The Story Behind
A Single-Story Sanctuary Perched Above Beverly Hills
There is a particular kind of home that does not announce itself — it reveals itself. 1675 Carla Ridge is that home. Approaching along a concrete walkway framed by a slatted wooden privacy screen, the warm wood-paneled facade offers a composed, almost meditative first impression. Then the threshold opens, and the full scale and ambition of the residence become clear.
The architecture is organized around a single, clarifying gesture: the horizontal plane. Overlapping rooflines with generous extended overhangs stretch the perceived boundaries of each space, while clerestory windows positioned along the higher roof pull natural light deep into the interior without compromising the privacy that elevation affords. The result is an interior that feels luminous at any hour and grounded in its setting regardless of season.
Wood-paneled ceilings flow continuously through the open-concept living spaces, providing warmth and a sense of craft that tempers the home's modern precision. Floor-to-ceiling glass walls dissolve the distinction between inside and out, framing hillside panoramas as living art. A sleek fireplace anchors the main living area, while built-in shelving and recessed lighting speak to an interior logic where every element earns its place.
The kitchen is a study in considered restraint. Warm wood cabinetry pairs with stone countertops and a generous island with bar seating. A built-in gas cooktop, dedicated wine storage, and an integrated skylight above the range hood complete a space that is as functional as it is refined — designed for both the quiet morning and the convivial evening.
The primary suite occupies its own private world within the home. A linear fireplace, wood-paneled ceiling, and floor-to-ceiling glass opening onto a private deck establish the suite's tone. The en-suite bathroom extends this language into spa territory: a floating double vanity with stone sinks, a glass-enclosed walk-in shower with views onto a zen-inspired courtyard garden, and a wooden soaking tub positioned beside vertical wood-slat walls and lush greenery. The walk-in closet, lit by a skylight and fitted with illuminated display cabinetry, treats the everyday ritual of dressing as its own considered ceremony.
A glass-walled home office completes the interior program, offering a productive counterpoint to the home's more contemplative spaces.
Outside, the rear of the residence is choreographed for both spectacle and seclusion. A wooden deck with a rectangular fire pit provides a natural gathering point, while a gracefully curved infinity-edge pool reflects sky and hillside in equal measure. Layered planting creates a private enclave between the primary suite deck and the broader grounds — ensuring that even at the home's most open moments, there is always a sense of retreat. This is architecture that understands that luxury is not excess. It is precision, proportion, and the quiet confidence of a home that knows exactly what it is.
Beverly Hills occupies a singular position in the geography of Los Angeles — and indeed, in the cultural imagination of the world. Incorporated as an independent city in 1914, it developed through the early decades of the twentieth century as a residential enclave for Hollywood's creative and financial elite, a character it has never fully relinquished. Today, the city of approximately 34,000 residents maintains its own municipal services, school district, and civic identity entirely surrounded by the sprawl of Los Angeles, functioning as a place apart — deliberately curated, meticulously maintained, and consistently ranked among the most desirable addresses in the United States.
Carla Ridge sits in the elevated residential hills above the flats of Beverly Hills, in a neighborhood defined by seclusion, privacy, and extraordinary views. The hillside streets north of Sunset Boulevard ascend into a quieter, more rarefied world — one where the city's energy remains visible on the horizon but does not intrude. Properties along these ridgelines are sought precisely for this quality: the sense of being above it all, literally and figuratively, while remaining minutes from the commercial and cultural heart of one of the world's most recognized cities.
Sunset Boulevard, the storied artery that runs along the base of the hills, connects Carla Ridge to the Sunset Strip, West Hollywood, and ultimately to the Pacific Coast Highway and the beaches of Malibu. In the other direction, the famed shops and restaurants of Beverly Hills' Golden Triangle — Rodeo Drive, Canon Drive, and the surrounding blocks of designer boutiques, acclaimed restaurants, and luxury hotels — are within a short drive. The Beverly Hills Hotel, a landmark of Hollywood history since 1912, sits nearby on Sunset Boulevard, its pink facade and bungalows as iconic as any building in the city.
For those who value cultural engagement, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Hammer Museum in Westwood, and the Getty Center — perched on its own hillside above the 405 freeway — are all within easy reach. The Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, located in the heart of Beverly Hills, brings world-class theater, dance, and music to the city itself.
The Beverly Hills Unified School District is consistently recognized as among the strongest public school systems in California, a significant consideration for families. The city's parks, including the expansive Coldwater Canyon Park and Franklin Canyon Park in the Santa Monica Mountains, offer hiking, birdwatching, and a genuine experience of the Southern California landscape just minutes from the urban grid.
To live at Carla Ridge is to inhabit a specific and privileged relationship with Los Angeles — present enough to participate fully in its cultural and professional life, elevated enough to observe it with perspective. It is a location that has attracted discerning residents for generations not because of its name alone, but because of what the name accurately represents: a standard of living, a quality of environment, and a sense of place that remains genuinely difficult to replicate.
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Curated Content • Presented by Benjamin Bacal

















