STUDIO SUTURA

 ABOUT



Studio Sutura is a Los Angeles–based architecture practice that develops architecture by working within the systems that shape what can be buit.

The name Sutura refers to a joint: a deliberate act of joining separate systems into a working whole. This idea frames how we approach architecture—not as isolated form-making, but as a process of alignment across regulation, construction, and use.





P001
Cooking and Smoking Architecture2023

P002
Kuka Wabi-Sabi Architecture & Fabrication 2023

P003Temple StudiosArchitecture2021
P004Robotic Timber JointFabrication2023
P0052.5D Research 2023
P006Deliberation and Detail Research2023
P007Small Lots, Big Impacts Research 2023


























P005  2.5D

Location: Los Angeles 
Program: Ascent
Status: Concept 
Year: 2023


2.5D examines the idea of flatness through an enlarged façade (or wall) and uses the bas relief technique to explore depth. This method involves carving behind or below protruding figures to create a sense of depth, producing distinct shadows. When used in architecture, this method creates a perception of stacked or separate volumes due to the deep, cut-away shadows.

Discussions on the wall and its role as an autonomous agent of design have been extensive. The conventional approach assumes that the room exists as an abstract unit of space for people, with the walls built to fit this preconceived unit. However, Andrew Holder offers an alternative perspective, suggesting that a room can also be understood by starting with the walls. This unique viewpoint presents architecture as a collection of densely packed objects, shedding new light on the subject.

In both traditional and contemporary Japanese culture, the surface holds significant value. Whether it is the ritual placement of rocks in sacred Shinto sites or the elaborate wrapping of everyday items, there is a belief that the appearance of something reflects its content. This emphasis on the surface also extends to the presentation of kaiseki meals and the presence of uniformed greeters in department stores. In this way of thinking, the two-dimensional holds great significance as it imbues meaning onto whatever it encompasses, merging dimensionality and content.

The façade occupies the bottom half of the existing Angels Knoll Park and takes on an added program of ascent from ground level to the plaza. The protruding figures that emerge are fragments of the lost Victorian houses that once existed on Bunker Hill. These now erased houses are flattened, resulting in a thin sculptural relief that vaguely resembles the fragments.




Process

Output image samples from  the process of Scanography.



Drawings
 




Models



© Studio Sutura  —  2024