In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (2024)

When Serban and Laura Gudino-Penciu purchased a 900-square-foot bungalow in Eagle Rock in 2004, it was just the two of them.

The Pencius’ 1924 house is on a charming street filled with 100-year-old homes and walking distance to stores and restaurants. But after the birth of their two sons, who are now 12 and 15, and Serban’s transition to entrepreneurial freelance work from a corporate job, the family of four needed more live-work space.

“As the kids were getting older, we wanted another bathroom and some communal space, but also space for them to lounge around and not have us hover over them,” says Laura, who works in sales for a pharmaceutical company. “But we didn’t want so much space that we wouldn’t be around each other. We didn’t want to disconnect.”

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (1)

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In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (2)

A one-car garage in Eagle Rock before its conversion into an ADU.

(Alex Solbes)

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In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (3)

Today, the converted garage opens to the pool area and includes attached storage at left.

Though laws have made obtaining permits to build accessory dwelling units easier in California, the couple was shocked at bids of more than $150,000 when they looked into converting their one-car garage into an ADU in 2020.

Architect Alex Solbes, who offered a bid, isn’t surprised. “I’ve had a lot of interest in ADUs, and people have this perception that they are less costly, and they really aren’t,” he says. “Construction costs went up during the pandemic, and they are still high. I think it’s the new normal. People need to realize they are still building a structure.”

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (4)

Serban and Laura Gudino-Penciu’s 1924 bungalow before it was remodeled and expanded.

(Alex Solbes)

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (5)

Bifolding doors open to allow a greater connection to the outdoors.

So the couple decided to do what many people with starter homes do: sell their home and move to a larger one in their neighborhood.

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But their house hunt didn’t work out quite as planned.

The neighborhood had changed dramatically in the 15 years since they purchased their two-bedroom home for $385,000. “It’s unattainable,” Serban says of finding a place in Los Angeles, where the average price for a typical home is about $973,000, according to Zillow. “We were in a situation where we would have to spend a million dollars on a house that needed work.”

“We kept getting outbid and priced out,” adds Laura. “We decided to go back to the drawing board.”

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (6)

The traditional front of the bungalow contrasts with the contemporary addition in back.

(James Juarez / For The Times)

To help them expand their small floor plan and convert the garage into an ADU, the couple hired Solbes of AOS Works: Architecture & Design, who understood their desire to brighten the dark interiors and create family and work space.

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“Natural light was so important to us,” Laura says. “That was one of our most important parameters.”

Solbes ultimately added 740 square feet to the main house, including a new master bedroom with a bathroom and walk-in closet, laundry, family room, office and powder room — nearly doubling the home’s floor plan in the process. (The couple also remodeled the kitchen, living room, dining room, two bedrooms and bathroom to make it more family friendly.)

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (8)

The family room just beyond the kitchen features full-height cabinetry on two sides with pocket doors that lead to an office and powder room.

Behind the house, the garage next to the existing swimming pool was converted into a 250-square-foot ADU so that Serban would have a place to work. The tiny ADU features a kitchen with apartment-size appliances (but no dishwasher), a bathroom and doors that open to the pool area, which make the space feel larger than it is.

To combat the loss of the garage, Solbes designed a storage area that is attached to the ADU and is accessible from the outside. Serban admits it was tough to give up the garage, even though there is room to park one car in the driveway. “We still haven’t gotten rid of everything that was in there,” he says.

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While the front of the house fits in with the other bungalows on the street, Solbes designed the back to be more contemporary, achieving the light and space the family wanted.

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (9)

The 250-square foot studio ADU includes a kitchen and bath.

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (10)
In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (11)

High windows bring in light and provide privacy, left. The bathroom of the ADU, right.

“The addition allowed us to have much higher ceiling heights and bi-folding doors that completely open up to allow a greater connection between the family room and the outdoors,” Solbes says.

In what the architect describes as “a shift,” the iconic California bungalow in front stretches into an entirely new form in the back. “There’s an evolution of form,” he says. “If you see these three masses, they are interlocking, but the family room’s high ceilings enhance the connection to the yard and allow light in — the traditional house in front challenges that.” The primary bedroom also opens out onto a deck further emphasizing the connection to the backyard.

As longtime residents of Eagle Rock, the couple felt it was important to preserve the front of their house and the character of their street. “We didn’t want a McMansion,” says Laura. “We just wanted a little more space and a home that fits in with the existing structures.”

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In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (12)

The cabinets in the family room and kitchen were finished with an environmentally friendly reconstituted wood veneer.

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (13)

The fireplace tile in the living room is representative of the bungalow’s roots.

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (14)

Bifolding doors in the master bedroom emphasizes the connection to the outdoors.

Thanks to the ADU’s smooth concrete floors, the family could easily use the structure as a pool house. But now that Serban runs his digital marketing company and a real estate investment firm from home, he uses the ADU as an office.

“I am always on calls and some of the videos are loud so I transitioned to the ADU,” he says. “It opens up, so we can do things as a family anytime we want, but most of the time, it’s my office. I can work at 1 in the morning and not wake anyone up.”

Sometimes, Laura says with a laugh, she has to text him “Dinner is ready.”

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In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (15)

“Sometimes, I have to text him, ‘Dinner is ready,’” Laura laughs.

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Although Solbes and landscape designer Roy Altaras found it challenging to fit everything — including a new deck and firepit — on a standard-size lot with a swimming pool, the family is thrilled with the thoughtful transformation.

“We wanted a working backyard,” Laura says of their indoor-outdoor lifestyle. “We love the extra usable space. We spend a lot of time outdoors and the ADU falls in line with that. Sometimes, we watch games in the ADU. Or we can turn on the firepit. I hosted my book club on the deck recently. It’s all easily accessible from the main house.”

Omega Contractors finished the project in 2022 after 14 months of work. The cost of the ADU, not including appliances, fixtures and accessories (or the remodel to the main house) was about $175,000.

When asked how the addition and ADU have affected their family, Laura says it has “changed how we live.”

“The kids can have friends over, and we can hear what’s happening but give them their space,” Serban says. “They can have fun without feeling like their parents always watch them. It’s hard to do that in a small house.”

Laura agrees.

“This is now our forever home,” she says. “We have everything we need.”

In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (16)

The additions emphasize a connection to the outdoors.

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Three rentals and an ADU? A narrow two-story in Venice makes the case for building up

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Millennials and Gen Z can’t afford homes. Is this prefab ADU a solution?

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She wanted more than a guesthouse for her sister. This tiny ADU in L.A. delivers

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In L.A.’s tough housing market, cramped family adds ADU rather than move (2024)

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