The Story Behind
An Exceptional Ocean-View Estate Four Properties From the Sea
There is a particular confidence that certain homes project before you ever cross the threshold. At 143 Marguerita Avenue, it arrives in the form of a symmetrical light-brick facade, blue double doors, and the quiet authority of a property that has been thoughtfully composed from the street all the way to the rear garden wall. This is a home of genuine architectural presence — one that balances formal grandeur with the ease of California living in a way that few properties at any price point manage to achieve.
Step inside and the foyer announces the home's intentions immediately. A sweeping staircase rises beneath a multi-tiered chandelier, flanked on one side by the bold red-walled formal dining room — its crystal chandelier suspended above an oval table beneath crown molding — and on the other by a succession of light-filled living spaces with soaring ceilings and gleaming hardwood floors. The scale here is generous without being theatrical, the proportions calibrated for both a formal dinner party and a quiet Sunday morning.
The chef's kitchen, remodeled within the last six years, is among the home's most compelling rooms. A striking black-and-white checkered stone floor sets a timeless tone beneath white custom cabinetry, marble countertops, and a La Cornue range in commanding blue with gold-toned hardware. Sub-Zero refrigeration, a large central island with brass foot rail, and a subway tile backsplash complete an ensemble that is equal parts functional and beautiful. The kitchen opens naturally to a bright breakfast area and a spacious family room whose glass doors dissolve the boundary between interior and garden, drawing the eye outward to the manicured grounds beyond.
On the main level, a wood-paneled library with built-in shelving offers a retreat of quiet authority — the kind of room that changes the character of a home, lending it intellectual weight and warmth in equal measure. Separate staff or guest quarters complete the ground-floor program with thoughtful practicality.
Upstairs, the primary suite is a private world unto itself. Ocean views frame the mornings, a wood-paneled fireplace surround anchors the room with warmth and character, and an expansive walk-in closet with full-length mirrors and custom shelving offers the kind of dressing room that renders the rest of the morning effortless. Three additional en-suite bedrooms occupy the upper level, each well-proportioned and filled with natural light.
The backyard is where the property fully reveals its resort ambitions. A long lap pool runs the length of the garden toward a detached two-story guest house with a vibrant blue door, its own entrance, and a private garage. A brick-edged raised spa, a pergola-covered dining patio dressed with a chandelier, mature fruit trees, and high hedging that seals the grounds in complete privacy — this is an outdoor environment designed for living, not merely for looking at. A separate pool house with a traditional wood-paneled sauna and shower adds a wellness dimension that elevates the offering further still. Three fireplaces, central HVAC, central vacuum, hardwood flooring throughout most of the home, and a well-maintained concrete shingle roof round out a property that is as carefully maintained as it is beautifully conceived.
Marguerita Avenue occupies a singular position in the geography of Santa Monica. Running perpendicular to Ocean Avenue along the city's prestigious North of Montana corridor, it is one of a small handful of streets that places residents within genuine walking distance of the Pacific while retaining the leafy, residential character of a neighborhood that has long attracted those who value discretion as much as address. Palm trees line the wide boulevard, mature canopies filter the coastal light, and the unhurried pace of the street stands in quiet contrast to the vibrancy that lies just moments away in every direction.
At its western terminus, Ocean Avenue gives way to Palisades Park — a 26-acre ribbon of blufftop greenery stretching 1.6 miles along the edge of the continent, offering sweeping views of Santa Monica Bay, Catalina Island on clear days, and the endless Pacific horizon. It is one of the great urban parks of Southern California, a place where the city meets the sea in a manner that remains genuinely unhurried. The beach itself, accessed by staircases and ramps descending from the bluff, is among Los Angeles's finest stretches of coastline.
The neighborhood known as North of Montana — named for its position above Montana Avenue — has long been considered one of the most desirable residential enclaves on the Westside of Los Angeles. Its streets are characterized by substantial single-family homes on generous lots, a strong sense of community, and a walkability that is rare in Southern California. Montana Avenue itself functions as the neighborhood's main street, lined with independent boutiques, cafés, yoga studios, and a curated selection of restaurants that reflect the area's blend of casual sophistication and health-conscious living.
Downtown Santa Monica, anchored by the Third Street Promenade and the Santa Monica Place shopping center, lies within easy reach and offers a density of retail, dining, and entertainment options that few urban districts can match — from the flagship stores of international luxury brands to the celebrated weekend farmers market at the Santa Monica Civic Center, widely regarded as one of the finest in the country. The market has long supplied some of Los Angeles's most acclaimed chefs, and the broader dining scene in and around Santa Monica reflects that culinary culture with restaurants of genuine distinction at every turn.
The iconic Santa Monica Pier, with its historic Looff Hippodrome carousel and Pacific Park amusement rides, marks the southern edge of the neighborhood's coastal identity and serves as one of California's most recognized landmarks. For families, the area is served by well-regarded Santa Monica–Malibu Unified School District campuses, and the proximity to the campuses of UCLA in Westwood and Santa Monica College adds further institutional depth to the community fabric.
For those who travel frequently, proximity to Santa Monica provides straightforward access to Los Angeles International Airport to the south, while the broader Westside — Brentwood, Pacific Palisades, Malibu — lies along the coast in either direction, placing the full spectrum of the region's finest living within an easy drive. To live on Marguerita Avenue is to occupy a rare vantage point: close enough to the ocean to feel it, rooted enough in neighborhood to belong to it.
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