California-based French designer Beatrice Faverjon was driving via Topanga Canyon on her approach to hearth her ceramics (she is each a ceramicist and inside designer) when she noticed a home on the market. “It actually regarded in despair with the entire home clad in a faux, pinkish wooden,” she remembers. “However the massing was unimaginable—it jogged my memory of the Nineteen Sixties homes of Sea Ranch.” Drawn to its potential, she bought the property with the aim of giving it a brand new life, envisioning it as each a trip retreat and a manufacturing location. A former director, Beatrice orchestrated the total renovation, preserving the outside partitions whereas reworking almost the whole lot inside.
“The ceilings had been extraordinarily excessive, with oddly formed home windows all through. It felt chilly and unwelcoming,” she explains. The answer was daring—decreasing the kitchen ceiling to create the sensation of an actual room, cladding the outside in Kayu wooden, and ending the interiors with knot-free Radiata (or Monterey) pine. The result’s a heat, natural modernist home spanning 2,900 sq. ft, with three bedrooms and an clever stability of uncooked and refined. Right here’s a glance inside.
Images by Yoshihiro Makino besides the place famous; all pictures courtesy of Beatrice Faverjon.



