FORT: LA and Frances Anderton Create Online Resource for Housing Advocates and General Public.
Los Angeles, CA—Friends of Residential Treasures: Los Angeles (FORT: LA) is collaborating with Frances Anderton, longtime architecture advocate and author of Common Ground: Multifamily Housing in Los Angeles, on an innovative online resource called “Awesome and Affordable: Great Housing Now.” This project aims to shed light on design-forward affordable housing solutions, with an initial focus on the Los Angeles region.
Awesome and Affordable, co-authored by Anderton and David Kersh, a long-time construction industry strategic policy and advocacy leader, features a monthly online newsletter showcasing exemplary case studies of a variety of affordable and attainable housing solutions. Each spotlight will delve into the design and background of a specific project, providing readers with valuable insights, drive-by visiting information, and a call to action with activities the everyday person can do to help alleviate the housing crisis.
“Awesome and Affordable makes the case that there are hope and tools for all those who feel that housing in LA is an insolvable mess,” Anderton writes in the introductory essay, “The Case for Great Housing,” which will be posted to FORT: LA’s website in mid-January. “FORT: LA believes the work accomplished in Awesome and Affordable will bring optimism and vision to the housing crisis in Los Angeles,” adds Russell Brown, founder of FORT: LA, a nonprofit organization that offers public events, research, and trails aimed at reinforcing collective pride in the built environment. “It’s particularly inspiring to learn about the many individuals and organizations coming together to improve lives through superlative architecture and design.”
Boyle Tower
Boyle Tower is a five-unit, below-market-rate studio apartment building under construction in Boyle Heights. It is designed by Mutuo and Urb-in for Toledo Capital Development, a private developer that aims to meet the demand for housing at reasonable rents in East LA. Toledo is also testing the limits of architectural innovation in this intriguing arrangement of interlocked concrete boxes on a very narrow site. The project got entitled with reduced setbacks, increased height, no parking, and no second stair (typical in five-story housing), due to low occupancy. (Rendering: Luis Tornel)
Twelve case studies—dubbed Awesome Buildings of the Month—will be released throughout 2024 on FORT: LA’s website and in its newsletters (subscribe at www.fortla.org). Selections are based on being both affordable and awesome in their design, services, contributions to community, and connection to the street and surrounding neighborhood. The selected developments display the rich variety of housing for a wide range of economic strata—from unhoused people to the working poor and missing middle. They also explain aspects of housing that are often misunderstood, from the definition of “affordable” to the means of producing it, and the many challenges involved in building and sustaining housing at low and reasonable rents and purchase prices.
“Housing created by idealistic developers in tandem with equally utopian design teams make the case that Los Angeles can continue to lead the world in creating the residential dream, albeit in a form much different from the single-family house with a yard,” notes Anderton. She adds that with the passage of Measure ULA, Mayor Karen Bass’ ED1, and the 2028 Olympics coming into view, now is the time to evaluate and elevate affordable housing.
In addition to case studies, the project will offer “The Housing Terminology Playbook,” a substantive glossary of housing terminology, agencies, and legislation. “Housing looks the way it does because of a political development culture, where each new project is a micro-battle, with the forces at play varying case by case, week by week,” writes Kersh. While the project’s initial focus is on Los Angeles, its emphasis on affordable housing and design will be relevant to audiences across the US. The monthly dispatches, glossary, and history of housing will all be available for free via the FORT: LA website.
Castle Argyle
The 1928 Castle Argyle in Hollywood, said to have been home to the likes of Clark Gable and Howard Hughes, is now affordable senior housing run by HumanGood. The building was originally designed by Leonard L. Jones and was recently renovated and adapted by Relativity Architects for Beacon Development. Residents are restricted to those with incomes below 60% AMI. (Photo: Tom Bonner)
Awesome and Affordable is sponsored with a grant from FORT: LA and supported by Taylor & Company, a communications and marketing agency for the built environment. Among the featured established and emerging architects are Brooks + Scarpa, DE Architects AIA, Eric Owen Moss Architects, FSY Architects, Kevin Daly Architects, KFA Architecture, Koning Eizenberg Architecture, Lahmon Architects, Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects, Michael Maltzan Architecture, Mutuo and Urb-in, OfficeUntitled, RADAR, Relativity Architects, Stanley Saitowitz|Natoma Architects, Studio One Eleven, Tatiana Bilbao Estudio, and Tighe Architecture. Nonprofit developers include Abode Communities, Community Corporation of Santa Monica, Hollywood Community Housing, Holos Communities, Venice Community Housing (VCH), and West Hollywood Community Housing Corporation (WHCHC). For-profit developers represented include Community Builders Group, SoLa Impact, Thomas Safran & Associates, and Toledo Capital Development.
To kick off the project, FORT: LA is co-hosting a public forum on January 27th with the Neutra Institute for Survival Through Design in Los Angeles. A discussion on Vienna’s Gemeindebauten social housing and LA’s own history with public housing will consider the potential lessons Vienna’s successful example has for US designers and advocates.
