Newly modernized high-end luxury historic Full-Floor live/work lofts occupy entire floors of the Singer building in Downtown L.A. Each unit extends the full depth from the front of the building to the rear of the building.
Originally known as the Singer Sewing Building, now under construction and nearing completion, six impressively unique units have windows at least in both the front and the back, some have windows on all four sides, which allows for superior light and air circulation. Most units are surrounded by enormous windows, natural light and views.
Modern luxury gourmet kitchens, two to three bedrooms and two to three full bathrooms bring historic character, 12 ft to 24 ft extra high ceilings, oversized windows, original brick walls and superior noise control. Ultra large 4,000 to 6,000 square feet residences, most with private outdoor space, give the ability to put bedrooms in the back of a unit, and more layout flexibility.
Spacious hallways, convenient elevator right outside the unit door provide vast roominess, comfort and convenience in this early 1900s historic building. The higher floors give spectacular views of the Downtown skyline and the theater clock tower.
The building adjoins some of the most notable architecture and retail names in DTLA, including the spectacularly re-purposed Tower Theater, Apple Store, Urban Outfitters and Vans flagship.
The Singer DTLA, a Beaux-Arts building that dates to 1922, has been completely renovated into six luxurious live/work lofts with large patios. An entire floor with no adjacent neighbors for your living space provides one to three bedrooms. On one end of the unit is a large primary suite with full bath and a walk-in closet, while the other end holds a flexible space ideal for another primary suite, large office, or two additional bedrooms. This separation allows residents to create distinct spaces for home and office, and reserves the floors central area for an open living room, with a wrap-around kitchen for entertaining. To define the connection with the outside, glass walls have been designed that open onto the patios and balconies, creating distinct outdoor spaces for dining and relaxation. Features secured entry with elevators and parking. Conveniently located in the Fashion District, The Singer offers abundant restaurants and stores within walking distance.
More:
The Singer Building – also known as The Singer Sewing Building – is a historic, 8-story, Beaux Arts structure on Broadway. It is currently being renovated as live/work lofts on the seven upper floors with ground-floor retail. All units feature operable floor-to-ceiling folding windows that open onto new patios. The penthouse unit features a double-height sloped ceiling retained from the original auditorium.
The original edifice was designed and built in 1922 by Meyer and Holler’s Milwaukee Bradley Building Company, best known as the designers of Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. The Singer was long occupied by the Southern California Music Company, which used the building as sales space and hosted concerts in an auditorium located on the building’s top floor.
Architecture firm Omgivning is restoring the building’s front facade to its original look, with some modern touches, in accordance with the Broadway Design Guidelines.
The Singer Building’s ground-floor has been renovated to look to sparkling new, now ready for occupancy.
BUILDING INFORMATION Status: Under Construction Gross Sq Ft: 64,604 Number of Stories: 8 LEED Certification: Not Certified RESIDENTIAL Residential Type: Apartment Market Rate Units: 6 Total Rental Units: 6 Total Units: 6. Three year minimum lease for these extraordinary loft rentals.
Q: How do I contact 1850 industrial avenue hoa?A: 1850 Industrial St is Biscuit Company Lofts in the Arts District of Downtown Los Angeles. Front desk phone number is 213-415-1720. Most HOA Home Owners Association phone numbers are listed in the HOA Directory for Downtown Los Angeles at www.HOADTLA.com
Hi, it’s Corey chambers in Los Angeles. Your home sold GUARANTEED, or I’ll buy it. Thanks for taking a minute to read the L.A. Loft Blog. In a moment, I’ll share with you some valuable information about this topic: Unlisted Live/Work lofts in Los Angeles. If you see any properties that are of interest to you, let us know, and we will gladly send you a property information packet on any loft, condo or house or private preview is available upon request. If you have a home you’d like to sell, you should know that I will guarantee the sale of your present home at a price acceptable to you, or I’ll buy it for cash. This guarantee will allow you to buy your next home without worrying about selling your present home. To find out how much you can sell your home for, call me at (213) 880-9910. Now.
So live work, loft, live, work lofts — That’s what people have been asking about lately for the past few weeks. So that’s what we’re going to talk about. As long as people want to ask for information about live work lofts, we’ll talk about livework lofts. We’ll talk about living. We’ll talk about working, and we will talk about lofting. We’ve been busy this week showing live/work lofts in downtown Los Angeles. We showed some for lease at the Higgins, building, the Bartlett building, and the Cornell building.
