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AIDS Housing Provides Infill Design Lesson
May 1, 1999
Professional Builder
One of the newest categories of low-income people who need specialized housing are those afflicted with AIDS. A Los Angeles project pays particular attention to the needs of people with this disease, but the design also provides lessons on how to produce affordable housing that fits in with other houses in the neighborhood.
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| Apartments for people living with AIDS were built to blend in with two-story Craftsman bungalows at the front of the site in Los Angeles, Calif. |
Craftsman architectural elements repeat throughout the complex to blend in with the two bungalows, which had been on the site for seventy years. Heavy wood brackets support gabled roofs for what Killefer calls a pleasant residential appearance. Thick wood trim surrounds windows and doors. Four timbers comprise the columns supporting balconies and walkways. Railings are also finished in wood. Trellises using the same architectural language help to define semi-public spaces in courtyards and at the entrance to the complex. These will eventually be covered with plantings for shade and beauty.
Killefer says the massing of the building pays respect to the neighbors, the typography and the residents. Providing the two-story mass are renovated bungalows, which were dismantled and stored during construction of subterranean parking. Now one bungalow is the community center and the other houses the manager’s office and apartment. The new construction steps up to three and four stories as the building moves back from the street. The positioning of the taller parts of the building on a steep hill and the main courtyard opening to the lower side provides city views from the walkways and balconies.
The West Hollywood Community Housing Corp. owns and manages Palm View. The project was funded by The Actors Fund of America, City of West Hollywood, Community Development Commission of Los Angeles County and Citibank F.S.B. The Actors Fund is a non-profit organization, which provides for the welfare of needy entertainment professionals.
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


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