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Nelson Houses
With their simple Mid-Century Modern lines and their breathtaking views, the Nelson Houses are a rare work by one of very few female modernists to gain acclaim in postwar L.A.
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Greta Magnusson Grossman was one of very few female modernists to gain acclaim in Los Angeles' testosterone-heavy architectural scene during the postwar period, and she managed to do so as a designer of both buildings and objects.
Born in Sweden, she was a successful industrial designer creating furniture, lighting, and other designs, and she continued that work when she moved to the U.S. Once in California, she began taking on architectural projects, eventually completing at least fourteen homes in Los Angeles. Two of them were for Frances Nelson, sited on adjacent hillside lots above Cahuenga Pass, and are wonderfully intact to this day.
The Nelson houses reflect Grossman's use of simple deck construction; unlike some other Modern hillside designs that step up or down a slope, the Nelson houses each sit on one level slab extending through the entire enclosed space, and are cantilevered out over their slopes.
They are both very small in scale but feel large and open thanks to their thoughtful modular design and the extensive use of floor-to-ceiling glass framed in wood.
Tall ceilings, overhanging roofs and trellises extending from the slabs also make the houses seem even larger. With their simple Mid-Century Modern lines and their breathtaking views, the Nelson Houses are an excellent example of Grossman's residential designs in the hilly neighborhoods of Los Angeles.