
Owner, architect pushed boundaries to create an intriguing showplace.
A motorcycle legend and a brash architect. Two renegades, one house.
That pairing promises singularity — precisely what’s rendered in the Midcentury Modern Max Bubeck residence in Glassell Park, offered at $1.395 million.
First, the two renegades.
The owner Max Bubeck spent his youth drag racing Indian bikes, his fingernails black from devising novel retrofits. In 1948, Bubeck set aspeed record of 135.58 mph on his “Chout,” an Indian Chief and Scout hybrid. He was a regular (1937-79) at the Greenhorn Enduro race in mountains and deserts near Bakersfield.
Thrice-married
Bubeck had this quick and honest answer when asked about his
imaginative fixes and thirst for speed: “I didn’t think it could be
done, so I did it.”
The architect Allyn
E. Morris built his name by bending a 1950s aesthetic to his whims. The
1956 single-family home he designed for his good friend Bubeck was his
first. Morris never gained significant traction as a Los Angeles
architect, but he left behind gems, including his 1957 Silver Lake
residence and studio, a steel-and-glass wonder that seems to emanate
from the hillside.
Morris was king of the cantilever. The architect craved the horizontal line and seemingly tried to stretch it to infinity — most evident in his 1961 Aldama Apartments in Highland Park.
The 1,950-square-foot Verdugo View Drive home Morris
renders the lean architecture of the era but applies a sculptor’s
sensibility. He triplestacks his plan, extending cantilevers in all
directions to a modest degree (for Morris), the entrance set to the
left.
And about that
entrance — it’s ageometric vortex, funneling attention within, and away
from all that horizontality. Rose-tinted block walls flank the deeply
inset door, enveloped within more vertical planes. The cascading steps
are also blushed pink, and mirror the network of cantilevers above.
Double-stacked
clerestory windows rise just inside, bordered by Morris’ signature
red-painted steel beams. An eight-sided atrium soars behind the
block-built fireplace. The hearth’s threequarter circle base is the
single arced element in the entire design, as if Morris contends: Yes, I
can create those as well, but I’ll give you only one.
Morris
was not interested in solving interior space puzzles. Rather, he was
wholly fixed on creating them. He created complex, interlocked layouts
that never confused, only intrigued.
Ajungle
gym wall of blocks, airily set in contrasted placement, leads to the
upper den. “I was a little monkey of a kid, and I climbed all over that
house,” said Bubeck’s son, Lon, who co-owns Flying Cloud Yachts in Long
Beach. “Max was very hands-on when the house was built; he acted as
general contractor.”
This
is a party house, strewn with light. Inner and outer space is muddied
by the living room’s sliding glass that opens to the square pool and
spa. A suite of three smallish bedrooms line the home’s east side,
flanked by decks.
As
if to signal the home’s iconoclast design, Morris faced his chimney with
illuminated glass, which extends through the roof to the flue. Current
owners say they can spot the beam from the 134 and 2 freeways.
Abeacon of uncommon design. Robert Kallick of Los Feliz Brokerage is the listing agent.
hotproperty@latimes.com
