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A family's journey to inner space
A cramped bungalow becomes a 5,000-square- foot oasis
with plenty of elbow room for all.
By Kathy Price-Robinson, Special to The Times
Photo Album

The first thing you notice about Janet Mitsui Brown's remodeled Mar Vista
home is its sense of balance, harmony and consistency.
The slate on the fence posts is repeated on the chimney, the front steps
and into the foyer. The red-toned wood of the double front doors appears
again in the eaves and around the windows. The lanterns flanking the fence
posts and porch unify its design, a combination of Asian and Craftsman
features.
But once you enter the grand foyer, the 5,000-square-foot, two-story house
reveals itself as a series of distinct spaces designed for the four individuals
who live there: Janet; her husband, Roger Brown; their teenage daughter,
Tani; and Janet's mother, Akiko Mitsui.
"I wanted the house to be a reflection of our family," said
Janet, an author, illustrator and producer, as well as a practitioner
of the ancient Chinese art of placement, feng shui. To achieve that, each
member has his or her "own place."
For her needs, Janet created an office at the front of the house overlooking
the garden, plus a media room that opens to her office as well as to the
living room and dining room.
When the media room is used for business, sliding opaque glass doors separate
it from the family areas. When used for family time, it's closed off from
the office.
Roger, an actor known for his role as Deputy Chief Joe Noland on the 2000-04
CBS series "The District," ended up with the grand entryway
he wanted and a sense of security in the home, provided in part by the
artful iron fence, painted to resemble wood, that surrounds the lot.
At the back of the lot is a workshop-office that Roger has dubbed "Man's
World" no women allowed. Even this reporter was barred.
"The dogs can leave their bones on the floor," he said, "and
no one's going to move them."
He has his own bathroom there and will soon add a steam shower.
Females are allowed, though, on the adjacent back patio, where the family
entertains often around a stone fire pit and a Japanese grill embedded
into a slate-covered table that Roger built. He finds the patio particularly
appealing.
"There's fire, there's meat," he said.
The couple's daughter, a June high school graduate leaving soon for Princeton
University, has a cozy bedroom on the second floor. Her mother purposely
picked the north side of the house to give the room the softest natural
light and a relaxed atmosphere but added a skylight in the high ceiling
to keep the room from getting gloomy.
"When my friends come over," Tani said, "they don't want
to leave."
Tani's influence is felt in the foyer, where two stained-glass pieces
she crafted one depicting a Buddha, another a bonsai tree
hang beneath a skylight.
The home's fourth resident, Akiko Mitsui, has her domain at the rear of
the house, with a bedroom and bathroom adjacent to a family room (there
is a second family room upstairs), plus a secondary kitchen that serves
her needs and is handy to the patio.
Janet also gave her mom her own laundry area, she said, to "maintain
harmony."
Although the remodel wasn't finished until 2003, the couple had been planning
it since they bought the house in 1997 for $286,000. Then, the house was
a 1,200-square-foot postwar bungalow on a nearly quarter-acre lot, with
bars over its windows and concealed from the street by a huge tree.
"It seemed like a house in hiding," Janet said.
But it had potential for the family, who wanted a house that needed work
in an up-and-coming neighborhood. For starters, they took the bars off
the windows, trimmed the tree and cleaned weeds and debris from the lot.
"It was basic feng shui," she said.
To determine the floor plan of the new house, the couple worked with Los
Angeles architect James Weeks. By 2000, the plans were complete, Roger
had landed his role in the TV show and it seemed a good time to start
work on the house. The family moved to a rental near the ocean.
Early on, Roger acted as general contractor to save money. Janet recalls
that he was very happy with his two roles, one at the studio, one at the
job site. After six months, though, with only the framing complete, Janet
realized he could not do justice to both pursuits.
"You need to do what you do best, which is being an actor,"
Janet recalled telling her husband and suggested they bring in a licensed
general contractor, the husband of her hairdresser.
Working with Luis Martinez, Janet took a year off work to finish the house.
She and Martinez shopped together to buy slate in bulk, which they used
throughout the house on floors, fireplaces, bathroom walls and patios;
and marble, for counters in the office, the kitchens, the laundry rooms
and the bathrooms.
"There's nothing better than finding a bargain, right?" Janet
said.
To continue the Asian features outside, Janet infused the lot with ponds,
bamboo and Buddha statues. For help with decorating and choosing colors
and materials inside, she hired interior designer Susan Taniguchi.
When the house was finished, the total price tag for the remodel came
to a little more than $1 million. Janet calls it "the house 'The
District' built." It was recently appraised at $1.6 million.
Having a design that emphasizes personal, private space has actually enhanced
their family life, Janet said.
Most important, she added, it has brought a "sense of peace."
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