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L.A.'s Designing Woman
June 10, 2001
Untitled Document
Architect Brenda Levin has been changing the city's face for more than 20 years
with bold projects and ambitious restorations, such as City Hall's. Now she
hopes to have new worlds to conquer.
By SUSAN FREUDENHEIM
Times Staff Writer
Los Angeles Times
June 10, 2001 -- "I don't care about the recognition for its own sake," says
Levin, in the renovated City Hall rotunda, "but I care about the opportunity
it affords to do more work."
How is it that the architect responsible for the historic restoration of a
slew of Los Angeles' most important historic landmarks--the Bradbury building,
the Wiltern Theatre, Grand Central Market and the late-1920s Oviatt and Fine
Arts office buildings--is virtually unknown outside her field?
How is it that this person has spent the last eight years restoring City Hall
to its original 1928 splendor . . . and still escaped notice?
"I've built a reputation, and I have a body of work that's substantial," said
Brenda Levin, sitting in the corporate-style conference room of her offices in
the Fine Arts building on 7th Street downtown. "But if you read the lists
of who gets talked about and considered for all the major projects around the
country, it's the same five firms over and over."
She pauses for a moment. "If there were the equivalent architect who was
male and who had this body of work, would that person be recognized in a different
way? I don't know the answer."
Architects operate in a world of developers, construction crews, engineers
and various administrators and clients--almost all of whom are men. And despite
the hordes of women who have graduated from architecture school in the last
three decades, few women with international reputations spring readily to mind.
There's London-based Zaha Hadid, 50, whose first U.S. commission is Cincinnati's
new Contemporary Arts Center. And that's about it.
Harold Hewitt has followed Levin's work on six projects commissioned by Occidental
College, where he is vice president for administration and finance. He suggests
Levin's low profile may be partly her own doing. "She is admired in Southern
California in the academic community, but I have wondered why she isn't wider
known. It may be that she operates with a small shop, and she has a tendency
to focus on the project. She's not the kind of person who boasts, and she is
not driven to be in the limelight."
Adds developer Ira Yellin, a client on multiple projects: "She's a discreet,
intellectual type with a strong sense of decorum."
Discretion has rarely been the hallmark of architects who become famous. Frank
Lloyd Wright was a relentless self-promoter. California legend Myron Hunt was
too. Today's masters, such as Frank Gehry, are known for latching onto influential
media figures in the hopes of getting favorable treatment. That's not Levin's
style. Posing for a photo in the center of City Hall's newly refurbished rotunda
this week, she winced, uncomfortable at the attention. Dressed in a black pantsuit
and low heels, she barely fussed with her hair before letting a photographer
click away, and she admitted that at a recent book signing for her new monograph
from the Master Architect Series (Images Publishing, 2001), meeting the public
had been a challenge.
"I had to talk about my work," she laughed. "I'm very comfortable
pitching it; I'm very proud of what we've accomplished, and I can sell it. But
just talking about it, that's hard."
People who know Levin well tend to say that "she knows her own mind." She's
not showy. At 55, Levin wears not a Rolex, but a Swiss Army watch borrowed
from her son. She drives a Lexus that is dusty from its many trips to construction
sites. Her Los Feliz hillside home, designed in 1980 while she was pregnant,
is modest too--a 2,600-square-foot wood and concrete structure she shares with
her husband, David Abel, publisher of the Planning Report and Metro Investment
Report. Eliot, their only child, is now a student at Stanford.
Levin doesn't complain about the lack of recognition, but she admits that attention
could be helpful. "I don't care about the recognition for its own sake,
but I care about the opportunity it affords to do more work. I know it looks
like I have had amazing opportunities, and I have. But with recognition comes
an ability to expand your world. Most of my work has been in Los Angeles, and
I'd be happy to have work that was in a more national context."
No Slowdown In Her Schedule
As her work on City Hall winds down, many other projects are in the works.
Most notable is the restoration of the Griffith Observatory, whose $63-million
upgrade, which has been under discussion for decades, is scheduled to begin
construction next year. She's also transforming the former St. Vibiana's Cathedral
into a performing arts center for Cal State L.A.; renovating the Frank Lloyd
Wright buildings at Barnsdall Art Park; and creating a master plan for the
Autry Museum of Western Heritage in Griffith Park.
Plus, with developer Yellin, she is toying with ideas for the former Herald-Examiner
building downtown, a revered Mission Revival landmark that has been vacant
since the newspaper folded in 1989.
Levin's firm of 12, Levin & Associates, employs nine architects and has
frequently worked in collaboration with other firms. Albert C. Martin Partners
Architects & Engineers did the seismic retrofitting and code upgrading
on City Hall, which will have its official unveiling Sept. 2. Hardy Holzman
Pfeiffer Associates will do the underground expansion of Griffith Observatory's
galleries, as well as upgrade the planetarium.
And although Levin is best known for fixing up historic structures, she also
has designed new buildings, including science and athletic facilities at North
Hollywood's private Oakwood School and a new building for St. James School,
just west of Koreatown.
