
It isn’t usually {that a} traditional, midcentury fashionable property of this dimension and stature hits the market.
On this case, it’s as soon as in a technology—the Richard H. Keating Home, constructed by famed architect Edward H. Fickett, was final bought in 2002.
The San Marino, CA, property was just lately listed for $8.58 million.
In-built 1962, the six-bedroom, six-bath, single-story residence sits on a gated, 1.2-acre lot and features a tennis court docket, heated pool and spa, and a exceptional pool home.

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The flat lot is exquisitely landscaped by Edward Koizumi, with water options; Japanese constructions; wide-open lawns; and personal, intimate sanctuary gardens and meditation area, together with an inside atrium.

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Modernist strategies
The inside of the 5,670-square-foot fundamental residence options traditional components of California modernism, equivalent to open-beamed, vaulted ceilings supported by brick and glass partitions, with clerestory home windows that usher in an abundance of pure mild.

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The midcentury fashionable flooring plans have been the inspiration for the model that’s so common at this time. The nice room flows into the kitchen that extends nearly seamlessly—by means of partitions of glass and sliders—to the impeccably designed outside areas. The format is an ideal instance of what renovators and owners alike have valued for many years since.

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The bedrooms abound with extra pure mild and have a number of home windows and sliders that open to patios. One of many bedrooms has been transformed to a yoga sanctuary.

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The house can be prepared for enterprise, with a two-room workplace and convention suite.

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The one-bedroom, one-bath pool home, with a kitchenette, is not any afterthought. It’s rife with Fickett signatures, together with its distinctive roofline and multi-planed, triangular panels, boarded by clerestory home windows above partitions of glass and brick.

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Fickett, a Los Angeles native who died in 1999 at age 83, was a housing marketing consultant to the federal authorities and structure advisor to President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Along with designing greater than 40,000 post-war tract homes, he created plans for quite a few, iconic Southern California landmarks, together with Dodger Stadium, Edwards Air Pressure Base, and the Port of Los Angeles Passenger and Cargo Terminals.