The Story Behind
A European Estate Above the Malibu Hills, Built Without Compromise
There are homes that are built, and then there are homes that are composed — assembled over years, material by material, room by room, with the kind of deliberate intention that cannot be rushed. This residence within The Estates at The Oaks belongs firmly to the latter category. Developed over more than a decade, it reads less like a construction project and more like a life's work, a property whose depth of detail reveals itself slowly and rewards attention.
The architecture announces itself from the moment you turn through the double gates and follow the long, quiet driveway to the arrival court. A scaled stone fountain anchors the forecourt, and the entry is oriented with precise alignment to the horizon — a gesture that sets the tone for everything that follows. The facade, with its domed towers, classical columns, and arched windows, draws on European estate vernacular without becoming a copy of it. It feels timeless in the truest sense: neither strictly historical nor fashionably contemporary, but entirely its own.
Inside, the language shifts from grand to intimate and back again with remarkable fluency. Soaring domed ceilings and wide, gallery-like hallways give the principal rooms a sense of civic scale, while bronze staircases sweep upward with an elegance that feels almost choreographic. The material palette is consistently exceptional: hand-selected stone, custom wall treatments, intricate moldings, and layered tilework sourced from some of the finest artisan suppliers available. Bespoke wallpaper, paneling, and millwork throughout bear the mark of JP Weaver Company, a Los Angeles firm known for its work in historically significant interiors.
The main level moves with the logic of a well-edited floor plan. The formal lounge opens to the gardens through a Spanish limestone fireplace. The Louis XIV–inspired dining room is finished in custom French wall coverings. The chef's kitchen — outfitted with Miele and Wolf appliances — flows naturally into the family room, bar, and fireside gathering areas, a configuration that makes the distinction between cooking and entertaining pleasantly irrelevant. Dual library offices with Minotti cabinetry, a vaulted game room, a glass-wrapped gym with steam room and massage suite, and three guest suites with outdoor access complete a level that functions as a self-contained world.
Upstairs, five bedroom suites surround a grand landing. The primary suite is a study in considered luxury: vaulted ceilings, a private living room, a domed office, dual spa-caliber bathrooms, expansive closets, and a terrace with an outdoor fireplace framing views across Malibu State Park. The secondary primary suite echoes this scale with its own foyer, stone fireplace, soaking tub, and private terrace.
The lower level offers a different register entirely — a 5,225-square-foot climate-controlled garage, a French-inspired cinema with fiber-optic ceiling and Dolby Atmos sound, an entertaining lounge with bar, a wine cellar and tasting room, and a private beauty salon.
Beyond the walls, the grounds unfold as a sequence of curated outdoor experiences: a solar-heated ozone pool, tennis, pickleball, and bocce courts, dramatic fire pits, a fully equipped outdoor pavilion with dual BBQs and pizza oven, and a vegetable garden that brings a quieter, more grounded rhythm to the property. The estate is engineered for longevity, incorporating advanced HVAC, whole-home water purification, solar power, fire-resistant construction, a full backup generator, and a triple-phase electrical system, with its spatial organization guided by principles of Vastu and feng shui for harmony and clarity of living.
Calabasas occupies a particular position in the geography of greater Los Angeles — far enough from the city's density to feel genuinely removed from it, yet connected enough to remain fully within its orbit. Situated in the western San Fernando Valley, bordered by the Santa Monica Mountains to the south and the rolling terrain of the Las Virgenes corridor to the west, the city has long attracted those who want proximity to Los Angeles without its compromises.
The community is defined by its relationship to the landscape. The Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, one of the largest urban national parks in the United States, wraps around the southern edge of the city, providing access to hundreds of miles of hiking and equestrian trails, open space, and native chaparral habitat. Malibu Creek State Park lies just minutes to the south, offering a stretch of preserved canyon land that feels remarkably wild given its proximity to one of the world's most urbanized regions. For residents of an estate perched above this terrain, the views are not incidental — they are foundational to the experience of living here.
The Oaks of Calabasas, the master-planned community within which The Estates sits, is among the most security-conscious residential enclaves in the region. The community features 24-hour guarded gate access and a network of private roads that insulate its residents from the rhythms of surrounding neighborhoods. The Oaks Farmers Market, held within the community, has become a well-regarded local institution, offering residents direct access to regional produce and artisan goods in a setting that reinforces the area's emphasis on quality of life over convenience.
Downtown Calabasas, anchored by the historic Old Town district, offers a curated selection of dining, boutique retail, and services that serve the community without overwhelming it. The Commons at Calabasas provides an open-air lifestyle center with restaurants and shops within easy reach. For those oriented toward the coast, the Pacific Coast Highway and the beaches and dining of Malibu are accessible within a short drive through the canyon, making this one of the few addresses in the region where both mountain and ocean lifestyles are genuinely within reach on any given afternoon.
Education is a consistent draw for families considering the area. The Las Virgenes Unified School District is consistently regarded as one of the stronger public school districts in Los Angeles County, and numerous private school options are accessible within a reasonable commute. The area also benefits from its position relative to major employment centers — the Westside, the entertainment industry hubs of Burbank and Studio City, and the corporate corridors of the Valley are all accessible via the 101 corridor.
What distinguishes Calabasas at its finest, however, is less about any single amenity and more about a particular quality of life: the ability to wake above the hills, look out across open land toward the Pacific, and exist — at least for a moment — entirely outside the pressures of the city below. For an estate of this caliber, the setting is not merely a backdrop. It is the point.
Featured Highlights
Curated Content • Presented by Jason Oppenheim




















































