Venice, California

The BAR Center at the Beach

Design That Reflects Resilience

Exterior entrance of a contemporary architectural building featuring a dramatic three-dimensional white triangular geometric facade, smooth concrete canopy overhang, glass double doors, and embossed BAR lettering on the wall

Project info

A story needing to be told

Perched just steps from the Pacific on Venice’s iconic Ocean Front Walk, The BAR Center at the Beach stands as both a welcoming community hub and a beacon of cultural presence for the Jewish community of Los Angeles. What began as a thoughtful renovation of a 1960s-era building evolved into an opportunity to weave meaning, memory, and identity into every surface — without ever overtly proclaiming them.


From the earliest conceptual stages, RSM Design joined the project in close partnership with the client and architectural team, grounded in a shared commitment to story-first design. The Jewish Federation expressed a clear ambition: the Center should feel open, hospitable, and integrated with its beachside context, yet it also needed to protect the privacy and dignity of the community it serves. Balancing these dual intentions shaped the narrative of the design itself.

Full exterior view of a modern two-story building at 201 featuring an award-winning three-dimensional white geometric triangular cladding system, diamond-shaped windows integrated into the facade, and a motion-blurred cyclist passing in front against a vivid blue sky

Image courtesy of architype.net

Corner exterior of the JFS Israel Levin Senior Center of Jewish Family Service featuring a vibrant large-scale community mural depicting cultural and family scenes including a dreidel, figures dancing, and coastal imagery, with rental bicycles parked along the sidewalk

A renewed architectural facade, inspired by Jewish symbolism

Interior donor wall display with three-dimensional geometric white triangular relief panels listing major philanthropic contributors including the Allison & Bennett Rosenthal Foundation, Goldrich Family Foundation, Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, and Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles, with a woman in a white dress viewing the installation

This limitation resulted in a one-of-a-kind outcome, born from collaboration, empathy, and asking good questions.

Detail view of an architectural donor wall featuring raised bronze three-dimensional lettering on white geometric faceted relief panels, recognizing contributors including Marilyn Ziering, Heidi and Jon Monkarsh, Russell Monkarsh, Debbie and Mark Attanasio, the Held Foundation, Melissa Held Bordy, Mount Sinai Memorial Parks and Mortuaries, Heidi and Albert Praw Family Foundation, Orna and Keenan Wolens, and Jacki and Jeff Karsh
Bright minimalist interior stairwell of the Marilyn Ziering Staircase featuring vertical white-on-white dimensional donor recognition lettering on the wall, warm wood handrail with brushed steel brackets, a skylight window reflecting the geometric building facade, and a motion-blurred person ascending the stairs
Close-up architectural detail of the Julie and Marc Platt and Ellen and Richard Sandler Entry Lobby donor recognition signage featuring tonal white embossed dimensional lettering on a white wall surface, with a natural oak vertical wood slat screen above, showcasing refined interior wayfinding and named space design
Architectural interior detail of the Simha and Sara Lainer Family Foundation Beit Midrash featuring vertical white-on-white embossed donor recognition lettering on a white wall, alongside a deep-set oak wood-framed window that frames a view of the building's exterior geometric triangular white facade panels, integrating named space signage with the architecture
Interior architectural wayfinding panel displaying the Sokol Library donated by Erwin and Caren Sokol and Family, and the Gathering Room donated by the Held Foundation, Melissa Held Bordy, Lacine and Joseph Held, and Lisa and Robert Held, with bilingual Hebrew donor text and ADA Braille signage, beside an oak-framed window overlooking the building's geometric structural exterior, with modern minimalist cream chair and black side table on wood flooring
Sunlit outdoor rooftop terrace and staircase of the Jackie and Herbert Pisternick Family Gathering Deck featuring white-on-white dimensional donor recognition lettering, warm wood-look porcelain tile steps with integrated step lighting, frameless glass panel railings with brushed steel handrails, a built-in bench, and open views of the surrounding Venice Beach Los Angeles urban skyline under a bright blue sky
Architectural detail of the BAR Architects firm identity signage featuring large-scale tonal letterforms CNC-routed or sandblasted into a warm limestone concrete canopy wall panel, adjacent to the building's signature three-dimensional white geometric triangular facade cladding system, showcasing integrated exterior branding and material contrast
Bold black dimensional address number 201 mounted on white stucco wall beside geometric triangular facade panels casting dramatic shadows
Nighttime architectural CGI rendering of the Israel Levin Senior Center of Jewish Family Service designed by BAR Architects, featuring a dramatically backlit three-dimensional geometric triangular white facade that glows luminously at dusk, with the BAR logo visible on the entrance canopy, motion-blurred pedestrians on the Venice Beach boardwalk in the foreground, and surrounding urban context of existing neighborhood buildings under a deep blue twilight sky