flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

L.A., all the way

Multifamily Housing

L.A., all the way

KFA Architecture has hitched its wagon to Los Angeles’s star for more than 40 years.


By PAT CURRY, CONTRIBUTING EDITOR | October 15, 2020

Pico Eleven, with 32 apartments (11 rent controlled), takes it cue from the beach houses of Santa Monica. The reclaimed oak siding will weather to gray. Photo: Nico Marques Architectural Photography

   

The year was 2010, the economy was just starting to recover from the Great Recession, and Killefer Flammang Architects, better known as KFA, decided it was time for a corporate brand refresh. The chief question: Why was all of the firm’s work in Los Angeles?

In fact, that was not exactly the case, but it was true that the overwhelming majority of the firm’s work was concentrated in Los Angeles County and environs. “We realized that LA was who we were,” said Founder/CEO Wade Killefer, FAIA. “There’s tremendous value in knowing who you are and what you do. It makes everything so much easier.”

Partner and Principal John Arnold, AIA, credited the firm’s LA grounding—its motto: "KFA/Architecture for Los Angeles"—as the key to its success. “We have a string of developers who ask for our advice because we know our neighborhoods,” he said. “In about an hour we can tell them if a project might be okay to go forward or not.”

Over the past 40 years, KFA has designed more than 17,000 units of housing in over 300 different buildings for scores of developers in Los Angeles County. A dozen of these projects, comprising more than 1,000 affordable units, are on the city’s Skid Row. More than 40 of these buildings are of vintage quality; 11 are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In recognition of these achievements, KFA received the 2016 AIA California Council Firm Award.

KFA didn’t start out with that sharp focus. Like most startups, it was just struggling to find its way. 

 

FROM DESIGN-BUILD TO ADAPTIVE-REUSE CHAMPION

Killefer, a San Francisco native, grew up in Washington, D.C., and graduated from Stanford with a BA in English. He met his future wife and business partner Barbara Flammang when they both showed up late to class at UCLA’s School of Architecture and Urban Planning. In 1975, after earning an MArch degree, Killefer established a design-build company with partner Scott Carde, in Santa Monica. Two years later, Killefer and Flammang were married; in 1980, she joined the firm, then known as Carde Killefer Architects; it was renamed Killefer Flammang Architects in 2002. The firm became KFA, LLP (dba KFA Architecture), in 2016 and moved to Culver City last year.

In the early days, Flammang said, the goal was simple—“just try to do work we could be proud of, listen to clients and build relationships with them. We knew that if we delivered what the client wanted, shaped by us, it would lead to more work.” 

They designed their first library in 1983, their first school two years later, and their first affordable housing project, in Santa Monica, in 1988. “That was a real milestone in terms of eventually doing a lot of affordable housing for a lot of great developers,” Killefer said.

As the new millennium rolled in, downtown LA was, by all accounts, a wasteland of once-grand older buildings that were all but abandoned. “Downtown was dead,” said Arnold. “The historic core had nothing but stereo stores and pawnshops. All these great buildings were 100% vacant above the first floor.”

Developers balked at the cost of bringing these venerable structures up to the city’s strict building code. To make redevelopment feasible Killefer helped update the city’s adaptive reuse ordinance (ARO). Under the revised ordinance, ARO projects no longer had to construct new parking or go through an entitlement phase. Fire/life safety, structural, and disabled access requirements were allowed to be more flexible with the historic buildings, which streamlined permitting and reduced construction costs.

At about this time, Tom Gilmore, a transplanted New York architect/developer, and his business partner Jerri Perrone, came into the picture. They purchased an entire block of abandoned historic buildings—the Continental, the Hellman, the San Fernando, and the Farmers and Merchants National Bank—in what they called the Old Bank District. Their firm, Gilmore Associates, was the first to use the new ARO, and they chose KFA as their architect.

It was the spark that lit the flame for downtown redevelopment. Los Angeles Magazine called the redevelopment of the Old Bank District “the most compelling urban neighborhood L.A. has spawned since the late 1800s.” 

Once ARO was in place, Killefer asked his staff for volunteers to go downtown one weekend. Armed with aerial photos, they each took a block, evaluated every building on it, and determined which structures had potential for conversion to residential or other use. From these crude data points, they created a color-coded map—using Magic Markers—for downtown redevelopment.

“That map was one of the biggest things for us getting work,” said Arnold, who joined KFA in 1999. “Developers could look at the map and see which buildings might work for redevelopment.” 

The product shifted from residential lofts to apartments, then to condos. “We learned how to be practical and integrate the historic fabric of a building without getting obsessed about it,” recalled Arnold. “Through 2009, we were the go-to firm for adaptive reuse downtown.”