She is an urbanist born and raised in suburban New Jersey who has worked extensively
in the densest neighborhoods of Los Angeles. She is well-known within the field
of adaptive reuse--finding new life for older buildings--and she says she regularly
gets calls from developers exploring downtown renewal projects. Though Levin
rarely works outside the L.A. area, her projects include UC Santa Barbara's
University Art Museum, Scripps College in Claremont (the Elizabeth Hubert Malott
Commons) and a small study for a building at Stanford University.
"Brenda has been at the forefront, working on the highest-profile preservation
projects in Los Angeles for a long time," said John Kaliski, principal architect
of Urban Studio in L.A. "She's also worked really hard to develop some real
skill and real excellence in building on difficult [urban] sites, the kind of
careful piece-by-piece buildings that one would hope to see a lot more of in
Los Angeles." Referring to St. James' new structure, Kaliski said, "Her
work is not slick, but it will really be appreciated by the people who use it
and the community around it." Levin does not impose a signature style on
any single building but, rather, does her best to accommodate and integrate with
surrounding buildings. It is the kind of approach that doesn't usually make the
history books but seems to work for neighborhoods.
Restoring a Landmark to Its Full Glory
Most people don't realize how many decisions are made in the process of bringing
new life to an old building. On a walk through City Hall, still largely a construction
zone despite having reopened a few floors of offices in recent weeks, Levin
pointed to the innumerable details that have been touched by construction workers,
engineers, conservators and artisans since the city began to plan the overhaul
of the 27-story building in 1993.
Work on City Hall began as a seismic retrofit, before the Northridge earthquake
caused significant new damage to the building. Although the work was first
budgeted at $153 million, costs rose dramatically over time, and at one point
city officials considered tearing it down and starting over. Despite Los Angeles'
typical disregard for history, the desire to preserve the historic structure
prevailed, and the city committed funds to preserve the building, as well as
its many murals, tile flooring, elaborate lighting fixtures, the glorious mosiac
rotunda and the terra cotta tile exterior. Final costs are just under $300
million.
It wasn't easy getting her work done the way she wanted it, Levin admits. "Every
battle was hard-fought for the scope of the preservation work," she said. "Both
for the aesthetics and for the money." But, she said emphatically and
with clear satisfaction, "the scope that I'd hoped for was almost entirely
achieved."
As Levin stands in the rotunda, she smiles affectionately at the optimistic
iconography of the mosaic ceiling, with its stylistically eclectic human figures
honoring the literary and scientific values of Greco-Roman culture. An enormous
original bronze chandelier hangs at the center of the ceiling; it was removed
in the 1970s as an earthquake hazard, stored and nearly forgotten. Getting
the chandelier back in its rightful place, said Levin, was "such a victory." She'd
seen pictures of it and insisted that it be found.
Restoring the painted and mosaic murals also consumed vast amounts of time
and energy. At every step, decisions had to be made as to the level of conservation,
even when a painting just needed touching up. Maria Carvajal, one of five project
managers who oversaw City Hall's seismic rehabilitation, said Levin always
had the final word on major color and design decisions. "They did mock-ups
to show the 1928 colors, and sometimes the original colors had to be reevaluated
to [adapt to] the tones of the 2000 era. The colors they used originally were
sometimes surprising--baby pinks and baby blues--some people might even find
them offensive today. Brenda used the same colors, but she worked with the
hues to bring more harmony."
In the finished building, Carvajal said, "a lot of what you see is Brenda," even
if it's subtle. "She has a quiet strength, yet she's very strong. She
knows what she wants, and when she says something, you know she's done the
research to support her ideas." Carvajal laughs as she adds one more thought: "It's
great for us women."
Unsolicited Praise From Her Clients
Without being asked, Levin's clients gush about how she understands them better
than they'd imagined. How she took their rough ideas further than they could
have hoped.
At the Mercado La Paloma, a $2-million project that transformed a former sweatshop
near Exposition Park into a neighborhood marketplace run by the nonprofit Esperanza
Community Housing Corp., a market manager interrupts Levin to say how happy
everyone has been since the place opened in early spring. At the Johnson Student
Center, which she built as an addition to a historic Myron Hunt building at
Occidental College, a bookstore manager grills her on what she's doing next.
People see Levin as a friend, a colleague and, to a large extent, an alchemist.
James Astman, headmaster of Oakwood School, worked with Levin on the school's
math and science center, completed in 1994, and then a music, dance and athletic
center, finished two years ago. At the time, Levin's son was a student at the
school, and she said he agonized over the intrusion of his mother's work. And
so, said Astman, did many of the other students.
"Children are fundamentally very conservative, despite what they think," he
said with a laugh. The two large structures represented a departure for the school,
which is known for its funky small-scale buildings and close relations between
faculty and students.
"We gave her an impossible task," Astman said. "We asked her to
build something large in scale that still embodies the sense of familiarity and
community of a school in which ethos and scale are critically important. I think
she solved the challenges brilliantly."
