SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

July 9, 2021

DIGS is the premiere luxury real estate lifestyle magazine serving the most affluent neighborhoods in the South Bay and Westside of Los Angeles, California.

Issue link: https://www.southbaydiggs.com/i/1390769

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 23 of 95

24 DIGS.NET | 7.9.2021 JULY 9, 2021 | ISSUE 257 TO OUR READERS South Bay DIGS welcomes your feedback and encourages reader response to our editorial features. Please send your letters to the Publisher at 722 1st Street, Unit D, Hermosa Beach, California, 90254 or via email to WDOW@southbaydigs.com. Please include your name and contact information. Letters may be published and we reserve the right to edit. ADVERTISING For inquiries, please contact Publisher Warren Dow at 310.373.0142. EDITORIAL For editorial inquiries, please email Editorial@SouthBayDIGS.com On The Cover JUNE 25, 2021 DIGS.NET FIND YOUR PLACE. NEW AND NEXT ON 9th Well-heeled glamour and outdoor living take center stage at this spacious new Hill Section home P R E S E N T E D B Y NICK SCHNEIDER & LAUREN FORBES OF COMPASS FEATURE ON PAGE X X FIND YOUR PLACE. JULY 9, 2021 DIGS.NET I N S I D E D E S T I N AT I O N D E S I G N | S C U L P T U R A L M I N I M A L I S M | D E S E R T A P P E A L PRESENTED BY NICK SCHNEIDER AND LAUREN FORBES OF COMPASS LIST PRICE: $9,868,000 FEATURED ON PAGE 64 722 1st Street, Unit D, Hermosa Beach, California, 90254 Office: 310.373.0142 South Bay Digs Magazine is published every other Friday by m3 Media, LLC. Reproduction in any form or by any means is strictly prohibited without the prior written consent from m3 Media LLC. The Publisher and advertisers are not responsible or liable for misinformation, misprints, or typographical errors. All advertised properties are subject to prior sale or withdrawal without notice. Real estate advertised in this publication is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. M3 Media will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. Any and all submissions to this publication become the property of m3 Media, LLC and may be used in any media. CREATIVE SERVICES & AD DESIGN/ORIGINAL ARTWORK PROVIDED EXCLUSIVELY BY SOUTH BAY DIGS. © 2021 Micro Market Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Publisher Marketing Director Business Development Director Digital Media Director Video Editor Senior Graphic Designer Graphic Designer Contributing Writers Senior Staff Photographer Warren J. Dow Kyle Coats Bud Moore Kieron McKay Matt Polizzi Rufus Agbede Jim Alba Jenn Thornton Constance Dunn Karine Monié Joclene Davey Abigail Stone Paul Jonason CO N N E C T W I T H U S Listen & subscribe on iTunes, digs.net or your favorite podcast provider. The Titans of Real Estate INFLUENCERS PODCAST .net S O U T H B A Y History Tidbits DRE#: 01368971 Maureen Megowan 310.541.6416 mdmegowan@gmail.com PALOS VERDES ROAD DEVELOPMENT Neigborhood Church One of the more spectacular buildings in Palos Verdes Estates is the mansion constructed in 1928 for J.J. Haggarty of Haggarty's Department Stores. In addition to the magnificent villa, Haggarty also built a pier extending from his property into the ocean for the purpose of launching his boats. False rumors claimed he used it for smuggling imports into the country. This pier, just to the south of the Swim Club, can be seen in old photographs of the Swim Club. The mansion was never occupied by the Haggartys, as Mrs. Haggarty preferred to stay at the family estate on Adams Blvd. closer in to the city of Los Angeles. Mr. Haggarty died in 1935, and the mansion was vacant for many years, and became to be rumored as haunted. Sometime in the early 1940's, an eccentric inventor purchased the property, and furnished it with a large collection of nude statues and paintings. Finally, the Neighborhood Church acquired the property in 1950 for only $70,000, Palos Verdes Estates Gatehouse This stone, castle-like structure, which is at 4420 Via Valmonte, near the entrance to Palos Verdes Estates on Via Valmonte, just up from Hawthorne Blvd., was built in 1926 as a guard's house for what was intended to be a gated entrance to the new Palos Verdes Project. The structure is a two story 15 foot diameter round building with 18 inch thick walls. It has two floors; a bedroom and bathroom area upstairs and a living room with a stone fireplace and a kitchen downstairs. This structure was known as the "Stone Tower", "Tower House" and the "Mirlo Gate Lodge" (Via Valmonte was originally named Via Mirlo, was renamed Hawthorne Ave. prior to Hawthorne Blvd. being extended south over the Peninsula Hill to the ocean, and then renamed Via Valmonte). Title was taken to this structure by Palos Verdes Estates in 1939 when the city was incorporated, and is leased by the city as a residence. Malaga Cove Library The Malaga Cove Library opened on June 3, 1930 as the Palos Verdes Library and Art Gallery. In keeping with the vision for the new community that was being established on the Peninsula, the library benefited from some of the best design thinking of its time. The building architect, Myron Hunt, was already known for his work on the Rose Bowl, the Pasadena Public Library, and other area buildings. The landscape architects, the Olmsted Brothers, were not only the sons of Frederick Law Olmsted of Central Park fame but well-known in their own right. In many ways the design of the library, with its inclusion of a multipurpose Gallery room designed for both art exhibits and public performances and its beautiful outdoor spaces, was ahead of its time and foreshadowed the role libraries play today as community gathering places and not just repositories for books. The above is an excerpt from my book "Historic Tales of Palos Verdes and the South Bay". For more info see http://www.southbayhistory.com.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online - July 9, 2021