An architect and filmmaker tackle the run-down situation and wonky format of a 100-year-old Los Angeles dwelling, modernizing the inside to go well with their love of entertaining.
After years of bouncing round LA’s aggressive rental market, architect Alfie Koetter and his spouse, documentary filmmaker Cristina Costantini, determined to tackle an even bigger problem: buying a house of their very own. It was the peak of the pandemic and like many on the time, the duo was bored with being cooped up of their small residence, so that they began scouring the web for a single-family residence they may customise to their liking.
“We had been dreaming of residing someplace else,” says Alfie, who based multidisciplinary design studio Loaf with fellow architect Luke Studebaker in 2021. “We checked out so many homes and made so many gives,” he continues. “We couldn’t get a spot, however it’s arduous to compete with individuals who pays all money and wave the inspection.”
Earlier than: Residing Room

The entrance door opens immediately into the lounge, which was nondescript and barely rundown when architect Alfie Koetter and his spouse first seen the house.
Photograph by Michael Lockridge
After: Eating Room

The brand new public zone of the home consists of the residing and eating space, which opens to the kitchen. A set of French doorways supplies entry to the brand new patio, the place the household eats dinner most nights. A set of classic bentwood Thonet chairs subtly echo the architectural curves all through the home.
Photograph by Michael Lockridge
Undaunted and decided, the couple saved looking out, passing over the copious quick-flip homes with low cost finishes and excessive worth tags. “All I noticed was a bunch of stuff that we’d be paying to undo,” Alfie says. Then, sooner or later, Cristina got here throughout an inventory on Redfin that most individuals would have rapidly clicked out of. “It was the home we’ve now,” Alfie remembers. “There was just one picture, and it appeared prefer it had been taken by any person who had by no means used a digital camera earlier than.”
“We instantly knew that we needed to see it,” Cristina says. “We noticed it as an thrilling alternative. It wasn’t a cute flip with white subway tile such as you see throughout L.A., however we needed to start out from zero, and this home allow us to try this.”
When she and Alfie went to view the property, which was co-owned by a brother and sister whose dad and mom constructed the home in 1926, they needed to look previous the uncared for points—dated carpet, flooring, and finishes, and an odd format that required you to undergo a bed room to entry the yard—to check its potential. Except for the prospect of absolutely customizing a single-family dwelling, Alfie noticed the acquisition as an funding for his profession. “At that stage, our observe wasn’t even born, it was within the gestational stage,” he says. “This was a terrific alternative to showcase my sensibility for our rising observe.”
Earlier than: Kitchen

The kitchen was cramped, and the partitions between rooms made the home really feel even smaller than it was.
Photograph by Michael Lockridge
See the total story on Dwell.com: Earlier than & After: A Highland Park Fixer-Higher Sings With a New Archway Motif