Architect Diego Cano-Lasso has designed Cano House, a contemporary residence that reinterprets the post-and-beam architecture built in Los Angeles in the mid-20th century.

The house, integrated into the terrain, features a cantilevered structure and form, merging the architecture with the landscape and reinforcing their connection. The resulting lightweight structure evokes modern architecture.

Diego Cano-Lasso's design for Cano House features a continuous glazed envelope with pivoting doors that frame and refine the various city views. The solid side facades are clad in Zellige tile murals designed and built by Doctor Cato (Alejandro Cano).

The lightweight, cantilevered structure is composed of a sequence of slender steel pillars supporting wooden beams that appear to extend beyond the house towards the horizon. Ceramic gutters imported from Spain have been reused, and the ceiling lights were sourced from the Spanish lighting workshop Luz Mixtura.

Cano House by Diego Cano-Lasso. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

Cano House by Diego Cano-Lasso. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

Project description by Diego Cano-Lasso

Cano House de Diego Cano-Lasso es una reinterpretación contemporánea de la arquitectura moderna de mediados del siglo XX tipo post-and-beam en Los Ángeles, California. El objetivo fue crear una estructura ligera que se proyectara en voladizo sobre la ladera y se extendiera hacia la ciudad. El resultado es una secuencia de esbeltos pilares de acero que sostienen vigas de madera de 42 pies de longitud, las cuales parecen prolongarse más allá de la vivienda hacia el horizonte. La envolvente está compuesta por un sistema continuo de acristalamiento con puertas pivotantes que enmarcan y reflejan distintas vistas de la ciudad mientras se abren y cierran. La casa está integrada en el terreno, requiriendo la excavación y retirada de más de 50 camiones de tierra. Su estructura y forma en voladizo contribuyen a que la arquitectura se funda con el paisaje, minimizando su impacto visual sobre la ciudad. La ligereza estructural de la vivienda evoca una característica definitoria de la arquitectura moderna de mediados de siglo, una aproximación que, aunque común en aquella época, rara vez se aplica en la construcción residencial contemporánea.

Cano House por Diego Cano-Lasso. Fotografía por Iwan Baan.
Cano House by Diego Cano-Lasso. Photograph by Iwan Baan.

La construcción se vio interrumpida por la pandemia de COVID-19. Cuando las obras se reanudaron, la escasez de mano de obra y el aumento de los costes de los materiales transformaron la industria de la construcción, obligando al desarrollo de soluciones creativas de autoconstrucción. Las fachadas laterales son las únicas superficies sólidas y están revestidas con murales de azulejos Zellige diseñados y construidos por Doctor Cato (Alejandro Cano). Se reutilizaron canalones cerámicos importados de España, transformando algunas piezas en luminarias personalizadas. Las manillas de las puertas fueron elaboradas a partir de piedras recogidas en las playas del sur de California, mientras que las lámparas de techo se obtuvieron del taller de luminarias español Luz Mixtura. Las piedras más grandes extraídas durante la excavación se incorporaron al espacio, fortaleciendo la conexión entre la arquitectura y su emplazamiento. Doctor Cato también diseñó y fabricó numerosos muebles inspirados en la obra de Frank Lloyd Wright y R. M. Schindler.

More information

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Architects
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Project team
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Alejandro Cano, Belén Rodero.

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Collaborators
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Arts and Crafts.- Alejandro Cano (Doctor Cato).
Structural Engineer.- José García.

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Area
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209 sqm.

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Dates
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Completion.- 2025.

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Location
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Mount Washington, Los Ángeles, California, United States.

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Manufactures
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Ceiling lights.- Luz Mixtura.
Tiles.- Zellige, designed and built by Doctor Cato (Alejandro Cano).

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Photography
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Iwan Baan, Open Space.

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Diego Cano-Lasso is a Spanish architect whose education and professional trajectory span Madrid, London, and Los Angeles. Raised in a family of architects, he discovered his vocation at an early age through close exposure to the work of his grandfather, Julio Cano Lasso, and the architectural practice of his father and uncles. These formative experiences instilled in him an understanding of architecture as a discipline rooted in social responsibility and a deep engagement with the built and natural environment.

He began his architectural studies in Madrid before continuing his education in London, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in Architecture from the University of Greenwich in 2010. He later moved to Los Angeles to pursue a Master of Architecture at SCI-Arc, graduating in 2012. That same year, he joined selgascano, becoming a partner and leading the firm's Los Angeles office until 2020. Earlier in his career, he completed professional internships at Richard Rogers Partnership in London and FCA Architecture in Naples. Between 2021 and 2022, he served as Director of Design and Production at the Royal Glass Factory of Segovia.

Throughout his career, Cano-Lasso has pursued a broad international perspective, developing an architectural approach centered on human experience and the relationship between people and nature. He views architecture as a service capable of enriching everyday life through responses tailored to the specific conditions of each site, context, and client.

He has worked with public and private institutions including the City of Los Angeles, the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), the Tigray Regional Government, the Institute for Field Research (IFR), and numerous private clients. His work has received international recognition and has been widely published in leading architectural and design media.

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Published on: June 8, 2026
Cite:
metalocus, SARA GENT
"Structural lightness. Cano House by Diego Cano-Lasso" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/structural-lightness-cano-house-diego-cano-lasso> ISSN 1139-6415
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