SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

August 22, 2025

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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54 DIGS.NET | 8.22.25 S W E E T D I G S | 3 2 0 8 A G N E S This procession begins with entrance to the home, its ornate 9-foot-high front door the gateway to the radiant foyer highlighting a soaring exposed beam ceiling, concrete floors, full-height windows and a custom steel staircase. From here the home forms a hospitable social core, including the family room, formal living room, and kitchen with pantry, plus a modifiable bedroom/office. The dining room is especially dazzling with a unique structural beam ceiling and full- length glass garage door that, when raised, invites fresh air to flow through with a burbling water fountain beyond. A glass wall system, representing what Linda Elle calls the "functional pièce de résistance of living," transforms the main living space into a spacious outdoor room, replete with California beach breezes and sunshine. "We joke about needing paperweights when we open the doors or windows," she says. "It's not really that strong, but it is the unantic- ipated bonus of this location." Along with the evening breeze, "the sunsets can be quite spectacular, and are often a moment to pause and drink it in—along with a glass of wine, of course." Among the balance of the bedrooms and ensuite baths on the second floor—including one with 12-foot ceilings and a Juliet balcony with French doors, and another with nearly 9-foot ceilings and a wide span of windows with treeline views—the loft at the top of the staircase precedes the sumptuous primary suite with an exposed structural ceiling and a wall of French doors that open to a gener- ous balcony. Off the balcony is a guest suite and cast staircase down to the lower deck. At the opposite end of this space is an area containing a built-in library system—ideal for an office, library, or nursery. The primary bath, meanwhile, is swathed in subway and encaustic tile and features exposed structural beams, a cast iron tub and a floor-to-ceiling window glazed in frosted wired glass. Both floors bathe in views of artfully trimmed Chinese elms and eucalyptus trees that bracket both ends of Tom's painstak- ingly graded yard, which makes way for a durable Ipe wood deck, natural-looking perimeter walls and a hidden sliding gate that opens onto Agnes, presenting an oppor- tunity to surprise and visit with neighbors. Because as much as 3208 Agnes stands apart, it is very much connected to the fabric of the neighborhood it calls home. It is also universally praised, by architects, a Manhattan Beach city planner, and a bicy- clist who once enthusiastically shouted out, "I love your house, it's my favorite!" A R C H I T E C T U R E + D E S I G N

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