Isla Intersections
Isla Intersections, 53 new one-bedroom permanent supportive housing units at the intersection of Broadway and Imperial Highway just north of Harbor Gateway, is scheduled to opening in 2024. The nonprofit Holos Communities and Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects (LOHA) worked to optimize this challenging site on a triangle of public land by creating what they term a “living lung,” with shipping containers oriented to minimize noise and air pollution from the nearby freeways, and a central public space named the Annenberg Paseo, designed to connect to Broadway, itself undergoing street improvements. (Photo: Eric Staudenmaier)
Las Flores
Las Flores is a 100% affordable apartment building built by Community Corporation of Santa Monica on 14th Street in Santa Monica. The design of the 73 units, by DE Architects AIA, models how to lessen the impact of high density with its layered façade, as well as its stepped-back stories, which create upper-level terraces with community gardens. (Photo: John Linden)
Project Florence
SoLa Impact, a private development company, built Project Florence, 31 units for 100% low-income residents on E. Florence Avenue at San Pedro in an opportunity zone in South Los Angeles. (Photo: SoLa Impact)
Rose Apartments
Rose Apartments consists of 35 units of supportive housing over offices for the building’s owner, the nonprofit developer Venice Community Housing. It was designed by Brooks + Scarpa and makes a feature of the central space, which is elevated over the ground-level offices and parking. This was achievable by uniting two neighboring sites. (Photo: Jeff Durkin/Breadtruck Films)
The Arroyo
This 64-unit 100% affordable housing project was the inclusionary piece of a market-rate development in downtown Santa Monica. Koning Eizenberg Architecture designed The Arroyo for nonprofit developer Community Corporation of Santa Monica. It sits on Lincoln Boulevard, which is rapidly densifying so the design team worked to create the feeling of a “big backyard” for the families in the building. (Photo: Eric Staudenmaier)
Vista Ballona
Vista Ballona designed by FSY Architects was developed by Community Corporation of Santa Monica. The structure is a small tower with two flat façades facing the street—one cream, the other a grid of warm yellow and soft green panels—with a staircase and entryway between the two. The 50-unit project delivers human connection via social spaces in the building and through direct connection to a lively street. (Photo: FSY Architects)
Vista Ballona
Vista Ballona designed by FSY Architects was developed by Community Corporation of Santa Monica. The structure is a small tower with two flat façades facing the street—one cream, the other a grid of warm yellow and soft green panels—with a staircase and entryway between the two. The 50-unit project delivers human connection via social spaces in the building and through direct connection to a lively street. (Photo: FSY Architects)
Vista Ballona
Vista Ballona designed by FSY Architects was developed by Community Corporation of Santa Monica. The structure is a small tower with two flat façades facing the street—one cream, the other a grid of warm yellow and soft green panels—with a staircase and entryway between the two. The 50-unit project delivers human connection via social spaces in the building and through direct connection to a lively street. (Photo: FSY Architects)
Watts Works
Watts Works is a permanent supportive housing complex at 9502 Compton Ave. designed by Studio One Eleven for Decro Corporation and Daylight Community Development Corporation. The firm experimented with modular construction in this complex of 24 studio units made of 58 shipping containers. Amenities include shared terraces. (Photo: Paul Vu)
About Frances Anderton: Frances Anderton covers Los Angeles design and architecture in print, broadcast media, and via public events. Common Ground: Multifamily Housing in Los Angeles (Angel City Press) won the 2022 Gold award for best Regional Nonfiction from Foreword Reviews. Previously, she was creator and host of “DnA: Design and Architecture,” a weekly radio show broadcast on public radio station KCRW. For many years, she produced KCRW’s acclaimed current affairs shows “To The Point” and “Which Way, LA?” Anderton has co-produced short films for the nonprofit housing developer Community Corporation of Santa Monica and Venice Community Housing. She is an adjunct teacher at USC, and she serves on the boards of Community Corp. and Palm Springs Modernism Week. Her honors include the Esther McCoy Award from the Architectural Guild of USC School of Architecture for her work educating the public about architecture and urbanism.
About Friends of Residential Treasures: LA (FORT: LA): FORT: LA seeks to bring people together by celebrating the history and influence of residential architecture. The organization has developed four interlocking programs in pursuit of this mission: an online mapping system for self-guided tours of the exteriors of architecturally significant homes developed by experts in the field (FORT Trails), a fellowship to foster new knowledge (FORT Fellowship), a series of virtual experiences to provide interior access and understanding (FORT Frames), and live and virtual webinars and other in-person educational experiences (FORT Gatherings). FORT: LA is the recipient of an LA Conservancy Preservation award and a California Preservation Foundation Design award. All content is accessible for free at www.fortla.org.
About David Kersh: David Kersh is the former Executive Director of the Carpenters/Contractors Cooperation Committee, a nonprofit organization comprising the Carpenters Union and construction contractors. For close to 25 years, he worked on policy and legislative initiatives throughout the Southwest, and mobilized support in the planning and political process for the region’s most important public and private projects. Over the years, he has collaborated closely with business, housing, labor, and community groups in the passage of ballot measures funding public works, transportation, and affordable housing projects, and has been a frequent panelist at civic forums and industry events. A graduate of the University of California, Santa Barbara, he also completed the Escuela de Letras literary studies and creative writing program in Madrid, Spain.
About Taylor & Company: Taylor & Company—the public relations and communications firm for the built environment—believes in professionals, companies, institutions, and organizations intent on bettering people’s lives through exceptional design. Since its founding in 1994 by Julie D. Taylor, Hon. AIA, the firm has provided public relations, media relations, marketing advice, and communications services to a global roster of clients in architecture, design, landscape, building, development, engineering, building products, and furnishings. FORT: LA’s Awesome and Affordable program aligns with Taylor & Company’s mission of linking good design to the public through effective communications.