WDC / LA NO. 01  ·  Brentwood

The Brentwood Light Study

The Brentwood Light Study — whole-home renovation, We Do Construction
1968 ranch returned to its original relationship with canyon light · Brentwood · whole-home renovation

Scope

Whole-Home Renovation

Location

Brentwood, Los Angeles

Area

3,400 sq ft · single story

Timeline

11 months

Completed

November 2025

Investment

$1.6M – $1.9M

3,400 sfWhole-Home
Renovation
1968Original Year
Mid-Century Ranch
11Months
Kickoff to Move-In
$1.6–1.9MInvestment
All-In
I · The Brief

A 1968 ranch, returned to canyon light

The home had been remodeled three times across five decades — each renovation adding a wall, a soffit, or a partition where the original mid-century plan had wanted none. By 2024, the canyon at the back of the lot was visible only from one window in the kitchen. The homeowners — a screenwriter and a landscape architect with three children — came to WDC with one operating principle: take down the additions, restore the original spatial reading, and let the canyon back into the house. Not a restoration project, but a clarification.

The house had been remodeled three times and each time it lost more light. The work wasn’t to remodel a fourth time. It was to undo what didn’t belong, and then let the original architecture do its job.— On The Brentwood Light Study

II · The Approach

Subtract first, then refine

The design moved in two phases. First, removal of the accretions: a 1990s kitchen wall that closed the rear elevation, a 1980s den partition, a dropped soffit, and two non-load-bearing walls between the entry and the dining room. Then, a precise set of additions calibrated to the original 1968 vocabulary.

01 · Structural Reorganization

A single 32-foot engineered beam replaced the rear-elevation wall, opening the kitchen, dining, and living rooms to a continuous reading across the canyon side. Two additional micro-beams cleared the entry sequence. The original roof plane was preserved; the framing was rebuilt around it.

02 · Full-Height Glazing

The 32-foot rear opening was glazed with thermal-broken steel-framed sliding doors — a Fleetwood Series 3070 system with a 10-foot center pocket. The glazing reaches floor to ceiling. The eye reads canyon, not frame.

03 · Material Restraint

Two primary materials throughout the public rooms: rift-sawn white oak for cabinetry, ceilings, and stair treads; board-formed concrete for the fireplace mass and the kitchen island base. Plaster walls, no paint changes between rooms. Floor: single material from front door to canyon — wide-plank European white oak.

04 · Canyon Restoration

The rear yard was simplified: stone terrace replaced lawn, native planting replaced ornamentals, the original pool was preserved but reshaped to a quieter geometry. The landscape architect-owner specified planting. WDC executed hardscape and the connection grading from house to terrace.

The 32-foot beam was the entire project, structurally and architecturally. Everything else was a detail in service of it.— Jacob Bachar, WDC

III · Materials

The material palette

Floor

Wide-plank European white oak · single material throughout

Walls

Smooth-troweled plaster · no paint transitions · matte finish

Cabinetry

Rift-sawn white oak · finger-pull · soft-close

Stone

Board-formed concrete · honed Calacatta island

Glazing

Fleetwood 3070 thermal-broken steel · 32-foot opening

Outdoor

Stone terrace · native planting · reshaped pool

IV · Schedule

Eleven months, end to end

5 wkProgramming
+ Geotech
12 wkDesign + CDs
+ Engineering
8 wkPermit
+ Bidding
22 wkConstruction
Demo to Punch
2 wkPunch
+ Move-In
V · Credits

Trades + collaborators

Design-Build Lead

We Do Construction · Jacob Bachar

Architectural Authorship

In-house · WDC Studio

Structural Engineering

Local structural · 32-ft engineered beam + lateral system

Landscape

Owner-led · landscape architect

Millwork

Southern California millwork shop · rift white oak

Glazing

Fleetwood Windows + Doors · Series 3070

Whole-Home Renovation

Considering a structural restoration of a mid-century home?

A two-week feasibility review covers structural scope, glazing strategy, material palette, and a realistic 9–14 month schedule. Mid-century homes reward subtraction. The first decision is what comes down.

Schedule a Consultation

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How did you remove a 32-foot load-bearing wall?
A single engineered beam — designed by a local structural engineer, fabricated off-site, set in three pieces on temporary cribbing during a controlled demolition. The full operation took four days. The roof plane never moved more than 1/8 inch during the transfer.
Did the family stay in the home during construction?
No. An 11-month whole-home renovation with structural scope is not a stay-in-place project. The family relocated to a Brentwood short-term lease for the duration.
Why a single material for cabinetry and ceilings?
Mid-century homes — particularly 1960s Brentwood ranches — were built around a single primary wood. Continuing rift white oak across cabinetry, ceilings, and stair treads reads as restoration of the original logic rather than as a contemporary intervention.
What did the glazing system cost?
The 32-foot Fleetwood 3070 system, including the 10-foot center pocket slider and the structural transitions on each side, was approximately $185K installed. The single largest line item on the project.
Could the original pool have been removed?
It was considered. The 1968 pool, reshaped to a quieter geometry and re-coped with matching stone, anchored the rear composition more strongly than a removal would have.
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