![]() Tiered building heights remain unchanged, providing a reduction in scale facing Sunset Boulevard, and approximately 22,000 square feet of landscaped terrace decks for use by tenants. Likewise, the mass timber wrapping the upper floors of the building have been discarded and replaced by clear and frosted materials, held together by a steel frame. Per the environmental study, the project has made changes as a result of feedback provided by the city's Urban Design Studio, including swapping out the “distinctive, softly luminous material and wood screens," in favor of solid materials alternating between frosted and clear panels. Gensler is designing the proposed 275-foot-tall building, which remains similar in form, but has undergone several revisions since last seen in late 2020. ![]() The proposed development, announced in March 2020, calls for the construction of a 15-story building featuring roughly 431,000 square feet of offices above 12,386 square feet of ground-floor retail space. The project would replace a Staples at 6450 Sunset BoulevardĪ proposed Hollywood office complex from developers Millennium Partners and Shorenstein Properties continues to inch toward reality.Ī final environmental study released by the Los Angeles Department City Planning represents another milestone for the Sunset + Wilcox development, which would replace a Staples office supply store and several smaller commercial buildings at 6450 Sunset Boulevard. I haven't been to Northridge recently, but I know it's urbanizing in parts there.ĭesign refresh for Hollywood's Sunset + Wilcox office complex You can kinda see people getting priced out of Sherman Oaks and moving north into Van Nuys. Sepulveda could be lined with 5-7 story buildings for miles, in this decade. I gave up on Van Nuys a few years ago, but I'm starting to see some hope there. It's not mind boggling growth, but the infill is making a difference on some of those older blocks. It's flying under the radar, but that's probably a good thing. Some of those buildings are really nice, something you'd see in West Hollywood.Įven in Van Nuys has more new construction than people expect. Noho and Woodland Hills have the most transformation, but if you travel through Sherman Oaks/Studio City, there is a ton of new 4-5 story buildings on the side streets. Having high quality transit, very high population densities, offices, and entertainment nearby may make the area a significant destination. The District NoHo project planned for the North Hollywood metro station parking lots is one of the largest serious proposals in the greater LA region and on top of what's already being built and planned in that area will be truly transformative. I don't get to the Valley very often but I've been impressed and optimistic about what I've seen, especially around NoHo. Apple previously announced it aims to grow the Culver City office to more than 3,000 employees by 2026. ![]() The company is estimated to employ more than 1,500 people in Los Angeles through Apple TV+, Apple Music and other ventures. The company could break ground on the second, 369,000-square-foot building in fall 2023 and be completed by late 2025, with the entire complex expected to be open in 2026.Īpple now occupies 500,000 square feet of space in and around Culver City, including a 128,000-square-foot building that it leases just south of the new campus site. Pending approval by both Culver City and Los Angeles, Apple could break ground on the first, 167,000-square-foot building early next year with completion set for late 2024. It would also replace an entire block of office and industrial buildings Apple bought in late 2020 for $162 million. The new development would double Apple’s footprint in Culver City, where its streaming service is based. The campus, dubbed Culver Crossings, would include two four- and five-story buildings stretching across 4.5 acres between National, Washington and Venice boulevards. A new environmental report released by Culver City highlights the new copper look. Quote: The Cupertino-based tech giant unveiled plans for its new office campus for thousands of employees on the border of Culver City and Los Angeles, Urbanize Los Angeles reported.
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