After the recession the work shifted to converting prime historic buildings into hotels. Once these properties were all called for, KFA turned to converting defunct buildings from the 1950s, ’60s, and ’70s.

As the economy picked up, adaptive reuse took off in other parts of the region, notably Pasadena, Koreatown, Santa Monica, the San Fernando Valley, and Orange County; it continues to this day. In Long Beach, KFA is converting a 1980s glass office tower to residential use and adding a mid-rise structure over the adjacent parking garage.

For a huge region with limited greenfield development opportunities, adaptive reuse is a viable specialty for a mid-size architecture firm like KFA. “LA is all about adaptive reuse and infill,” said Arnold. “There are no farms left. It’s about having a vision to see the opportunity where it may not be obvious. We feel there’s enough work in LA to keep us busy for the lifetime of the firm.”

 

AN EMPHASIS ON LIVABILITY AND OPENNESS

KFA prides itself on listening closely to its clients, its own staff, governmental agencies, the project’s neighbors, even the project’s opponents.

“No one knows more about a neighborhood than the people who live there,” said Arnold. “Maybe the client or the neighborhood council has a good point. Most of the time, it makes the project better.”

Arnold recalled negotiating with the National Park Service on the conversion of a historic building to apartments. “They said the corridors were a character-defining feature that couldn’t be touched, but the walls, which were made of clay tile that would shatter in an earthquake, were not stacking,” he said. KFA proposed to first remove all the doors and finishes—the important architectural features—and then replace the walls to stack correctly while also making them earthquake resistant and reducing the overall seismic weight of the building. The last step: restoring the finishes to NPS standards. “We listened to them and found a solution that they could agree with,” said Arnold.   

The firm’s paramount design focus is livability, working outward from deep inside the building. “That’s where we start, from the inside,” said Arnold. “Buildings are not just materials and form for the sake of the architectural vision. If someone gives me a building that looks great from the outside but has living units that are incompatible with livability, that is unacceptable to us.”

Livability is especially important in affordable housing projects, said Arnold. “Units have to be laid out so that you can furnish them properly,” he said. “I’ve seen so many projects where there’s no clear place to put a couch or a TV.” There has to be plenty of light and air, too, he said. “I remember one project where the living unit was long and deep and it had one little window off to the side that was put there to make the building look better on the outside,” said Arnold. “We simply won’t do that.”

KFA’s projects are also marked by the way they open up to the surrounding community. “That entry to the neighborhood has to be there so people feel connected or included or seen,” said Bornstein. “That is the stuff we would fall on our sword for.” As for narrow courtyards with no views to the outside, or courtyards that are enclosed on four sides,

“We avoid them, especially in these times where light and air is so important,” said Arnold.

The mantra at KFA, said Bornstein, is to “keep reminding ourselves the building has to love the people who will live there.” That’s not to say aesthetic considerations aren’t important. But sometimes, beauty comes from their reflection of the people who live there. I think that’s where we do our best work.”

 

LAYING THE GROUNDWORK FOR FUTURE LEADERSHIP

Earlier this year, as the coronavirus pandemic took hold and seven of its projects were put on hold, the firm had to lay off several staff. Work has picked up in recent months, and all but one of the laid-off employees has been rehired, bringing the total to 75.

After 45 years in the trenches, Killefer said he remains optimistic about the firm’s future. “We’re doing larger and larger campuses, bigger and bigger projects,” he said. “There’s a lot of housing left to be built in Los Angeles.”

Four years ago, Killefer and Flammang put a succession plan in place—neither of their children went into architecture, although their son became a developer—promoting Bornstein, Arnold, and Jonathan Watts to Partner.

Watts joined the firm in 2015, bringing an outsider’s perspective to the existing team, while also affirming KFA’s geographical focus. “As architects working to make Los Angeles a better place, we concentrate on how we can design to benefit the community and the client at the same time,” said Watts. “Community design is at the heart of what we do, but we also understand the forces that housing developers face. Efficient, well-considered design benefits both sides of the equation.

“Because we know the many diverse communities of Los Angeles, we bring this design focus to bear in very specific ways,” said Watts. “There is no single repeatable solution, so we go looking for the unique solution for each project.”

 

KFA CULTURE: WHERE GENDER EQUITY, DIVERSITY, AND  ‘COLLABORATIVE AUTONOMY’ GUIDE THE WORKPLACE 

Earlier this year, KFA Partner Barbara Flammang was named a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects not only for her work in transforming LA’s historic core but also for her “inclusive management practices that have tenaciously advanced gender equity and diversity.”

“The most important thing we can do as leaders is to provide an environment where people can do their best work,” Flammang said. “You have to challenge people to believe in themselves. They need to know that they are in charge of their success. No one else is.”

