SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

July 1, 2022

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

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74 DIGS.NET | 7.1.2022 S W E E T D I G S | 5 7 7 T H S T R E E T M A R K E T H ead south along Hermosa Avenue— past the bustle of Pier Avenue—and scenes of Old Hermosa start to open up. There are casual eateries and places to have a cold beer, as well as inviting walk streets lined with idyllic bungalows that lead to the warm sands and cool waters of the Pacific Ocean. But along the 7th Street walk street there's new flourish in the form of an inviting contem- porary home, approximately 4,200 square feet in size—a 4-bedroom and 6-bathroom designer haven that's defined by its beach and ocean views, low-key glamour and generous selec- tion of sunlit gathering spaces. Walk streets, with their neighborly atmospheres and homes located steps from the beach, are highly desired. In Hermosa Beach nearly all walk streets are pleasingly flat and intimate, about a block long, but there's typically little turnover in terms of real estate. "I've been doing this for 22 years," states real estate agent Lauren Forbes, "and there's not been in recent memory a new construction house available for sale on a flat walk street in Hermosa Beach. So it's a very unique property in that regard." Completed in 2021, this home was purchased by its current owners, who upgraded several features, including sound and lighting, while briefly in residence. Boosting its special location is the residence's thoughtful design and construction, created by architect Charles Belak- Berger (CBB Architects), longtime Beach Cities builder Mike Davis (Mike Davis Custom Home Building) and designer Kathy Barone of Barone Designs. "With windows we captured and preserved the views and light," points out Davis, who shaped key living areas towards the ocean's electric landscape of palm trees, blue skies and blue waves. And the natural setting informed Barone's selection of the luminous, beach-friendly hues and textures she used throughout, from the gorgeous, creamy porce- lain cladding on the front of the home, to the sand-hued planks of European white oak on the floors. "Driftwood," says Barone, "was one of my key inspirations."

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