Built in 1912, the four-bedroom home has an abundance of gorgeous period features, including detailed woodwork and moldings, stained glass, French doors, vintage sconces and light fixtures, and an Art Nouveau fireplace. Asking price is $975,000.
This colorful Craftsman is perched on a hilltop in Highland Park and offers some terrific views across the city. Other features include a large back patio, hardwood floors, beamed ceilings, and a very festive kitchen.
Issues raised by a lawsuit against the project have created a potentially big problem for the Highland Park project. The City Council just suspended permits and its approval until the developer conducts an environmental impact report.
Sold last year for $690,000, this Highland Park house is back and fully made over. The four-bedroom house has Douglas fir windows, a spacious kitchen, and a private patio off the master bedroom.
Some 50 tenants are protesting a staggering $1,000 rent hike. The North East Los Angeles Alliance, a community activist group, has been working to organize tenants into a unified front in their fight against new owners, Skya Ventures and Gelt Inc.
This handsome 1902 Craftsman apparently received an award for a restoration that left many of its original features intact, such as wood siding and Douglas fir floors. The welcoming front porch adds plenty of curb appeal. It's listed for $680,000.
Councilman Jose Huizar and the Historic Highland Park Neighborhood Council are seeking items to be buried in a capsule. Relics of the rapidly gentrifying neighborhood will be preserved until 2041.
Built in 1911, the colorful house comes with three bedrooms, two baths, drought-tolerant landscaping, a garage-turned-studio, and some zany brokerbabble. Sited on a 6,339-square-foot lot three blocks north of York Boulevard, it's asking $699,000.
The gleaming, freshly refurbished bowling alley was hidden under drop ceilings, false walls, and a lot of old trash and treasure. Using tons of vintage and original items from the space's past, the new proprietors revealed what's always been there.
This restored Highland Park residence once harbored early suffragists Anna Howard Shaw and Cora Pond-Pope. The four-bedroom home, listed for $886,000, has hardwood floors and an interior design almost as colorful as its past.
Is a studio in Hollywood better than a one-bedroom in Van Nuys? We've picked five apartments renting for around the same price, but clearly one is superior to the others. Which one is it? You decide: check out the options and vote for the best.
A construction sign in Highland Park is asking neighbors fed up with construction noise to convert their anger into gratitude for the skyrocketing housing values that are forcing many longtime residents out of the area.