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Gardenhouse by MAD

MAD wraps Beverly Hills residences Gardenhouse with America's "largest living wall"

Chinese firm MAD has completed the Gardenhouse residential building in Beverly Hills, which includes a large green wall and is designed to look like a village on top of a hill.

Composed of 18 gabled residences set on top of a three-storey podium largely covered in planting, the 4,460-square-metre complex at 8600 Wilshire Boulevard, is MAD's first completed project in the US.

Photo by Nic Lehoux

The exterior of the base is covered in native planting, drought-tolerant succulents and vines, which make it the "largest living wall" in the US, according to the studio.

Photo by Darren Bradley

As its first project in America, Gardenhouse provided the opportunity for the firm to experiment with its Shanshui City concept, which aims to translate Chineses landscape paintings, known as shan-shui, into architecture.

MAD's Huangshan Mountain Village and Chaoyang Park Plaza in China also aim to follow this concept.

Photo by Darren Bradley

"Los Angeles and Beverly Hills are highly modernised and developed," said MAD founder Ma Yansong. "Their residences on the hills seemingly coexist with the urban environment. However, they also see enclosed movement at their core."

"The commune connection between the urban environment and nature is isolated," he added. "What new perspectives, and new value, can we bring to Los Angeles? Perhaps, we can create a hill in the urban context, so people can live on it and make it a village.

"This place will be half urban, half nature. This can offer an interesting response to Beverly Hills: a neighborhood which is often carefully organised and maintained, now with a witty, playful new resident."

The green wall covers the lower portion of the complex, which is composed of residences and shops and provides a podium for 18 gabled volumes that are completely residential. These are built with wood frames and clad in white glass.

MAD decided to break up the complex into the mini house-like volumes to mimic the scale of houses in Beverly Hills. The residences are arranged in a circle around a greenery-filled central atrium.

Photo by Darren Bradley

The residences are divided up into three different types – Garden Flat Collection, Row House Collection and Sky Villa Collection. Some residences have balconies overlooking the central green space, while others have more private outdoor areas.

Garden Flat Collection are one-storey, three-bedroom houses that have private balconies and terraces with access to the interior courtyard. Comprising 2,500 square feet (232 square metres) of living area, they have large windows and blank walls for hanging artwork.

Photo by Darren Bradley

Row House Collection meanwhile are three, three-storey properties with entries on Charleville Boulevard on the south side. Each has a private three-car garage on the ground and a lift that leads up the 3,100 square feet (288 square metre) home.

Two bedrooms with a guest den are located on the ground floor, while a master bedroom suite with a Japanese onsen-style wet room, and a library is on the first floor. An open-plan lounge, kitchen and dining room is on the top level with large glass doors that open onto a terrace.

Lastly, the Sky Villas occupy the top floors of the clustered, white gable volumes. Spanning two storeys connected by a curved staircase, they have an open-plan living area on the lower level with access to a balcony and one bedroom. Two more bedrooms, including the master suite, are on the floor above.

The interiors throughout are designed by Houston-based firm Rottet Studio, which chose white walls and wooden floors to give a Californian feel to the decor.

Photo by Darren Bradley

"It was important to create interiors that complement the outdoor spaces, allowing light to be captured in a way that feels expansive, bright, and connected to its surroundings," said Richard Riveire, Principal of Rottet Studio.

"The interior finishes pay tribute to the California heritage of woodworking and high-end design in a way that is intimate in feel and lavish in tone."

Photo by Nic Lehoux

Founded by Ma in 2004, MAD is based in Beijing, China and has offices in Los Angeles, New York City and Rome.

The firm is also working on another project in the US – the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, which broke ground in Los Angeles in 2018 following a saga that saw the project moved across the country from Chicago.


Project credits:

Principal partners in charge: Ma Yansong, Dang Qun, Yosuke Hayano
Associate partners in charge: Flora Lee, Dixon Lu
Design team: Li Guangchong, Jon Kontuly, Joanna Tan, Chris Hung-Yu Chen, Wenshan Xie, Cesar D Pena Del Rey, Jeffrey Miner
Executive architect: Gruen Associates
Structural engineer: John Labib + Associates (JLA)
MEP engineer: Breen Engineering Inc.
Landscape architect: Gruen Associates
Interior design: Rottet Studio
Civil engineering: Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc.
Green wall specialist: Seasons Landscape
General constructor: DHC Builders, Inc.

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