
Exiled in L.A.: The Untold Story of Leopold Fischer's Domestic Architecture
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781606069868
Publication Date: 10/28/2025
The first Englishlanguage volume to explore the work of architect Leopold Fischer, and the inaugural study of his California legacy.
In 1936, Leopold Fischer (1901-1975), in exile from Nazi Germany, arrived in California, where he created a small but distinct oeuvre of mostly domestic architecture. In contrast to his famous peers Rudolph Schindler and Richard Neutra, immigrants whose Southern California buildings are frequently examinedand who, like Fischer, studied with the modernist architect Adolf LoosFischer and his California structures have, until now, escaped the attention of architectural history.
Exiled in L.A. examines Fischer’s important, yet overlooked, contributions to Southern California architecture. As the whereabouts of Fischer’s archives remain unknown, Volker M. Welter grounds the designer’s California works in comparison with his preexile projects and the compositions of fellow architects in California. In the 1920s, Fischer created experimental workingclass housing estates in Germany that pioneered ecological construction and living practices. Comparable to their predecessors, Fischer's California buildings revolve around the “functioning, the organization of a home,” as he defined domestic architecture in 1926. Featuring new photography and detailed architectural plans, this book is an original contribution to the literature on Southern California’s built heritage.
In 1936, Leopold Fischer (1901-1975), in exile from Nazi Germany, arrived in California, where he created a small but distinct oeuvre of mostly domestic architecture. In contrast to his famous peers Rudolph Schindler and Richard Neutra, immigrants whose Southern California buildings are frequently examinedand who, like Fischer, studied with the modernist architect Adolf LoosFischer and his California structures have, until now, escaped the attention of architectural history.
Exiled in L.A. examines Fischer’s important, yet overlooked, contributions to Southern California architecture. As the whereabouts of Fischer’s archives remain unknown, Volker M. Welter grounds the designer’s California works in comparison with his preexile projects and the compositions of fellow architects in California. In the 1920s, Fischer created experimental workingclass housing estates in Germany that pioneered ecological construction and living practices. Comparable to their predecessors, Fischer's California buildings revolve around the “functioning, the organization of a home,” as he defined domestic architecture in 1926. Featuring new photography and detailed architectural plans, this book is an original contribution to the literature on Southern California’s built heritage.
Choose options
New Releases
Storm Breaker: An Epic Enemies-to-More Slow-Burn Dystopian Romantasy
Nisha J. Tuli
Hardcover
Sale price$24.99
The New Girl: First Crush: A Graphic Novel (The New Girl #2)
Cassandra Calin
Paperback
Sale price$14.99
















