Design Guide: The Los Feliz Neighborhood of Los Angeles
Los Angeles might be known for showbiz, but the city also has plenty to offer when it comes to design. Considered a creative capital, you’ll find hundreds of museums covering everything from modern art to military history, striking architectural landmarks, and your pick of trendy places where you can eat, drink, or stay.
It’s a lot easier to wrap your head around Los Angeles when you think of it less as one massive, sprawling city and instead more as a cluster of neighborhoods that all have their own charm. So rather than try to hit all the design spots in one guide, we’re bringing you the best of the best of Los Feliz.
Situated just below Griffith Park (you can even spot Griffith Observatory from below), the area was originally inhabited by the Tongva Native Americans. In the early 1800s, Corporal Jose Vicente Feliz helped organize a new pueblo in Los Angeles, and he was rewarded with the land from the King of Spain. Today, Los Feliz rests between chaotic Hollywood and ultra-hip Silver Lake, but this largely walkable neighborhood has an eclectic vibe all its own.
What to Do
Head to Barnsdall Art Park for the sweeping city views, but stay for the beauty of the Hollyhock House. Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and completed in 1921, it was built as a residence for an oil heiress and patron of the arts. Her favorite flower was the hollyhock, and Wright used that as inspiration, incorporating an abstract hollyhock motif throughout the building. Its architectural significance marked the Hollyhock House as LA’s first UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2019.