As the first residential high-rise to be built west of the 405 Freeway in more than 40 years, the Landmark Los Angeles (LMLA) is a glass-and-steel structure rising 349 ft featuring floor-to-ceiling windows, horizontal balcony planes and glass guardrails intersected by vertical elements to a rooftop cornice.
The first theater in Los Angeles wired for film with sound provides an appropriate setting for a leading technology retailer’s flagship location, thanks to the comprehensive renovation effort that combined seismic upgrades with preservation of distinctive 1920s-era finishes.
The 28-story, mixed-use Lilia Waikiki is the first building in Hawaii to achieve the Fitwel Certification, a green building certification system focused on improving, enhancing and safeguarding the health and wellbeing of tenants and residents in office buildings, multi-family residential buildings and retail space.
The 400-foot-long Taylor Yard Bicycle and Pedestrian Bridge provides a crucial connection between the Los Angeles River communities of Elysian Valley and Cypress Park, via the Taylor Yard G-2 site, a 42-acre industrial parcel and former rail yard.
Built as part of a master plan to renew the 99-year-old Santa Monica High School campus, this 260,000 sq-ft facility includes a five-story education building, two levels of subterranean parking, aquatic center with an Olympic-sized pool, rooftop solar and more.
While transforming a former IMAX theater into a modern broadcast and production facility, this project served a combination of two clients: Sinclair and the Tennis Channel.