LA Times Times reports Mayor sets out to transform targeted L.A. Streets into Walkable Streets.

Sunset Triangle Plaza in Silver Lake is a new neighborhood plaza

Sunset Triangle Plaza in Silver Lake is a new neighborhood plaza

This LA Times Story (July 27, 2014, front page)  reports that Mayor Eric Garcetti hopes to transform 14 major thoroughfares into hubs of neighborhood activity.  In a process the mayor describes as “urban acupuncture,” the city plans to add bike racks, plazas, crosswalk upgrades and other amenities aimed at drawing in pedestrians and attracting new businesses.

Why is this important?  Today,  more people desire to live walking distance to amenities, especially restaurants, bars, and shops.   Previously, Angelenos demanded infinite amenities within an easy commute,not walkability.  Now the trend is also for walkable amenities.  This trend toward neighborhood workability has led to the recent increased popularity of Venice, Downtown Santa Monica, Downtown Los Angeles, and Silverlake. In Highland Park, once sleepy York Boulevard has become a magnet for an array of middle- and upper-middle class needs: coffee, comic books, vegan ice cream, and $5 donuts. Abbot Kinney Boulevard in Venice, once favored mainly by locals, is now a regional tourist destination with prices to rival Rodeo Drive. Walkable streets are now a major amenity attracting renters and home buyers.

So what comes first, retail amenities or residential.  It is hard to say.  Maybe it is a little of both.  In Los Angeles, major employment centers must be within easy commute to a potential area in gentrification.  Prices and rents very close to these employment centers are very high. So people seek more affordable areas.  Someone takes a chance and opens a restaurant that takes off and attracts the gentrified demographic.  A house renovator takes note and tries a renovation that succeeds. Other renovators take note and follow.  Other retailers take note and follow.  And so goes the chain reaction that plays out over years and even decades.

Now, Garcetti said he is trying to create conditions favorable to a transformation by targeting locations that already have sparks of new economic activity (retailers or housing renovation). He’s quick to point to success stories in the council district he represented before becoming mayor.

In Silver Lake, he closed one block adjacent to the Sunset Boulevard business district to car traffic, replacing it with a pedestrian plaza painted with green polka dots (Silverlake Triangle Plaza). In Atwater Village, Garcetti worked to make Glendale Boulevard — a major route to the 5 Freeway — more welcoming to pedestrians. City crews upgraded crosswalks, extending curbs farther into the street, and added new trees, signs and trash cans.

Now, on the Westside, Garcetti picked four blocks of Westwood Boulevard anchored by the Geffen Playhouse on one end and by UCLA’s Hammer Museum on the other. In Mar Vista, Garcetti picked Venice Boulevard between Beethoven and Inglewood Boulevard.   On Figueroa Street in Highland Park, another corridor (between Avenue 50 and Avenue 60) selected by Garcetti, check-cashing businesses and pupuserias have been joined by workout places, a record shop, a vintage clothing store and Kitchen Mouse, a storefront restaurant that promises vegan and gluten-free dining options. Customer Elizabeth Brizzi said the area is starting to have the “Silver Lake feel” — a reference to the hip neighborhood once represented by Garcetti.

You can read the full article below.

 

Mayor sets out to transform L.A. streets through ‘urban acupuncture’ – LA Times.

Downtown Art District Retail Starting to Pick Up Steam

Mateo and Palmetto

Mateo and Palmetto

The Downtown Art District retail will start to pick up steam. Currently, the Art District has 3 hot restaurants (Bestia, Factory Kitchen, and Church and State) ;an Urth Cafe; and four coffee houses (Slumptown, Handsome, Verve, Novel, and Daily Dose). Now two projects will add 165,000 square feet of new retail.

A corner property where Mateo and Palmetto streets meet, now occupied by five warehouses, is about to be transformed into a huge, $30-million shopping center (with parking!), says the Downtown News. The 125,000-square-foot “urban retail center” will be an open-air mall “anchored by a major retailer” (as yet unnamed) and have a grocery store, according to a release from ASB Real Estate Investments, which is partnering with Century City-based Blatteis & Schnur on the development. No renderings have been released yet, but developers have said that they’re hoping to keep the center in line with the AD’s “unique place in Los Angeles” and that they’ve planned ” [a] brilliant design … allowing us to attract unique, compelling and artisan retailers and food purveyors.”

The Yards

The Yards

The second project involves the 45,000 square foot portion of the 435 apartment unit One Santa Fee under construction.  The developer announced it as a collection of 25 unique designers, specialty boutiques, and renowned chefs curated around private landscaped walkways to be called the Yards. ,

Finally, the retail is filling in the Art District to provide an exciting experience for those who work and live in the area.

Honey I Shrunk The Dining Room

More and more new apartments are eliminating the dining room..  Many Millennials eat out, at their desk, on a coffee table (and in front of a video screen) , or at a eating bar and (in front of a video screen).  Jerome Synder’s new two luxury highrise apartment towers, the Vermont, at Wilshire and Vermont,do not offer residents a dining room.

Notice that in the one bedroom floor plan below, there is no dining room:

No Dining Room in the Wilshire Vermont One Bedroom.

No Dining Room in the Wilshire Vermont One Bedroom.

In the Living Room Looking Toward the Kitchen Eating Bar in the Vermont One Bedroom

In the Living Room Looking Toward the Kitchen Eating Bar in the Vermont One Bedroom

Instead, the dining room is replaced with an eating bar in the kitchen.

Creative Apartment Space is Born with Deconstructed Open Wood Ceiling

We just gave birth to a full creative apartment unit renovation at our new project at 1306 Temple Street in Echo Park.  At 580 square feet, the one bedroom unit has full deconstructed open wood ceilings.  We stripped off the drywall ceiling of a 1920 apartment unit and left the wood lumber exposed.  To accomplish this, we installed new finished doug fir plywood just above the existing wood ceiling frame. The result was to create a loft look in only 580 square feet.  Due to City laws, most one bedroom loft like apartment units (with wood ceilings)  in Los Angeles are much larger. Creating this unit may seem easy, but it was very difficult because it had never been done before.

A number of dubious team members worried the city fire codes would not allow an open ceiling, or it could not be framed.    Eighteen years ago, we faced a similar challenge.  We proposed to strip the acoustic tile from an existing 1000 square foot office suite and create an open wood ceiling with rigid ducting and skylights.  In other words, we wanted to create a creative office in a conventional 3 story office building.

First Wood Open Ceiling in a Conventional 1982 Office Building, 720 Wilshire, Santa  Monica

First Wood Open Ceiling in a Conventional 1982 Office Building, 720 Wilshire, Santa Monica

.  No one had done this before in Los Angeles. The first prospect loved the space but asked when the ceiling was going in.  Shortly, we had multiple offers for the space.  Again, the first one was hard, but the rest is history.

Below is how the 1920 apartment unit, with drywall ceilings, looked  before our renovation..

Unit Before Renovation

Unit Before Renovation

Here is a close up of the ceiling before deconstruction:

Original Drywall Ceiling Prior to Deconstruction

Original Drywall Ceiling Prior to Deconstruction and Renovation

Below is the unit after renovation: a loft looking creative apartment unit with the new deconstructed open wood ceilings.

After Renovation with New Deconstructed Open Wood Ceiling

After Renovation with New Deconstructed Open Wood Ceiling

Congrats to our project designer/manager, Adaptive Realty, our consulting engineer/architect Gwynne Pugh Urban Studios, and  our PMI team.