Chris Pratt and Katherine Schwarzenegger have architecture super lovers (yeah, they are a point) up in arms quickly following they demolished an historic L.A. pad to make their wish residence, but the architect’s daughter says it definitely is not that significant of a loss.
Erin Ellwood, daughter of the popular architect Craig Ellwood — who made and crafted the Brentwood, CA home in 1950 — tells TMZ you will obtain no have to have to have for the uproar in excess of the Pratts’ teardown of the iconic residence identified as the Zimmerman dwelling.
In her eyes, it truly is not practically the tragedy her father’s admirers are developing it out to be, in certain considering the fact that it can be not the most breathtaking case in point of his tasteful operate.
Erin suggests she unquestionably would’ve preferred a different particular person to just renovate the spot and retain it standing — but even now, she’s not bent out of kind about Katherine and Chris’ final choice to get started out afresh on the assets.
The Hollywood pair obtained the assets final calendar year for $12.five million owing to its location … and Erin claims she respects their have to have to construct a spouse and young children nest close to the double compound owned by Katherine’s mom Maria Shriver.
All that staying claimed, Erin’s laying down the eco-beneficial regulation, expressing what she’s genuinely not a fan of is waste.
She’s all about delivering back, suggesting it would be excellent if troubles from the aged pad obtained recycled to assistance these in want, or at least, provided new existence in architecture educational institutions.
It stays to be identified regardless of regardless of whether Erin’s stance will be the chill capsule architecture admirers need to ease their fury additional than C&K tearing down the historic gem.
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Irrespective of the detest, the pair is marching ahead, swapping a piece of L.A. history to reportedly assemble a bigger, bolder, present day farmhouse-form pad which is acceptable on pattern.
As they say, out with the aged, in with the new — even for an Ellwood standard.









