Reference
The five Westside home identities
Each identity comes with the same look at three Westside price points. Concept estimates, not appraisals; specific deals get specific numbers.
The Coastal Modernist
Light, air, and the line where inside meets out.
Drawn to bright, open rooms, walls of glass, and a plan that opens to the garden. Clean lines, pale floors, nothing heavy. A home that feels calm, current, and full of daylight. Palette: white walls, light oak, large glazing, soft sand and sea tones. Found in Santa Monica, Venice, Mar Vista, the Palisades.
Coast & canyon: 1958 post-and-beam in Venice or the Palisades, around $2.5M. Design-rich middle: 1962 modernist in Mar Vista or Culver City, around $1.45M. Emerging value: 1959 mid-century inland or South Bay, around $900K.
The Quiet Minimalist
Calm, restraint, and a few things made well.
Wants less, chosen carefully. Pale wood, hidden storage, uncluttered surfaces, a home that lowers your shoulders the moment you walk in. Palette: pale timber, plaster, paper-soft light, integrated detailing. Found in Mar Vista, Culver City, Santa Monica.
Coast & canyon: 1965 modernist calmly renovated in Santa Monica, around $2.4M. Design-rich middle: 1958 modern in Mar Vista or Culver City, around $1.4M. Emerging value: 1960 single-level inland or South Bay, around $880K.
The Organic Naturalist
Warmth, texture, and a garden you actually live in.
At home around natural materials and green. Plaster and wood, a deep lot, mature trees, the line between house and garden dissolved. Palette: limewash plaster, walnut, stone, planting, dappled light. Found in Mar Vista, Culver City, West Adams, the canyons.
Coast & canyon: 1948 character home and garden in Mar Vista or Venice, around $2.2M. Design-rich middle: 1947 garden Craftsman in Culver City or West Adams, around $1.3M. Emerging value: 1950 garden cottage inland or South Bay, around $820K.
The Industrial Romantic
Volume, structure, and honest materials.
Loft-like space: exposed structure, steel and glass, polished concrete, room to make and host. Raw made warm, with art on the walls and nothing fussy. Palette: black steel, concrete, reclaimed wood, open volume. Found in Culver City, Mid-City, West Adams, converted spaces.
Coast & canyon: Converted live-work in Venice, around $2.3M. Design-rich middle: 1955 warehouse-style remodel in Culver City or Mid-City, around $1.35M. Emerging value: Flexible loft-style space inland or South Bay, around $850K.
The Character Collector
Soul, story, and a home with a past.
Loves a home built with craft that has lived a little: Spanish arches, Craftsman wood, original tile, rooms with edges and surprises. Layered, warm, one of a kind. Palette: clay tile, oak, plaster, color, period detail. Found in West Adams, Mid-City, Mar Vista, Santa Monica.
Coast & canyon: 1926 Spanish Revival in Santa Monica or Venice, around $2.6M. Design-rich middle: 1925 Spanish or Craftsman in Mar Vista or West Adams, around $1.5M. Emerging value: 1923 bungalow inland or South Bay, around $950K.
Common questions
How is identity decided?
Each answer carries identity tags; the scoring resolves to the closest of five archetypes, with a secondary streak shown when the score is close.
What if I'm between two identities?
That's a streak. The result card shows the primary identity and notes the secondary so the search reflects both pulls.
Are these the only neighborhoods?
No. The three price tiers (Coast & canyon, Design-rich middle, Emerging value) are the most common Westside reads for each identity. A specific search adapts to budget and life details on a call.
Where do the prices come from?
Closed-sale benchmarks across the named Westside markets, weighted to the era and character of each identity. Concept estimates, not appraisals.