We got a request this week from someone who said that his lender told him that they can actually give them a better deal if he buys a loft, if he buys a place zoned for live work, or in a live work zone. So that’s interesting, because I don’t think I’ve heard that before. I’d like to know exactly what his lender said. I might ask him to, for his lenders phone number so I can talk to them myself and find out exactly what they meant. That way I could be sure to get him the right info, and help the lender, because he wants to get a good deal.
It’s usually the other way around — people usually have to pay a tiny bit more for their loft loans in general because they have unusual issues, and they’re listed as industrial and commercial buildings. They have more commercial properties in the building, which lenders usually don’t like. They usually have a bunch of issues that lenders do not like. So it’s usually the opposite of, of that. As far as lenders go, they usually want you to buy a regular house in a regular suburban neighborhood or a condo in a regular suburban neighborhood or regular condo, but everybody’s different. So that’s why it’s just important to know exactly what his lender said and exactly what his lender meant when they said that they want that he could get a better deal. And, if it’s in a live work zone, So we don’t, we need to know the exact words because between what he’s lender says and what he says and what I say, you know, something can get skewed in that process.
The story with live-work is that people want to be able to live and work in the same place. That’s one of the reasons why some people get a loft rather than a regular house or ordinary condo. Many people want to be in a place that can be presented to clients as a place that’s more professional, that’s more upscale in a way, or more stylish — a place where they can get more work done. The open space allows them to work on more things like large artworks, or to just handle having clients coming over to be in a larger, more impressive space, a more professional space — and for a few other reasons:
People want to have clients over without disturbing their neighbors. And a lot of people feel strange if they’re trying to do work in a residential zoned area. Although the fact is that as far as I know, pretty much every house and even condos, you can do work in there. It varies city by city, sometimes neighborhood by neighborhood. But, for the most part, you can work at home, but you just cannot do things in general that disturb your neighbors. So, if you have neighbors that are disturbed by you having over one or two clients a day, those neighbors are probably goofy, but if you’re in some small town or suburban neighborhood, then your neighbors might know you, and they might be keeping an eye on you. Whereas in LA, it’s kind of the opposite. It big cities, people are constantly doing strange things, where that is normal in Los Angeles, that’s kind of what LA is for and San Francisco. People who want to do strange things, more creative endeavors, choose more unusual settings like New York city. So in these big cities centers of creativity, you would expect people to be doing strange things has been living and work, and working at home, or living at work would would not stand out as something unusual in these neighborhoods. Nevertheless, people want to feel even more comfortable and feel like what they’re doing is sanctioned by the law that is acceptable and expected They want to feel comfortable where they are living and they want to feel comfortable where they’re working. Live work allows people to feel comfortable living and working in that space, in that building and in that neighborhood.
I have lived and worked in the same place for a big chunk of my life. I have worked at home and a lot of different places. And I have also lived at work in a lot of places. I’ve lived in an office temporarily when I was a teenager, right after high school, before I went in the Air Force. That was only for about a month or so. When I got out of the Air Force, I lived in my sign shop, created a sign shop with my brother. And I just lived and worked in the sign shop, which was an industrial warehouse type of building a modern that building was probably built in the 1970s or eighties, probably seventies. And then, most recently before I moved to Los Angeles, I was doing eBay consignment, had a large industrial unit that I was leasing. That was about 1400 square feet. It was pretty cheap. It was only about a dollar per square foot, around $1,400 once a month. I built an apartment, a room inside of the warehouse because the warehouse was really pretty big. So there was room enough to build a large bedroom, and still have a large warehouse to work. At one point, we had a lot of stuff in that warehouse. We were selling for people. But fortunately, it did not make enough money. So it gave me an incentive to change careers too, to do real estate.
Real estate is better, especially when you’re in your fifties. You don’t want to really be schlepping people’s furniture and stuff. When you’re in your fifties, schlepping is good exercise, but I started to get pretty tired physically from that kind of work. And real estate is good because you walk sometimes, nut you don’t have to walk every day. I chose to walk every day because we’re walking the dog right now as I’m recording this audio for transcription to then L.A. Loft Blog.
That’s my experience with live/work, and that’s what people want — to live and work in the same spot. Or they just want a place that is, has the aesthetic — that industrial aesthetic, and mostly just live in there and enjoy it, enjoy that style. And there’s other people that just want mostly want to work so recent or re helped a repeat customer who had one of the penthouses at Eastern Colombia where they’re living and working, and then he needed more space to, to work.
