This Creative Couple Brought a Rare 1940s Soriano-and Its Hillside Site-Back to Life
Briefly

This Creative Couple Brought a Rare 1940s Soriano-and Its Hillside Site-Back to Life
""It was a barren, parched hillside when we moved in," Seigal remembers. "Now, when you're sitting in the living room, you feel like you're outside in a fantastic oasis.""
""Max and I had only been together three years when we embarked on this journey," he says. "We had differences of opinion on certain things like the blue granite dining table, which Max thinks is very Miami. Ultimately, we both love the architecture so much the interior takes a back seat.""
""You can feel the thread between the past and present," Seigal avers. "The Case Study ethos is very much alive in LA.""
Case Charles Fleher of Landscape Workspace redesigned the property's barren hillside into a lush outdoor oasis visible from the living room. Seigal and partner Max debated interior choices such as a blue granite dining table, but prioritized the home's architecture over interior decoration. Soriano's early participation in the Case Study program connected to a later initiative: Seigal and entrepreneur Dustin Bramell launched Case Study: Adapt (CSA) in response to recent Los Angeles wildfires. CSA paired ten leading LA architecture firms with sixteen clients to develop smart, sustainable responses to climate change and to rethink what modern living means today.
Read at Architectural Digest
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