Built in 1955, and fully restored in 2014, House Friedman was designed
by internationally-trained architect Frederic Lasserre, founder of the
UBC School of Architecture. Situated near the university, just outside
the city of Vancouver limits, the house combines a modernist aesthetic
with a distinctively West Coast Modern ethos. Distinguished by its
spatial complexity, and by its seamless relationship to the landscape
design of Cornelia Oberlander, the house asserts at once its adherence
to global modernism while asserting a local aesthetic that has come to
be identified as West Coast Modernism. Architect Lasserre, whose early
career was associated with Berthold Lubetkin, and landscaper Oberlander,
student of Gropius, together produced an iconic design for modern living
featuring an open plan, generous glazing, and a subtle flow between the
house and garden. The future of the house was threatened by the
exorbitant land values in Vancouver, where the price of property often
trumps architectural value; however, a national effort to save the house
was successful, and the house remains as a testimony to those who value
modernist architecture's special place in the West Coast ethos.