On a street lined with some of Los Angeles’ most recognizable names — from LeBron James to Travis Scott — a newly built residence is taking a different approach to luxury.
At 694 N Tigertail Road, the $23.995 million home doesn’t lean into glass walls or ultra-modern minimalism. Instead, it looks elsewhere: toward European manor houses, aged materials, and a slower, more tactile kind of design.
Created by Concept by C, with Christine London on landscape and the Gesh Group overseeing the full vision, the home feels less like a new build and more like something assembled over time, piece by piece.
A lantern-lit approach framed by olive trees and limestone

The arrival sets the tone immediately.
Olive trees arch overhead, a lantern-lit pathway cuts through the garden, and limestone underfoot leads toward steel-framed glass doors. It’s a sequence designed to slow things down before you even step inside.
There’s no dramatic reveal, just a gradual shift into the home’s atmosphere.
Built around materials rather than trends

What defines the house isn’t a single feature, but the way materials are layered throughout.
Roman Clay walls, limestone floors, Chinese brick, and custom oak paneling appear repeatedly, creating continuity across rooms. The effect isn’t flashy — it’s cumulative.
Each space builds on the last.
A kitchen anchored by two statement ranges
The kitchen centers around two focal points: a Wolf range and a L’Atelier Paris range, both set against European marble and detailed tilework from Prat & Larsen.
Integrated Sub-Zero appliances keep the space clean, while the materials — not the appliances — do most of the visual work.

It’s a kitchen designed to be used, but also to be looked at.

Fixtures selected like objects, not just hardware
Throughout the home, plumbing fixtures from Waterworks, Barber Wilson, Van Cronenburg, Waterstone, Cal Faucet, and Harbeaux are treated almost like collectibles.
They’re not competing for attention, but they’re impossible to miss once you notice them.

Living spaces shaped by light, fire, and texture
The main living areas feel composed rather than staged.
Fireplaces sit against carved stone, linen drapery softens incoming light, and floor-to-ceiling windows pull greenery into the room. The palette stays restrained, letting texture carry the space.

A rhythm of rooms: piano space, mirrored bar, and upstairs den
Rather than one oversized great room, the house breaks into smaller, distinct areas.
A piano room, a bar wrapped in antiqued mirrors, and an upstairs den overlooking the grounds create a sequence of spaces that feel intentionally varied.

Each one serves a different mood.

A dining room wrapped in stone, wood, and quiet detail
The dining space continues the home’s material language, combining stone, oak, and subtle detailing.
It’s formal without feeling rigid — a space that fits both larger gatherings and smaller dinners.

A lower level that shifts the mood entirely
Downstairs, the tone changes.
Reclaimed brick, beam ceilings, and lower lighting create a more enclosed atmosphere. This level includes a wine room, built-in bar, and a home theater designed to feel fully immersive.

It’s less about openness, more about depth.
A wine room designed as part cellar, part display
The wine cellar isn’t tucked away, it’s integrated into the experience of the home.
Reclaimed brick and wood beams give it weight, while the layout allows it to function both as storage and as a visual feature.

A theater that leans into mood rather than scale
The home theater keeps things intimate.
Vintage-style lighting and darker tones create a setting that feels more like a private screening room than a standard media space.

A wellness suite carved from limestone
The wellness areas continue the material story.
A steam room finished in limestone, a sauna, and a gym are grouped together to form a dedicated space that feels separate from the rest of the house.

A primary suite designed as a self-contained retreat
The primary suite includes its own fireplace, a wet bar, and dual bathrooms finished in marble and limestone.
Vintage European hardware appears again here, reinforcing the home’s consistency in detail.

Dual spa bathrooms instead of one oversized space
Instead of a single large bath, the suite includes two separate spa-style bathrooms.
Each one is finished to the same level, allowing for symmetry without redundancy.

Outdoor spaces that mirror the architecture
Outside, the architecture continues into the landscape.
A still pool reflects the home’s facade at dusk, while lawns and planted areas are arranged to feel structured but not overly formal.


A gazebo with copper detailing and a fireplace lounge
A covered gazebo extends the usable space outdoors, with copper detailing and a fireplace that keeps the area active after sunset.
It’s one of several outdoor zones designed for lingering rather than quick use.

Outdoor dining with a built-in Wolf grill
An outdoor kitchen and dining area sit nearby, anchored by a built-in Wolf grill.
The setup supports everything from casual meals to larger gatherings without needing to move back inside.

A house that doesn’t play by the usual Los Angeles playbook
In a neighborhood filled with bold architecture and high-gloss finishes, 694 N Tigertail Road takes a different approach.
It leans into materials, proportion, and restraint, creating a home that feels less like a statement piece and more like a place built to last.
At $23.995 million, it stands apart not because it tries to do more, but because it chooses to do less — and does it carefully.

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