The
Samuel Freeman House (1962 Glencoe Way) was designed by
Frank Lloyd Wright, supervised by
Lloyd Wright, and furnished and expanded by
Rudolph Schindler. Built in 1923, it is one of four
textile block houses built by Frank Lloyd Wright in Los Angeles between 1922 and 1924, and it has the world's first glass-to-glass corner windows. It was known as an avant-garde
salon, and the list of individuals who spent significant periods of time there or lived in the house's two Schindler-designed apartments includes
John Bovingdon,
Beniamino Bufano,
Xavier Cugat,
Rudi Gernreich,
Martha Graham,
Philip Johnson,
Peter Krasnow,
Bella Lewitzky,
Jean Negulesco,
Richard Neutra,
Claude Rains,
Herman Sachs,
Galka Scheyer,
Edward Weston,
Olga Zacsek, and
Fritz Zwicky. It also served as an intellectual sanctuary for individuals blacklisted by the
House Un-American Activities Committee. It is on the
National Register of Historic Places. The High Tower (2178 High Tower Drive) is a five-story, over 100-foot-high tower housing a private elevator. It was built circa 1920 in the style of a Bolognese
campanile. The tower provides access to a
Streamline Moderne fourplex known as High Tower Court, built between 1935 and 1936. Architect Carl Kay designed both. The High Tower was featured in
The Long Goodbye,
The High Window,
Dead Again,
Michael Connelly's novels
Echo Park and
The Closers, and a 1961 episode of
Naked City. It also leads to the Alta Loma Terrace neighborhood, which includes the Otto Bollman House – one of
Lloyd Wright's first projects – and the
B.A.G. Fuller House (6887 W. Alta Loma Terrace), which is a
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument. Residents of the hillside enclave around the tower have included
David Copperfield,
Michael Connelly,
Tim Burton,
Timothy Hutton,
Kurt Cobain, and
Courtney Love. The
Yamashiro Historic District (1999 Sycamore Avenue) is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places and consists of nine buildings, including the Yamashiro restaurant. It was built between 1911 and 1914 as a residence by two brothers, Adolph and Eugene Bernheimer, and is said to be a replica of a 17th-century palace in
Yamashiro Province in Japan. It has a 600-year-old pagoda imported from Japan. Many films and television shows have been filmed here, including
Memoirs of a Geisha and
Sayonara.
Richard Pryor,
Pernell Roberts,
Joe Flynn, and
Jerry Dunphy lived in apartments on the grounds.
The Magic Castle (7001 Franklin Avenue) is a private nightclub for magicians and magic enthusiasts. It is the premier venue for magic in the United States and is the clubhouse for the
Academy of Magical Arts. Originally constructed in 1909 as a
châteauesque mansion for banker, real estate developer, and philanthropist Rollin B. Lane, it is a
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument.
Highland-Camrose Bungalow Village (2103 N. Highland Avenue) is on the
National Register of Historic Places. The
Eagles' Don Henley and
Bernie Leadon wrote "
Witchy Woman" in a bungalow here shared by
Linda Ronstadt and
JD Souther. The
Villa Bonita (1817 Hillcrest Road) is a
Spanish Colonial Revival-style apartment building designed by architect Frank Webster and built in 1929. It is on the
National Register of Historic Places. Residents have included
Errol Flynn,
Francis Ford Coppola,
Emma Dunn,
Lois Collier,
Ethelind Terry,
Sarah Marshall,
Carl Held,
Billy Wirth, and
Jim Thompson.
Hollywood United Methodist Church (6817 Franklin Avenue) was designed by
Thomas P. Barber and built from 1927 to 1930. It is a
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument. It is built on land that includes the location of
William C. deMille and daughter
Agnes de Mille's first home in Hollywood. American Legion Post 43 (2035 N. Highland Avenue) is a distinctive example of
Egyptian Revival and Moroccan Art Deco architecture. Designed by Weston & Weston architects and completed in 1929, the building is a
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument. Its members have included
Clark Gable,
Stan Lee,
Mickey Rooney,
Gene Autry,
Charlton Heston, and
Ronald Reagan. It served as the venue for Los Angeles' longest-running play,
Tamara, from 1984 to 1993. It has a 482-seat, state-of-the-art movie theater that was previously a live music venue played by groups including
The Doors. The Hollywood Art Center School (2025-2027 N. Highland Avenue) is a
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument. Originally built in 1904 for the artist Otto Classen as his residence and art studio, the estate was designed by famed architects Dennis &
Farwell, who also designed the
Hollywood Hotel and
Magic Castle. The Hollywood Art Center School operated at this location from 1950 to 2000.
Phil Roman studied at the school. Las Orquideas Apartments (1901 N. Orchid Avenue), designed and built by
Wilfred Buckland in the late 1920s, are an example of
Spanish Colonial Revival architecture meant to evoke an
Andalusian village. A
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument, its residents have included
Wilfred Buckland,
Ellen Burstyn,
Ray Heindorf,
Arthur Lange, and
Robert Vaughn. The DeKeyser Duplex (1911 N. Highland Avenue) was designed by
Rudolph Schindler and completed in 1935. The Abraham Koosis House (1941 Glencoe Way) was designed by
Raphael Soriano and completed in 1940. The End of the Road (2042 Pinehurst Road) is the name
Carrie Jacobs-Bond gave to her home and was the title of her final book of poetry, published in 1940. The Franklin Garden Apartments (6917-6933 Franklin Avenue) were an example of
Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. Built in 1920, they became a
Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument on June 7, 1978, but were demolished on July 1, 1978, to expand the
Magic Castle's parking lot. The Shrader House (1927 N. Highland Avenue) was another example of
Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. Designed by Mead &
Requa and built about 1915, a committee of architects representing the
American Institute of Architects selected it as one of the best small houses in Los Angeles; in its February 1920 issue,
House Beautiful magazine called it one of the three best homes in Los Angeles. ==Notable events==