Oceanus House: A Thoughtful Modernization of a Mid-Century Hillside Residence in Los Angeles
Horizontally layered hillside residence in Los Angeles, modernized with reductive detailing, stepped façade bands, expansive glazing, and ocean views.
Perched atop Mount Olympus in Los Angeles, Oceanus House is a carefully reimagined residential renovation by Good Project Company that restores architectural clarity to a once-fragmented hillside home. Originally completed in 1992 by architect Donald Luckenbill, then a senior architect in the practice of Paul Rudolph, the house had already undergone a significant transformation from its modest 1975 origins. However, decades of piecemeal alterations gradually diluted the strength of its original architectural intent, prompting a comprehensive yet sensitive modernization.


Initially commissioned to update interior finishes, Good Project Company approached the project with a clear and restrained strategy: modernize the home while reinstating a cohesive architectural language. Rather than relying on structural changes alone, the team adopted a materially reductive approach, allowing finishes and detailing to foreground the home’s most compelling characteristics. Central to this was the strong horizontality of the structure, an expressive architectural gesture that visually extends beyond the perimeter glass walls, reinforcing the seamless relationship between interior living spaces and the surrounding landscape.


This emphasis on horizontality is paired with a refined interplay between solid masses and open voids. Large expanses of glazing dissolve boundaries, while carefully calibrated planes and projections introduce depth, shadow, and spatial rhythm. The result is an interior environment that feels simultaneously grounded and light, with living spaces oriented toward expansive views of the Pacific Ocean and the Los Angeles skyline.


As the design process evolved, the scope of work expanded beyond interior finishes to include spatial reconfiguration, façade upgrades, and site improvements. One of the primary challenges was extending the original reductive design philosophy to this broader architectural scale while respecting existing constraints, most notably the requirement to preserve the home’s thermal envelope.



The façade redesign became a defining feature of the renovation. Rather than replacing the envelope, the architects introduced a series of three stepped horizontal bands that extend the existing cornice and façade projections. Each band operates with its own compositional logic:
- The lower band, composed of metal cables, visually anchors the building to the landscape while subtly filtering views.
- The middle band of white vertical slats mediates between solidity and openness, enhancing privacy without compromising daylight.
- The upper plaster band preserves the character of the original stucco façade, maintaining continuity with the home’s architectural history.
Together, these layered horizontal elements reinforce the building’s linear expression, align the exterior with the renewed interiors, and redirect attention toward framed vistas rather than neighboring properties. The result is a façade that feels contemporary yet respectful, assertive yet restrained.
Oceanus House stands as an exemplary residential renovation that demonstrates how careful material reduction, compositional clarity, and sensitivity to context can restore architectural integrity. By balancing preservation with transformation, Good Project Company has delivered a home that once again feels coherent, purposeful, and deeply connected to its dramatic hillside setting.




All photographs are works of Taiyo Watanabe
Popular Articles
Popular articles from the community
Filtering Space: A Gradual Spatial Experience
From urban intensity to spatial calm.
Marvila Apartment Renovation in Lisbon: A Bright Minimalist Attic Transformation by KEMA Studio
Bright attic transformed into minimalist Lisbon apartment with skylights, sustainable materials, open plan layout, and industrial-inspired interior design elements.
Split House: A Compact Urban Home Blending Privacy, Light, and Flexible Living in Japan
Compact Japanese home featuring DOMA space, flexible café potential, passive lighting, privacy zoning, and sustainable urban living design.
Similar Reads
You might also enjoy these articles
20 Most Popular Commercial Architecture Projects of 2025
From sustainable market concepts to heritage factories, the commercial buildings and proposals that drew the most attention on uni.xyz this year.
Free Architecture Competitions You Can Enter Right Now
No entry fees, real prizes. Here are the best free architecture competitions open for submissions in 2026.
Top 15 Architecture Competitions to Enter in 2026
From student-friendly idea competitions to prestigious international awards, here are the best architecture competitions open for entries in 2026. Updated regularly.
DIY & Engineering in Computational Design : Enter the BeeGraphy Design Awards
Showcase Your Creativity with Computational Design and Open Source Projects
Explore Architecture Competitions
Discover active competitions in this discipline
The International Standard for Design Portfolios
The Global Benchmark for Architecture Dissertation Awards
The Global Benchmark for Graduation Excellence
Challenge to reimagine the Iron Throne
Comments (0)
Please login or sign up to add comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!