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Old Hollywood
$2,400/night
Sleeps 8

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Phone: 510-647-9769


Old Hollywood Fantasy Getaway

Enjoy an Old Hollywood fantasy getaway in this beautifully restored mansion and updated neo-Mayan masterpiece. Designed by Lloyd Wright, son of America's greatest architect, Frank Lloyd Wright, this 1926 home is a magical oasis in the heart of modern-day Hollywood. Conveniently located next to the best of Los Angeles shopping, nightlife, and dining, once inside this unique 6,000 square foot house you feel as if you are in another world entirely. All rooms face the interior courtyard which shelters a secluded jacuzzi and pool amidst an immaculate succulent garden with flowering vines. The courtyard doors slide into the walls to create a stunning indoor/outdoor feel, while the addition of water and fire features give unity and completion to Wright's elemental vision.

Renovated in the year 2000 by designer/owner Xorin Balbes, a sleek, modern edge was brought to the Old Hollywood glamor of the Sowden House. The renovation also brought it a feature in Architectural Digest, and a new era of public visibility as the location for countless celebrity fundraisers, film shoots, TV shows and commercials. Today, the master bathroom provides luxury comfort with its own private spa-soak in a freestanding tub, a shower in a glass encased steamroom, and a meditation area by a beautiful koi pond. The home also features a reading room with a huge salt water aquarium, a home theater system with surround sound, a gourmet kitchen, formal dining room, 2 fireplaces, 2 outdoor firepits, 2 exotic modern flaming torches, and a dramatic city view.

A collection of new antique artifacts were added to the home as well, including an enormous Indonesian Buddha that looks out from atop the master bedroom, an antique Chinese dowry chest, Japanese tansus converted to bathroom cabinets, and a 400 year-old Quan Yin statue. All of these new design elements harmonize with the rustic details around the door frames and the Mayan-influenced stone work. Other amenities include a washer/dryer, garage parking and wireless internet. The 4 bedrooms with 6 bathrooms can accommodate up to 8 people.

10% discount for stays of 5 nights or more

HISTORY OF THE SOWDEN HOUSE A Legend that Still Lives:

In 1926, Lloyd Wright, son of America's greatest architect, Frank Lloyd Wright, built the Sowden House for friend and photographer John Sowden. The home utilized Wright's philosophies as a landscape architect to emphasize the elements of nature by a floor plan where all rooms opened to a central courtyard. Hand cast, sand-colored concrete blocks emblazoned with images of harvest, water, clouds, and sun were stacked together in such a way that the house became an homage to the pyramids of ancient Mayan civilization, while the pillared courtyard with multiple entries made clear architectural reference to such Yucatec Mayan temples as Sayil and Uxmal.

In his book, "The Visionary State", author Erik Davis speaks of the Wright family's "Mesoamerican palaces" that were built in a number of Southern California locations. He goes on to say that "the home that Lloyd Wright built on Franklin Avenue ... is easily the wildest of the lot, an Expressionist temple whose primeval exotica makes the visionary aspirations of the Southland's neo-Mayan architecture clear.

"The Sowdens were artsy Hollywood folks who liked to party, and Lloyd Wright, who had spent a year or so designing sets for Paramount, indulged their desire for theater. The windowless entranceway lies below a canted cyclopean mass of zigzag rock that hangs like the roof of some antediluvian cave. After climbing a dark stairway, visitors enter the inner sanctum: a long outdoor courtyard lined with concrete columns whose weathered motifs of waves and twining vines deepen the sense that elemental powers are being invoked. Two massive freestanding water organs once stood on the far end of the courtyard like murmuring Deco-pagan stelae." (They were destroyed in a 1930's earthquake)

Today the courtyard is taken up with a large pool, part of a thorough renovation of the house by designer/owner Xorin Balbes, who enhanced the building's air of almost savage spectacle with an elevated jacuzzi and an altar-like heater. In 2003, Balbes hosted an "interspecies dance ritual" (by composer/choreographer Jim Berenholtz) called "The Temple of the Cosmic Serpent", which featured fire dancers .. and pas de deux between human beings and boa constrictors."

Beyond the purely theatrical, the Sowden House, in its modern incarnation, has served as the set for countless films, TV shows, and commercials. Among these are Martin Scorcese's "Aviator" about the high drama life of Howard Hughes, various episodes of "America's Next Top Model", and an American Express commercial featuring Ellen DeGeneres in deep meditation. The house was also referenced in some rather dark-themed articles in the Los Angeles Times in 2004 as the former home of the notorious Dr. George Hodel, who may have been responsible for the even more notorious Black Dahlia murders; at least according to his son and private investigator George Hodel, author of "Black Dahlia Avenger".

Whatever the truth, there is no question that the Sowden House is a magnificent tribute to the interplay of shadow and light, much as are the ancient Mayan temples that inspired it. Steeped in Hollywood history, it continues to reveal new facets of its relationship to drama and stardom, while at the same time taking on new life as a center for creativity and healing. In restoring the Sowden, Xorin Balbes has honored Lloyd Wright's intention to merge architecture and landscape by making this home a living temple environment where sacred space is evident at every turn.

GUEST COMMENTS:

"What can I possibly say about this house that you are so willing to share. We would never have had an experience like that if it wasn't for your willingness to share such an amazing monument. Staying in the house is truly an experience that changes your life. We came to Los Angeles to shop and sight see, and instead we found ourselves just wanting to stay in and hang in your beautiful home." - Jason and Betsy Sanderson, New York

"Exquisite beauty is all I can say." - Steve Marks, San Francisco

"Who ever knew that such beauty could exist? The house is so comfortable and relaxing... so looking forward to our next trip to Los Angeles." - Dan Morrison, London, England

"It is like a fantasy - yet it is real! Thanks for sharing! We'll be back!" - Betsy Johnson, New York

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