But they do want to be able to know to be nearby and to, you know, sleep there if, and when they want to. But it’s mostly for, for work. So Eastern Columbia lofts is a very presentable place for doing anything. That’s where you want to be stylish, want to have a stylish and professional presentation for your work. And so that’s where they got a second law, because then they need thousands of square feet to be able to do that, what they do. So, take a look on the LA Loft Blog, I was busy showing properties and also running around because I had lost my keys, lost my fog Meyer, real estate, supra lockbox fobs. Then forgot, and tried to show some properties today that required the super lockbox fog and we were not able to get in. So that was a reminder that I need to get my father immediately. So I drove, I had to pay like 75 bucks for the fog, then drive to Beverly Hills to pick it up from the MLS goodness. They usually have good service MLS. But they should, they, they are, you’re there for the real estate agents they’re created by real estate agents for real estate agents. The MLS is where your listing, if you sell or rent out here, your loft real estate agents, that’s where we list it for other agents to see. And it also feeds out to Zillow and Trulia and all that for the public to see as well.
I should remind people that we have some pocket listings coming up. You want to know, you have exclusive access to our team’s pocket listings. It’s you get some big benefits when you can see a property and know about the property, find out about it before other buyers and renters find out about it. So we have, what is definitely the coolest live work loft, historic mills act loft in downtown Los Angeles, under $500,000. It’s going to be the biggest and coolest live work loft under $500,000. The largest, because it is has two mezzanines that have been added and it has the highest ceilings in the whole building. It has higher ceilings than, than the penthouse. And then it has two mezzanine, little rooms, little upstairs areas added a small office upstairs and then a bedroom added upstairs. So it has basically two bedrooms and a, and an office has a downstairs bedroom and upstairs bedroom And upstairs office. And it’s got a huge windows, Extra, extra large windows and views in a beautiful historic building across the street. That’s takes up a much of the view of a really beautiful building and then a corner, a street corner where you can watch people walking down the street. In the historic core. It’s got exposed brick and it has a dramatic lighting, sort of film lighting, added camera lighting, which is really cool to highlight the brick. It has a sort of a library added up on top with one of those library ladder ladders. That’s cool. It looks good in lofts, especially when you have the big, huge high, extra high ceilings. So it has all that character that other places do not have, and it’s not 700,000 or a million it’s under $500,000. So that’s rare to find a, a loft, this cool under 500,000.
You are one of the first! We haven’t even put this on the blog yet. We just, we might’ve barely mentioned part of it once. So you’re getting more of the whole story right now about getting paid to live in one of the most amazing lofts in downtown Los Angeles or anywhere for that matter. The coolest hippest, most stylish, most awesome, all inspiring creativity, creative juice, inducing lofts in more than 10 years that I’ve been working with lofts. So people like to live in a cool loft. And these are among the coolest:
High Ceilings, super high, extremely high, extra, extra high ceilings — higher ceilings than the penthouses, not as high as the penthouse ceilings — higher! and character, not just character, not a little bit, not a lot, but EXTRA CHARACTER. So, along with super high ceilings, we’ve got the super big walls of exposed original brick with special lighting theatrical stage motion, picture lighting, which this place deserves very appropriate. A bedroom with a door that closes so big open space and a bedroom, a real bedroom with a door that closes. Plus two mezzanines have been added. A bigger bedroom has been added as a mezzanine, the large bed, extra space and hand made wood closets with fantastic, beautiful rich wood clad closets, and a beautiful glass wall, partial wall rail, and metal spiral staircase going up there, washer and dryer in the unit kitchen has been upgraded with white subway tile backsplash covering the whole wall of the kitchen, or at least all the, you know, the wall between the sink and the counter and the cabinets bathroom has been upgraded or has a big deep soaking tub, new marble counter sink and new marble floor tiles in the bathroom. So we got, it’s like having, it’s like a small three bedroom, but with a big open loft. And that was super high ceilings added to it. So wait till you hear the price range, he’s got a whole bunch of other stuff, too many amazing details to even mention huge windows, bigger than huge windows with extra natural light and views downtown Los Angeles, historic core. What’s the price? Sounds like a million bucks or 2 million. It sounds like — but the average loft in downtown is about $500,000 to $600,000, sometimes to $700,000. So you think that this loft is at least going to be above average price? Nope. We’re talking about less, more character, more square footage, a lot more character than the average loft at a lower price than the average lofts lower prices than the average.
Lower price than the average loft. So check it out. www.millsactla.com take advantage of this www.millsactla.com. As I mentioned earlier, a property information packet is available on any loft, condo or house or a private preview. It was available upon request call (213) 880-9910. Cory chambers in Los Angeles. Your home sold GUARANTEED, or I’ll buy it. Thanks for joining me.