in Los Angeles, placing a new cross-laminated timber and steel office building atop its parking garage foundation.


    At 145,000 square feet (13,470 square metres) 843 N Spring Street is located at an intersection near Dodger Stadium in Chinatown and contains offices as well as retail space.

    Lever Architecture has renovated a former 1980s warehouse in Los Angeles into an office building

    “Technically a renovation, the project takes a windowless, 1980s-era retail warehouse with a parking garage underneath and grafts a new structure on top of it, creating one of the first and largest hybrid cross-laminated timber (CLT) buildings in Los Angeles,” said Lever Architecture.

    The building consists of two, four-storey wings placed on top of the garage. The wings flank an interior courtyard, atrium and walking path through its centre, with landscape design by Field Operations.

    Los Angeles office building
    A centre pathway and atrium cut through the centre of the building

    A main staircase leads uphill towards the entrance of the building, retail spaces, and the courtyard, while the remaining sides of the building abut a street, alleyway and a neighbouring building.

    The building’s facade is clad almost entirely in glass, while its structure consists of 3- and 5-ply CLT panels and concrete slabs.

    Los Angeles office building
    Exposed steel and CLT panels run through the space

    Exposed steel concrete and beams run throughout the interior, which consists of open floor plans.

    The new structure was based on the original “typical” 30 x 30 grid plan of the parking garage below and extended upwards through the office floors.


    Mass timber earthquake test

    Largest earthquake test for mass-timber tower successful in California


    “The use of CLT also allowed us to build atop the building’s existing foundations instead of demolishing and completely rebuilding the structure – a significant saving in embodied carbon,” said the studio.

    The centre atrium is made up of an egress stair, balconies and wide landings that stretch in between the two wings. Outdoor seating and planting beds fill the vertical space, which culminates in a rooftop deck and garden.

    Los Angeles office building
    The atrium provides outdoor spaces for workers

    Balconies cantilever outwards from the front and back of the building, marked with the exposed Douglas fir and spruce pine fir timber of the building’s structure.

    The use of the CLT panels adds a “natural, warm aesthetic” according to the studio, while also contributing to the building’s overall sustainable strategies.

    Los Angeles office building
    The interior features open floor plans, concrete floors and exposed CLT panels on its ceilings

    These include rooftop solar panels, EV charging stations, bike parking, 100 per cent rainwater recycling and vertical fins along the facade to provide shading and reduce solar heat gain.

    According to the studio, the building materiality and design is a hybrid of Los Angeles’s “high-rise towers and low-rise bow truss warehouse culture”.

    Recently, Lever Architecture wrapped a Wyoming house in weathering steel and tested the earthquake capabilities of a 10-storey mass-timber building in California.

    The photography is by Jeremy Bitterman



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleTobin Land Bridge gives wildlife and people safe passage
    Next Article RAMSA designs arts and engineering building for Minnesota university
    Team_HomeDecorDesigner
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Architecture

    Dark Skies festival installation "treats sound as a primary building material"

    June 14, 2025
    Architecture

    The latest US edition of Dezeen Agenda features four architecture proposals for New York

    June 14, 2025
    Architecture

    This week we highlighted everything you need to know about Egypt's new capital

    June 14, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    I Should Have Listened To Y’all

    December 6, 2024

    "Patrik Schumacher presents a stark and exclusionary vision of the state of architecture"

    March 8, 2025

    Episode 181: Plants You Can’t Kill

    May 23, 2025

    Filling Curves lighting collection by Le Brimet for Pixom

    April 17, 2025

    "You can't have your roots in modernism forever" says SCP founder Sheridan Coakley

    April 6, 2025
    Categories
    • Architecture
    • Decorating
    • Design
    • DIY Home Decor
    • Garden Design
    • Home Improvement
    • Interior Design
    • Plants & Yards
    Most Popular

    Dark Skies festival installation "treats sound as a primary building material"

    June 14, 2025

    2024 Holiday Gift Guides – Ideas for Women, Men, & Kids

    November 24, 2024

    Exploring the Choice Between Interior Design Companies and Self-Employed Designers — AKIVA UK Affordable home Interior Design

    November 24, 2024
    Our Picks

    Of Architecture mimics Edwardian terrace for north London home

    April 26, 2025

    Marset's Caramel collection intends to "create paintings of light"

    June 10, 2025

    Dezeen Debate features “fun and frivolous” cottages in Karuizawa

    February 4, 2025
    Categories
    • Architecture
    • Decorating
    • Design
    • DIY Home Decor
    • Garden Design
    • Home Improvement
    • Interior Design
    • Plants & Yards
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    • About us
    • Contact us
    Copyright © 2024 Homedecordesigner.co.uk All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.