At the end of Oriole Way overlooking the Sunset Strip, this lot was more cliff than site — and one of the best views in the city. The challenge was grafting the house onto the hillside while creating a proper entry experience and sufficient living space on extreme topography.
The solution separates the garage and parking area from the entry of the house, using the street slope to bring pedestrians in at the home’s main level through a water- and light-filled entry courtyard. The house is laid out over three levels: bedrooms, a dedicated theatre, gym, and wine room below; entry, living, dining, kitchen, and master suite at the main level; and a loft, additional bedroom, and roof terrace above.
The pool is unique — an infinity edge on all four sides. The two-story living room, a rarity in the neighborhood, draws light from every direction and gives the house an expansive feel. The palette is sleek Hollywood: black and white, shiny and suede — marble, dark granite, and chrome with high-gloss cabinetry and custom wallpaper.
Building at this scale on a cliff lot demands serious structural engineering — complex hillside foundation systems in a high-seismic zone, engineered and executed without compromising the architecture.
Projects completed by Interconneckt principals, including work performed through their respective prior practices.