Two of Many for Morphosis

Often honored in the P/A Awards program, Morphosis was recognized in 1987 for two very different projects in the Los Angeles area.

1 MIN READ
Cancer Center Axonometric Plan

Courtesy Morphosis Architects

Cancer Center Axonometric Plan

1987: One P/A Award, One Citation

Los Angeles–area firm Morphosis Architects began winning P/A Awards in 1977 and has been recognized in the program 25 times since. In 1987, it was honored for two projects serving the public in divergent ways. An award went to the Kate Mantilini restaurant in Beverly Hills, Calif., and a citation to the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the Cedars-Sinai medical complex (associate architects for the latter were Gruen Associates).

The restaurant was conceived as a freestanding structure on Wilshire Boulevard, a sophisticated embodiment of the “roadside steakhouse” that was requested by the client. The cancer center was an underground addition wedged into an existing medical complex, an outpatient facility that responded to then-emerging methods of treatment. In both cases, the architects tailored distinctive environments to specific kinds of users.

Both projects featured daylight flooding central spaces from above—the only source of it for the cancer center, which burrowed two levels below grade. Both were more restrained than much of the contemporary work by Morphosis and its Southern California contemporaries, displaying a rigorously modular order—imposed in the case of the restaurant by its reuse of a former bank building. In both designs, this regularity is countered by bold visual incidents: a sculptural assemblage reaching for the light in the cancer center; a boxing-ring mural and a skylit model of the solar system in the restaurant.Kate Mantilini still offers an appealing destination for the area’s celebrities, while continuing to welcome a broader public. The cancer center, succumbing to the more rapidly evolving demands of medical treatment, is no longer there.

1987 P/A Awards Jury
Joe Berridge
Bernardo Fort-Brescia, FAIA
Thomas S. Hines
George Hoover, FAIA
Ricardo Legorreta, AIA
Vivian E. Loftness, FAIA
George M. Notter Jr., FAIA
John Templer

About the Author

John Morris Dixon

An architecture graduate of MIT, John Morris Dixon, FAIA, left the drafting board in 1960 for architectural journalism, eventually becoming editor-in-chief of Progressive Architecture (P/A) from 1972 to 1996. He has chaired the AIA’s national Committee on Design, on which he remains active, and is involved in preservation of modern architecture as a board member of Docomomo New York/Tri-State. He continues to write and edit for a variety of publications, in print and online.

No recommended contents to display.

Upcoming Events

  • Future Place

    Irving, TX

    Register Now
  • Archtober Festival: Shared Spaces

    New York City, NY

    Register Now
  • Snag early-bird pricing to Multifamily Executive Conference

    Newport Beach, CA

    Register Now
All Events