There's the tendency, said Levin, "when you go to architecture school,
to think that design is the most important element. And everybody wants be
a designer. I was no different." Her work on the preservation and adaptive
reuse projects, however, taught her that she needed to master more than design
to be good. "I really needed to understand all the aspects of drafting,
construction and context before I could become a very good designer. And because
my designs have evolved from that process, I am less interested in doing pieces
of architecture that stand alone on a piece of property--the isolated sculptural
piece of architecture."
Building an Early Interest in Urban Landscapes
Levin grew up in Teaneck, N.J., a middle-class suburb just across the Hudson
River from Manhattan. Her mother was a homemaker and her father a real estate
agent, and both were active in the community. Levin remembers falling in love
with construction sites as a girl while tromping around after her dad, looking
at all the new developments sprouting up in the neighborhood. She also remembers
going into the city for every special occasion, loving the urban life and falling
in love with the pageantry of places like Radio City Music Hall, memories that
would greatly influence her work on buildings such as the Wiltern.
She studied design and painting at Carnegie Mellon University and graduated
from New York University in 1968 with a degree in graphic design. After teaching
art for a while, then working as a graphic designer, Levin enrolled at Harvard
University's Graduate School of Design and earned her architecture degree in
1976.
Harvard imbued her with a strong sense of history, particularly Modernist architectural
history, but when she and Abel moved to Southern California, Levin landed a
job with L.A. visionary John Lautner after a friend showed her his work on
a tour of local landmarks.
"I knocked on John's door, literally, that was all I did, and said 'I just
graduated from architecture school and I want to work for you.' He said, 'Sure,
kid, five bucks an hour if you can build me a model.' "
Lautner's work was nothing like what she'd known on the East Coast. "It
was an unbelievable leap," Levin said. With him, she worked on Bob Hope's
famous "flying saucer kind of house" in Palm Springs, which had been
damaged in a fire.
Levin spent about 18 months with Lautner, then launched her own business, doing
kitchen remodels and other small work. It was lonely, she said, so she went
to work for Group Arcon, a firm specializing in commercial and industrial projects.
While there, L.A. developer Wayne Ratkovich commissioned the firm to rehabilitate
the Oviatt Building.
"We started the project in the late '70s, and we were venturing into territory
that was virtually unknown in L.A.," Levin says. There was no L.A. Conservancy,
no love for older architecture. And the building codes were for new buildings,
not old ones. Levin was hardly experienced and knew nothing about preservation
work. She made it up as she went.
"It wasn't a sexy project," she says now with a laugh. "Whether
they gave it to the 'woman' or they gave it to the 'person who came from Boston
and might have some historic sense,' or I just happened to be free . . . whatever,
they gave it to me."
Ratkovich laughed when asked if he felt he was taking a risk in getting Levin
to do the job. "I'm not sure I really thought about it," he said. "Brenda
came from an environment that prized historic architecture, but we were all
early in our careers and we were embarking on an adventure, trying to do something
exciting."
Ratkovich said the choice of architect was not quite as easy for Mauro Vincenti,
the late restaurateur who helped introduce contemporary Italian cooking to
Los Angeles with Rex il Ristorante, the now-defunct eatery he built in a former
men's haberdashery on the ground floor of the Oviatt. "He was a wild Italian
with very strong views as to what could and couldn't be done," Ratkovich
remembered. "It was very important to him that our architect would measure
up. And she did."
Levin left Arcon in 1980 to start her own firm, even as she was building her
own house and had a new baby. She juggled, and one job led to another. Ratkovich
hired her again to work on the 1931 theater and office building then known
as the Pellissier Building. The lavish Art Deco movie palace had fallen into
decay and was going to be demolished by Franklin Life Insurance Co. until protests
by preservationists saved it. Ratkovich and Levin's make-over became the Wiltern,
still Levin's favorite project. A hand-colored and collaged blueprint of the
building hangs in the front hall of her home.
Levin received recognition for her work with Yellin on the ornate Bradbury,
and across the street, Grand Central Square. The latter is a multipurpose complex
that includes the famous 1917 market, as well as a conversion of two adjacent
buildings into housing and the addition of a new parking structure.
And as the big projects progress, Levin has made a point of taking on small,
less profitable ones too, just because she cares about them. She's worked on
the Downtown Women's Center Residence and Day Center, a place for homeless
women; the Adams Congress Apartments in an area of town hard-hit by the 1992
riots; the community center and food court at Mercado La Paloma; and now the
Echo Park Senior Apartments for the Menorah Housing Foundation.
"Each of these projects is an extraordinary opportunity to affect the life
of the city, some on a large civic scale and others in a more personal way," Levin
said. "Being able to impact the economically disenfranchised, those seeking
parity in the world, is as important as the civic projects. It's about repairing
the world--and both types of work feed each other."
Copyright (c) 2001 Los Angeles Times
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