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Front Yard Facade Remodel

A dated front yard gets a sleek new look and private outdoor living room

Kathleen N. Brenzel
1 /5 Photo by Michael Schneider

Step inside a front yard makeover

Before: Too much concrete

A dated façade and a bleak concrete front yard—that’s what the owners of this ’50s rancher got when they bought their house in Encino, California.

Instead of remodeling the home, though, the couple used a simpler, less costly strategy to solve both problems.

First step: Remove the metal fence and the expanse of concrete beyond. Then reorient the garage (at far left photo) to face the street, with access by wide pavers.

Next, see what it looked like after the remodel.

2 /5 Photo by Michael Schneider

Mission: Curb appeal

The owners ripped out the concrete, terraced the sloping yard, then walled off the top level to create an outdoor room behind the façade. The effect is the appearance of a whole new house.

Next, see inside the new outdoor room.

Design: Landscape architect Michael Schneider, Orange Street Studio, ​Los Angeles (323/874-3378)

3 /5 Photo by Michael Schneider

Deck out the new "living room"

Case Study stainless steel furniture from Modernica in Los Angeles surrounds a built-in gas firepit. The decking is teak finished with tung oil. Tree aloes and yuccas soften the house.

4 /5 Photo by Michael Schneider

Don't ignore the real front door

A low wall of graphite-hued concrete backs a long, shallow pool on both sides of a “bridge” leading to the entrance to the main living area.

5 /5 Illustration by Arthur Mount

Rejigger the space

Terracing the bottom half of the 30- by 40-foot former driveway with concrete walls and steps [1] lets the top half be level. A teak wall with a white-framed “door” [2] screens the outdoor room [3] from the street. The actual entrance to the house [4] lies on the far side of the new space.