MANUELA AT HAUSER WIRTh

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DOWNTOWN ARTS DISTRICT, 2019

PROJECT
Manuela is a farm to table restaurant inside the Hauser & Wirth gallery in the Arts District of Downtown Los Angeles.

Angel City Lumber salvaged trees from Griffith Park, Los Feliz, Hollywood and Pasadena to fabricate a variety of elements for Manuela. Coast Redwood beams for a raised garden, Deodar Cedar timber benches for the open-air courtyard and large Deodar Cedar planters all unite to create a natural oasis amidst the restaurant’s urban surroundings.

PLANTER BOXES
Manuela restaurant Executive Chef Kris Tominaga has an ethos: celebrate seasonal ingredients sourced from the best farms and producers in Southern California. When Tominaga needed planter boxes built to grow ingredients he turned to urban lumber. We sourced Coast Redwood logs from Los Angeles Recreation and Parks that would otherwise have been sent to the dumps. We cut, dried and milled those trees into sustainable, locally sourced 4’ x 6’ timbers before handing the lumber to Brightview Landscaping for box assembly.

Project Services
Design Development
Fabrication 

Installation

Project Management

Chain of Custody 
Custom Milling

Products
Cladding
Log Benches

Species & Source
Deodar Cedar: Hollywood, Mar Vista, Ontario
Coast Redwood: Griffith Park


Accreditation
Certified LEED Silver

Project Team
Studio MLA Landscape Architect
Brightview Landscaping

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COAST REDWOOD
It’s been a tragic relationship between Manifest Destiny and the mighty Coast Redwoods and Giant Sequoias. Early settlers decimated old growth forests who unscrupulously cut down the giants for decades. Coast Redwood is almost perfect.  Impossibly red (deep crimson with wood finish), Coast Redwood’s texture and smell may even upstage its beauty. Its velvety latewood invites the touch, and it smells like sweet nutmeg when cut.  The wood is bug and rot resistant, void of pitch and resin, lightweight and strong--perfect for exterior use. The trouble is, it’s most happy in its native Northern California where coastal clouds and mist make for a much different climate than Southern California. Its quick initial growth and its perception as unmistakably Californian have caused folks in Los Angeles to plant them without considering its needs. It’s a sad sight to see a Coast Redwood struggle in the arid, Mediterranean climate of LA. Tree selection leaves a lot to be desired moving forward with Urban Lumber and urban planning. In the meantime, we are doing our best to utilize as much of this gorgeous, California wood as we can.