Cliff May Experimental House
The Cliff May Experimental House was built by Cliff May in the early 1950s as his family's fourth house and developed to push his ideas of "bringing the outdoors in" and open interior planning. The one-story, 1800-sf house is a simple rectangle in plan with a 288-square foot open skylight in the center. May's family of five created different rooms by using movable partitions. The family resided in the home for two years, while May determined how the sizeable skylight and open plan functioned for the residents there. From this experience, the home "Mandalay" was designed by May, which became the last home for his family.
This house is located at 1831 Old Ranch Road in the Riviera Ranch neighborhood of Los Angeles.[1] The house is located behind a locked gate and is not publicly accessible. Thomas D. Church & Associates, Landscape Architects. Peggy Galloway, Interior Designer. It was recognized as a City of Los Angeles Historic Cultural Landmark in 2002. In 2007, design firm Marmol Radziner restored the historic home, re-establishing the open floor plan, replacing the roof, and bringing the home up to current code.[2] The firm also provided landscape design and interior design services.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Cliff May Experimental House". Los Angeles Historic Resources Inventory. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
- ^ "Marmol Radziner - Experimental Ranch". 4 April 2016.
- Editorial staff of Sunset Magazine and Books. Western Ranch Houses by Cliff May. Menlo Park, CA: Lane Publishing Company, 1954. Pages 126-131.
- van Balgooy, Mary A. "Designer of the Dream: Cliff May and the California Ranch House." Southern California Quarterly 86:2 (summer 2004): pages 127-144.