919 Milwood Avenue, Venice Beach - Original 1924 Charm with a Frederick Fisher artist's studio, home office
In the historic Milwood District, in Venice Beach
919 Milwood is a wonderful beach cottage home and a detached artist studio designed by Frederick Fisher. It is a unique blending of easy beach charm, and a rare jewel of Venice Beach architecture.
919 Milwood is a two bedroom, one bath 816 square-foot bungalow built in 1924 and a 400 square-foot artist's studio designed by Frederick Fisher in 1986.
• The bungalow has all the charm of relaxed beach living on a quiet, wide, and sunny street, in the historic Milwood District. It's a cozy home with many of its original graces - the original clawfoot tub, a 1935 Wedgwood stove, and a standing brick fireplace.
• The studio, is a jewel of modern American architecture. It's a masterpiece of volumes and light. Its 400 square-feet are a light-filled and elemental celebration of true, and humanistic values. White walls and raw-wood beams and railing are lit by a daily show of captured sunlight making for a creative space of unique wonder.
919 Milwood is an opportunity to invest in a very special home and studio in a quiet and livable Venice Beach neighborhood.
Frederick Fisher's Wikipedia page gifts us this appraisal of the architect:
Frederick B. Fisher, AIA, FAAR, is an American architect whose professional practice is headquartered in Southern California. Frederick Fisher started his architecture firm in 1980 which partnered architects Joseph Coriaty and David Ross in 1995. Fisher is most noted for building seminal academic institutions, museums, and contemporary residential projects throughout the United States, Europe and Asia. His approach to architecture comes from a broad cultural and social perspective.[vague]
Fred currently serves as a member of the Board of Councilors for the USC School of Architecture. He chaired the Environmental Design Department at Otis College of Art & Design. In addition, he has held numerous visiting instructor posts including USC, Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Columbia University, Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc), and the Department of Architecture and Urban Design at UCLA.[citation needed]
He has served as the architect for several renowned cultural landmarks including the Annenberg Community Beach House in Santa Monica and the visitor's center of the Sunnylands Estate in Rancho Mirage, California.[1]
919 Milwood is a two bedroom, one bath 816 square-foot bungalow built in 1924 and a 400 square-foot artist's studio designed by Frederick Fisher in 1986.
• The bungalow has all the charm of relaxed beach living on a quiet, wide, and sunny street, in the historic Milwood District. It's a cozy home with many of its original graces - the original clawfoot tub, a 1935 Wedgwood stove, and a standing brick fireplace.
• The studio, is a jewel of modern American architecture. It's a masterpiece of volumes and light. Its 400 square-feet are a light-filled and elemental celebration of true, and humanistic values. White walls and raw-wood beams and railing are lit by a daily show of captured sunlight making for a creative space of unique wonder.
919 Milwood is an opportunity to invest in a very special home and studio in a quiet and livable Venice Beach neighborhood.
Frederick Fisher's Wikipedia page gifts us this appraisal of the architect:
Frederick B. Fisher, AIA, FAAR, is an American architect whose professional practice is headquartered in Southern California. Frederick Fisher started his architecture firm in 1980 which partnered architects Joseph Coriaty and David Ross in 1995. Fisher is most noted for building seminal academic institutions, museums, and contemporary residential projects throughout the United States, Europe and Asia. His approach to architecture comes from a broad cultural and social perspective.[vague]
Fred currently serves as a member of the Board of Councilors for the USC School of Architecture. He chaired the Environmental Design Department at Otis College of Art & Design. In addition, he has held numerous visiting instructor posts including USC, Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Columbia University, Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc), and the Department of Architecture and Urban Design at UCLA.[citation needed]
He has served as the architect for several renowned cultural landmarks including the Annenberg Community Beach House in Santa Monica and the visitor's center of the Sunnylands Estate in Rancho Mirage, California.[1]
919 Milwood Avenue
The 1924 Bungalow All the charm of an original Venice Beach Bungalow. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath
Vintage warmth and comfort: 1935 Wedgewood stove, claw-foot tub. Front and back yards! |
919 Milwood Avenue
Frederick Fisher's 1986 Studio A jewel of Venice Beach architecture
the studio, designed by Frederick Fisher, is 400 sql of airy delight, with cathedral ceilings. Beautiful indoor-outdoor environment |
A view from above
8 little blocks to the Venice Beach Boardwalk and the beach...
Walking distance to Abbott Kinney, and the restaurants and shops, as well as walking distance to Lincoln Blvd, and coffee shops and supermarkets. |
919 Milwood AvenueThe Beach Bungalow
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919 Milwood AvenueFrederick Fisher's
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The Studio was built in 1986 it is:
400 sql It has: beautiful light-filled cathedral ceilings a loft area a sink area and bath It is a jewel of LA architecture, a one-of-a-kind home-work office / studio |