Ever thought about putting on a prayer shawl as an architectural experience? Michael Lehrer has some ideas on the matter.
“The tallis is essentially the most rudimentary form of architectural shelter — envelopment,” the architect said. “It does wonderful things with texture and light, especially in nice old muslin tallises. I’m happy when I’m wrapped in my tallis.”
Lehrer — who says if he hadn’t become an architect, he might have become a rabbi — considers his work to be “fundamentally a spiritual exercise,” and he finds architectural themes all over Judaism. Sukkot, for Lehrer, is less a harvest festival than an architectural holiday. The Mah Tovu prayer — “How good are your tents, people of Jacob” — is about dwelling. And then there’s the mezuzah.
“What could be more architectural than a mezuzah?” Lehrer said, standing in the middle of his Silver Lake studio. He spoke quietly, but with energy. “What a beautiful thing! I’m coming into a new space” — he reached out for an invisible mezuzah, then kissed his hand — “thank you, God!”
For the last 10 years, Lehrer’s engagement with Judaism and architecture also has been more concrete, as Jewish communities across greater Los Angeles have hired his firm, LehrerArchitects LA, to build — or in many cases, rebuild — their facilities.
The firm’s newest client is the Silverlake Independent Jewish Community Center, which just announced that Lehrer Architects will develop a master plan for the renovation of its 1951 building. The two-story red-brick JCC hides just off of Sunset Boulevard, crowded into a gully between a boarded-up motel and a brand-new apartment complex. What was the front door now looks more like a fire exit, and the main entrance from the parking lot around back is uninspiring.
The job takes Lehrer — a self-described “Los Feliz blueblood” — back to very familiar ground. His children attended the center’s preschool, his wife once served as a member of its board and, a generation earlier, Michael attended the preschool there himself.
Lehrer was attracted to architecture at a very early age, and by the time he was 12, he was copying the drawings of Frank Lloyd Wright. He went on to study architecture, first at UC Berkeley and then at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Upon graduating, he worked with Frank Gehry for a “short but incredibly powerful” 13 months. “There were 15 people at the practice at the time,” Lehrer said, and he worked directly with the architect. Gehry’s influence is apparent in a number of Lehrer’s buildings — even in projects completed years after he left the firm.
At 56, Lehrer’s hair has a touch more pepper than salt, and he continues to reach new heights professionally. He served as president of the L.A. chapter of the American Institute of Architects in 1999, spent five years as vice chairman of LAUSD’s School Construction Bond Oversight Committee (helping the school district and the taxpayer get the most bang for their bucks), and has been a member of the Hollywood Design Review Committee for City Council District 13 since 1991. And all the while, he’s been assembling an impressive portfolio of award-winning projects.
The façade of the Silverlake JCC building, meanwhile, has seen better days. “We can all agree on what’s not wonderful about a place,” Lehrer said, “but that’s just not interesting to me.”
Lehrer instead has focused on the many parts of the building that do work — the courtyard, for instance. Hugged by the JCC complex on three sides, this patch of concrete comes to life on Friday mornings when preschoolers sit with their parents on multicolored strips of fabric and sing to welcome Shabbat. It was Lehrer’s appreciation for what was already there, along with his personal connection to the JCC, that sold the center’s leaders on working with him. “One thing that was really exciting is that he loves the original bones of the building,” Kaile Shilling, the project’s capital campaign chair, said. “It wasn’t about tearing down or redoing anything dramatically.”
Back in Lehrer’s office — less than a mile away from the JCC — the architect put it more philosophically. “Architects exist in the present future,” he said. Seeing buildings not just as they are, but also as they might be is hugely important, since Lehrer often works with existing structures. “As architects, we look at things and just think, ‘Oh, magnificent!’ ” Lehrer waved his hand, gesturing to an imaginary building. It had imaginary flaws: “ ‘Let a little light in there, open that wall …’ ”