Luxury Real Estate Happens Here
DIGS.net favicon

Get access to exclusive homes, and the stories behind them that we don’t share anywhere else.

Discover the best of living the luxury lifestyle with spotlights on places from home décor and furniture stores to hotels and restaurants and city life in and around the South Bay & Westside areas and around the world.

The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

When the Museum opens later this year, on Wilshire and Fairfax in the Miracle Mile neighborhood of Los Angeles, and just in time for a new awards season, expect a blockbuster.

The Godfrey Hotel Hollywood

When it came to finding the ideal spot for the first Godfrey Hotel on the West Coast, Oxford Hotels & Resorts settled on a parcel of land a block south of Sunset Boulevard in the heart of Hollywood surrounded by technology and entertainment companies, high-rise apartments, retail, restaurants and nightlife.

The Firehouse Hotel: Hot-Spot Hospitality

Housed in a historic 1927 building in the Arts District of Los Angeles, the Firehouse Hotel comprises nine rooms, a restaurant, an event space and a coffee bar.

Ultimate Journeys | Change of Scenery Near + Far

Montage Laguna Beach unveiled a head-to-toe makeover in March, expect 253 updated guestrooms and view of the Pacific. Plus Waikiki’s newest luxury boutique hotel will include 284 guestrooms and four suites with ocean views.

The Commodore of Hollywood

Accommodations for The Commodore of Hollywood will include 73 pet-friendly residences and nine hotel-style units ranging from 350 to 810 square feet, and featuring abundant natural light, soaring ceilings, hardwood flooring, spacious walk-in closets, and eat-in kitchens.

Distinct Destinations: Near + Far

Luxury awaits on the North Shore of Lake Tahoe at the Condominiums of Granite Place at Boulder Bay. The Mauna Lani, Auberge Resort Collection’s new Meyer Davis-designed guestrooms are set to welcome guests with a fresh, contemporary aesthetic and panoramic ocean views.

Art Bridge By wHY Architecture

For years Angelenos walked or jogged along a concrete-encased tributary of the L.A. River in Valley Glen, its painted flank part of the Great Wall of Los Angeles—a vibrant mural depicting California’s ethnic peoples.