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  ENLARGE IMAGE
Classic bungalow, after addition
Lisa Romerein
After: Sheets of 16-mm. clear polycarbonate open this dark little bungalow to its garden.
Bungalow gets sunny addition
See how a sheer room links a Venice, Calif. home to its backyard

From the sidewalk, the oversize oak front door and classic porch of this 1913 bungalow offer no clue to the surprise out back.

Located on a quiet street in Venice, California, the house is virtually indistinguishable from its neighbors.

 
A Victorian transformation
Fireplace's Cinderella story
Front-yard family room
 
 
But in fact, the front and rear areas are so different — visually, emotionally, and thermally — that owners Gus and Stephanie Koven regard them as separate summer and winter homes.

The couple wanted to find a cost-effective way to unite the original 1,000-square-foot bungalow and its backyard. “You literally had to duck through a tunnel-like door and meander down steps to access the garden,” says Gus, a sound designer and avid gardener. “The only view of the yard was through a small window in the bedroom.”

Classic bungalow, before addition
Before: A narrow passage and door led to the backyard.
Friend and architect François Perrin expanded the kitchen, extended the master bedroom, and set a freestanding bathroom within its midst. Overhead, he erected a Douglas fir frame wrapped with Polygal (about $2 per square foot), a translucent skin of thermal polycarbonate normally used for greenhouses. The Polygal gives the structure its sheerness, reflecting the sun’s rays in summer and absorbing them in winter. “The material works best in climates like the one in Venice, where breezes provide natural ventilation,” Perrin says.

  ENLARGE IMAGE
Classic bungalow gets a light-filled addition
Lisa Romerein
Stephanie and Gus Koven regard their airy addition as their "summer" home.
The geometry of the addition takes its cue from the sun’s path throughout the day, optimizing passive heat and light. (According to Perrin, the design is based on the theory of a “solar envelope,” originated by University of Southern California architecture professor Ralph Knowles.) A set of sliding doors and windows of the same translucent material creates natural cross ventilation along with acrylic skylights. Perrin added steel X-braces to satisfy seismic requirements, as well as radiant-heated concrete floors and interior cabinetry of maple. The 700-square-foot addition cost about $150 per square foot — “mostly labor,” Perrin says.

Thanks to the addition’s openness to the outdoors, the Kovens’ lives have been transformed. “We live by natural cycles now. We know exactly when the sun rises and sets. It’s almost like camping,” Gus says. The design satisfies their toddler son Gustavo’s wanderlust too, allowing him to roam freely inside and out with dog Petunia.

Design: François Perrin, Los Angeles (213/590-7096)

Published: July 2006