Brooks Avenue House by Bricault Design
Vancouver, Canada-based Bricault, designed the Brooks Avenue House in Venice, California.

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The clients for this project needed more space to accommodate the needs of a growing family, but they were reluctant to leave their location in Venice – one of the few walkable neighborhoods in Los Angeles.
The solution was to maintain and remodel their existing 2000 square foot home, while creating a 1700 square foot addition and courtyard on the rear lane side. With an ideal climate for much of the year, a primary design driver was to create a seamless connection between inside and outside, while eliminating the need for air conditioning To this end, a central sculptural staircase links the ground floor with the rooftop deck, while doubling as a chimney to draw cooling breezes through the house. On the main floor, a sequence of pivoting doors opens the house to the courtyard, while on the second floor, windows fold back and full-height exterior panels slide into walls. A system of cedar battens serve as a shading device along much of the addition.
The volume of the new master bedroom extends out from the second story, creating a carport below. Its exterior is clad with a living wall system on three sides, visually tying together the courtyard greenery with the planted roof. All landscaping is fed with a combination of captured rainwater and recycled domestic greywater. The roof’s softscape is divided between a highly productive vegetable garden and indigenous, low-maintenance grasses and shrubs. The roof also supports a solar panel array that is sufficient to meet household needs.
The house features a high-efficiency combination boiler, which supplies both radiant in-floor heating and domestic hot water. A hot water recirculation loop makes hot water available “on demand,” while reducing consumption. Other features include low-flush toilets and non-toxic, low-VOC finishes, which are used throughout the house.
Visit the Bricault website – here.
Photography by Kenji Arai and Danna Kinsky
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Colin Sampaleanu on 16 Sep 2011 at 6:26 pm #
What a beautiful stair
pfarm on 19 Sep 2011 at 6:51 pm #
tried hard on the green wall – but worth trying.
Architectoid on 20 Sep 2011 at 8:50 am #
The Axonometric drawing of the house is very interesting it looks like the original house gave birth to its subsequent additions.
Peter on 20 Sep 2011 at 2:40 pm #
The green roof looks awesome any further shots of it’s performance over time?