| Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com | This deluxe volume offers a meticulously researched and lavishly illustrated history of 45 magnificent estates in three of America’s most prized residential districts: Beverly Hills, Bel-Air, and Holmby Hills. Lush new color photographs as well as a trove of historical images take readers beyond the front gates for an exceptional, never-before-seen view of the mansions, grounds, and gardens of these sumptuous estates, and tell the history of Los Angeles' rise from rugged paddocks and farmland to famed metropolis. Each house is explored both for its historical and architectural importance, for here are the epitome of residences and gardens reflecting the famed Italianate and California Mediterranean styles by all the leading architects of Southern California, including Wallace Neff, James Dolena, Gordon Kaufmann, Robert Farquhar, Roland Coate, and Paul Williams. They built for clients whose own stories reflect the intrigue and foibles of Hollywood society (What rich widow built one of the greatest estates, only to lose everything because of non-stop parties and gambling? Which major Hollywood star secretly took nearly 100,000 photographs of nude starlets including young Marilyn Monroe at his estate?). The book’s final chapter, "Gone But Not Forgotten," pays homage to great estates that have been destroyed or lost to history. | Average Customer Rating: Lavish Book just like the estates This book is filled with beautiful photos of the many estates as well as filled with history about Beverly Hills and the celebrities that built them! Beautifully packaged and a terrific read! This Book Delivers The estates of Beverly Hills, Holmby Hills, and Bel-Air are some of Southern California's greatest works of architecture and landscape design, but no one has published a serious history of these celebrated residences until now. I love The Legendary Estates of Beverly Hills for many reasons. First, it is filled with historical and present-day photographs that really capture the beauty of these estates and the stories of their often-famous owners. Second, this book does more than just describe the architecture or the landscape design. It explains how the architects and their clients created these grand estates. Third, this is the antithesis of a glossy, superficial book. It is physically big and substantial, yes, but it's what's inside that matters. LEBH covers each estate in detail, not just the architecture and landscape architecture, but the interior design and furnishings. It provides the history of each estate, from its original design and construction through its subsequent owners and the changes they often made to the house and property.
The books tells some great stories--some funny, some sad--about the different owners. And it has chapters that provide the detailed history for each of the three neighborhoods.
I came away from LEBH with a much greater understanding of and appreciation for the Beverly Hills, Holmby Hills, and Bel-Air neighborhoods...and for these estates which can be rarely glimpsed from the street. Whether you're an architecture or landscape architecture buff, an afficianado of Los Angeles history, or you just learn how rich families have their share of triumphs and tragedies,this book delivers. And then some. Misleading This is really handsomely produced insider gossip.Very big on "legends" of famous owners but woefully inadequate on photographs of the estates or any design context. All about how much something cost, how many rooms and how much entertaining. Almost no sense of any esthetic or of how landscape, architecture and interiors worked together (or didn't).The book is beautifully produced and the early history is interesting but the actual photographs of the estates are so sparse or dated as to be almost ludicrous. The ultimate in Real Estate porn Covering some of the most beautiful estates in Beverly Hills, Holmby Hills and Bel-Air, this book is the ultimate in Real Estate wish-fulfillment. Happily it leaves off most of the cracker-box McMansions of the last decades; the focus is estates such as Casa Encantada, the Harvey Mudd mansion and the Warner Estate, as well as such estates as Enchanted Hill and Cordhaven that are sadly gone. The book is really a tome, large enough to be completely at home in one of the lavishly panelled libraries contained in it's pages and gives exhaustive history of the homes detailed inside. Filled with glorious photographs of the estates both today and in the years they were built, this is a must-have for serious collectors of books on LA's estate architecture and perhaps the best passive-aggressive gift one could give to someone who lives in Beverly Park. | |