Work to convert the former Westside Pavilion Macy's department store in West Los Angeles to a mixed-use commercial campus recently completed. The development repurposes about 240,000 sf of shuttered retail space into an open, creative office campus with new commercial leasing opportunities.
“Adaptive reuse of the former Westside Pavilion Macy’s preserves an urban fabric that a generation of Angelenos associate with the memories of time spent with family and friends at the mall,” said Sejal Sonani, principal and managing director at HLW, which provided architecture, interior design, and landscape architecture services. “West End is also an impressive case study on repurposing underperforming and abandoned malls throughout the country.”
Located next to the former Westside Pavilion that was transformed into a 584,000 sf Google office campus, the development bolsters a new transit-oriented job center near the Westwood/Rancho Park Expo light rail station. The project included seismic upgrades, a glass curtain wall system, extensive landscaped courtyard areas, and a new 1,000-car parking structure.
While maintaining the architectural style and integrity of the existing structure, the design divided the building into two sections with a 52-foot-wide courtyard extending north to south to the parking structure, adding open lobbies and generous balconies to connect the two halves, and creating a seamless indoor-outdoor connection. The ground plane was pushed down one level below the street, creating a light-filled courtyard at the lower plaza level. The building’s façade, previously sealed to the exterior, was retrofitted with floor-to-ceiling glass furthering the visual connection between the interiors and the property’s surroundings.
“Boasting an abundance of outdoor space, better integration of the building into the urban fabric, and adding to the pedestrian-friendly character of the rapidly changing neighborhood, West End has been transformed and blended into the infrastructure of Greater Los Angeles, incorporating wellness and biophilic design elements into the site for the first time in its history,” the release says. “Once leased, West End's new tenant(s) will enjoy a proximity to places to work, shop, and dine, as well as the adjacent Google campus.”
On the building team:
Owner and/or developer: GPI Companies
Design architect: HLW
Architect of record: HLW
MEP engineer: AMA Consulting Engineers
Structural engineer: Saiful Bouquet
General contractor/construction manager: Del Amo Construction
Related Stories
Mixed-Use | Mar 11, 2019
Podcast: Sterling Bay’s Andy Gloor discusses Chicago’s grandiose Lincoln Yards Plan
Lincoln Yards is Sterling Bay’s ambitious riverfront development of formerly industrial land between Bucktown and Lincoln Park.
Mixed-Use | Feb 21, 2019
An R&D-oriented innovation district is taking shape in the heart of Durham, N.C.
Its buildout has included converting old tobacco warehouses into offices and labs.
Mixed-Use | Feb 19, 2019
Sunset Library in Brooklyn will be capped with 50 affordable residences
Magnusson Architecture and Planning is designing the facility.
Mixed-Use | Feb 18, 2019
Seaport World Trade Center will offer Bostonians 737,000 sf of waterfront mixed-use space
Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects is designing the project.
Mixed-Use | Jan 22, 2019
Mixed-use skyscraper rises in the heart of metropolitan Tokyo
Pickard Chilton designed the building.
Mixed-Use | Jan 4, 2019
Grenoble, France’s new mixed-use building has the skin of a python
A Prada bag inspired the design.
Mixed-Use | Jan 2, 2019
Goettsch Partners’ and Lead8’s mixed-use complex begins construction in Changchun, China
The complex includes a 980-foot tower.
Mixed-Use | Dec 14, 2018
Schmidt Hammer Lassen’s first U.S. project breaks ground in Detroit
The mixed-use development will connect some of Detroit’s key public spaces.
Mixed-Use | Dec 10, 2018
Luxury residential development completes in downtown Charleston
JE Dunn was the general contractor for the project and The Preston Partnership is the architect of record.
Mixed-Use | Nov 7, 2018
53-story L.A. tower has a series of 12 cantilevered pools
Arquitectonica is designing the building.