KFA’s staff has been 50% female for more than 30 years. “Almost all of our associates are women,” she said. “Potential employees have been drawn to KFA because they have seen that this is a place where women have learned, been mentored, and acquired responsibility.” 

That’s what Lise Bornstein, AIA, experienced when she interviewed at KFA in 2001. “When I walked around the office, I saw women who were obviously leading projects and being heard,” she recalled. “That was it. I was going to be there.” She's now a Principal and Partner.

KFA is also notable for allowing staff members to test options for new roles within the company, a process Bornstein calls “collaborative autonomy.”

“‘Community’ is a thread that runs through everything we do,” said Bornstein, who handles all staff hiring.  One example: KFA's work on the Los Angeles LGBT Center, Anita May Rosenstein Campus, for which it received the AIALA Presidential Honoree Award in 2019.

Related Stories

Office Buildings | Mar 8, 2024

Conference room design for the hybrid era

Sam Griesgraber, Senior Interior Designer, BWBR, shares considerations for conference room design in the era of hybrid work.

Architects | Mar 8, 2024

98 architects elevated to AIA's College of Fellows in 2024

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) is elevating 96 member-architects and 2 non-member-architects to its College of Fellows, an honor awarded to architects who have made significant contributions to the profession. The fellowship program was developed to elevate architects who have achieved a standard of excellence in the profession and made a significant contribution to architecture and society on a national level. 

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Mar 7, 2024

Bjarke Ingels’ design for the Oakland A’s new Las Vegas ballpark resembles ‘a spherical armadillo’

Designed by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) in collaboration with HNTB, the new ballpark for the Oakland Athletics Major League Baseball team will be located on the Las Vegas Strip and offer panoramic views of the city skyline. The 33,000-capacity covered, climate-controlled stadium will sit on nine acres on Las Vegas Boulevard. 

Adaptive Reuse | Mar 7, 2024

3 key considerations when converting a warehouse to a laboratory

Does your warehouse facility fit the profile for a successful laboratory conversion that can demand higher rents and lower vacancy rates? Here are three important considerations to factor before proceeding. 

Shopping Centers | Mar 7, 2024

How shopping centers can foster strong community connections

In today's retail landscape, shopping centers are evolving beyond mere shopping destinations to become vibrant hubs of community life. Here are three strategies from Nadel Architecture + Planning for creating strong local connections. 

Market Data | Mar 6, 2024

Nonresidential construction spending slips 0.4% in January

National nonresidential construction spending decreased 0.4% in January, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors analysis of data published today by the U.S. Census Bureau. On a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, nonresidential spending totaled $1.190 trillion.

MFPRO+ Research | Mar 6, 2024

Top 10 trends in senior living facilities for 2024

The 65-and-over population is growing faster than any other age group. Architects, engineers, and contractors are coming up with creative senior housing solutions to better serve this burgeoning cohort. 

Architects | Mar 5, 2024

Riken Yamamoto wins 2024 Pritzker Architecture Prize

The Pritzker Architecture Prize announces Riken Yamamoto, of Yokohama, Japan, as the 2024 Laureate of the Pritzker Architecture Prize, the award that is regarded internationally as architecture’s highest honor.

Office Buildings | Mar 5, 2024

Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware

In Oak Brook, Ill., about 15 miles west of downtown Chicago, McDonald’s former corporate headquarters has been transformed into a modern office building for its new tenant, Ace Hardware. Now for the first time, Ace Hardware can bring 1,700 employees from three facilities under one roof.

Green | Mar 5, 2024

New York City’s Green Economy Action Plan aims for building decarbonization

New York City’s recently revealed Green Economy Action Plan includes the goals of the decarbonization of buildings and developing a renewable energy system. The ambitious plan includes enabling low-carbon alternatives in the transportation sector and boosting green industries, aiming to create more than 12,000 green economy apprenticeships by 2040.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category



AEC Tech

Lack of organizational readiness is biggest hurdle to artificial intelligence adoption

Managers of companies in the industrial sector, including construction, have bought the hype of artificial intelligence (AI) as a transformative technology, but their organizations are not ready to realize its promise, according to research from IFS, a global cloud enterprise software company. An IFS survey of 1,700 senior decision-makers found that 84% of executives anticipate massive organizational benefits from AI. 


Codes and Standards

Updated document details methods of testing fenestration for exterior walls

The Fenestration and Glazing Industry Alliance (FGIA) updated a document serving a recommended practice for determining test methodology for laboratory and field testing of exterior wall systems. The document pertains to products covered by an AAMA standard such as curtain walls, storefronts, window walls, and sloped glazing. AAMA 501-24, Methods of Test for Exterior Walls was last updated in 2015. 

halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021