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Magni Kalman Design and Shubin Donaldson Redefine California’s Mid-Century Legacy With a Contemporary Home
In the Pacific Palisades, a collaboration between Magni Kalman Design and Shubin Donaldson has resulted in a contemporary home that stands out not only for its scale but also for its integration with the challenging hillside site. The 14,500-square-foot main house, complemented by a 2,500-square-foot separate building for a gym, sauna, and game room, offers sweeping views of a state park and the Pacific Ocean. The owners, a tech entrepreneur and a finance professional, embarked on this project with no children, but by its five-year completion, they had three, influencing the home’s evolving needs.
The architectural design cleverly addresses the topography. The ground level forms a U-shape, while the upper level expands to an O-shape, incorporating a central courtyard. A notable design decision was to embed a six-car garage within the hill at the center of the U-shaped ground floor. This innovative placement avoids obstructing the panoramic views that would have been compromised by a traditional rear motor court. The garage roof transforms into an upstairs courtyard, featuring craned-in olive trees, which also ensures that the surrounding rooms on both levels are relatively shallow, allowing ample sunlight to penetrate.
The aesthetic of the house is characterized by a blend of modernism and organic elements, emphasizing a handcrafted rather than machine-made feel. Architects Russell Shubin and Robin Donaldson prioritized creating architectural assemblages that highlight distinctions between materials. This is evident in the giant slatted panels outside the window walls, which can pivot to serve as sunshades, and the entry staircase, where treads float over a triangular reflecting pool lined with river rocks, providing a dramatic water feature in place of conventional hard flooring. The entry is further enhanced by a large Sean Scully painting, a composition of stripes in a saturated color palette, marking the owners' first significant art acquisition.
The interior design, conceived by James Magni and Jason Kalman, extends the exterior's material palette indoors. A limited selection of stone and wood is consistently used, with the same limestone appearing on exterior walls, terraces, interior flooring, and fireplace surrounds, varying only in finish. Sapele mahogany frames doors and windows and reappears as slats in dividers and stair treads, echoing the black-painted steel framework used outdoors. Furnishings, largely custom-designed and now part of the Magni Home Collection, were chosen to introduce comfort and coziness into the expansive contemporary architecture. This is exemplified in the 23-foot-high living room, where vintage pieces like Gio Ponti and Finn Juhl chairs are mixed with custom elements, including a bronze and cast glass cocktail table and a grid-like chandelier, designed to humanize the room's grand scale.
The dining room features a 14-foot-long custom walnut oval table with an oil-rubbed bronze base, crafted by a San Francisco furniture studio. A lighting cove above the table, surfaced in white-gold leaf, casts a warm glow. The kitchen includes a live-edge walnut island for casual family gatherings, while the adjacent den provides a relaxed space with a sectional and T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings ottomans, along with a Robert Rauschenberg artwork. The master suite, a generous 2,000 square feet, encompasses a small bedroom and a spa-like bathroom, complete with multiple vanities, a makeup counter, a large shower, and a massage space. Upstairs, beyond the master suite, are the children’s rooms, a playroom, and an office, all encircling the central courtyard. A sentimental touch on the ocean-facing mezzanine is a glass cocktail table encasing an alfalfa bale, a memento from the wife’s father. This home successfully combines contemporary design with personal touches, creating a sophisticated yet comfortable living environment.
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