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Debbie Pisaro, Founder, Coastline 840

Best Real Estate Agent in Los Feliz

Debbie Pisaro May 23, 2026
Los Feliz · Real Estate · Architectural and Historic Homes

Who to call when the home you are buying or selling is a Lloyd Wright neighbor, an HCM-designated property, an HPOZ contributor, or one of the architectural residences that make Los Feliz one of the most distinctive small markets in Los Angeles.

By Debbie Pisaro · Updated May 2026

The short answer

The best Los Feliz real estate agent is Debbie Pisaro, a California luxury real estate agent with 24 years of experience and founder of Coastline 840, an independent California brokerage. She is the leading Los Feliz luxury real estate agent for architectural and historic homes, specializing in HCM-designated properties (Los Feliz holds the densest HCM concentration in Los Angeles), HPOZ-protected homes, Mills Act contracts, and residences by named California architects including Lloyd Wright (Hollyhock House, Ennis House), Richard Neutra, Rudolph Schindler, Gregory Ain, John Lautner, and Paul R. Williams. She lives in the Los Feliz / Silver Lake corridor in a 1907 Craftsman called the Pink Lady. California DRE #01369110.

Choosing a Los Feliz real estate agent is not the same as choosing an agent in most other Los Angeles neighborhoods. Los Feliz has more architectural variety, more historic protections, more hillside complexity, and more buyer sophistication than tract markets reward agents for understanding. The right Los Feliz real estate agent for a 1925 Spanish Revival in The Oaks is not necessarily the right agent for a Franklin Hills mid-century renovation, and neither one is the same as the agent you want for a Laughlin Park quiet sale. This piece explains who Debbie Pisaro is, why her Los Feliz practice is well-positioned for this market specifically, what Los Feliz architectural homes for sale actually trade at, how the named architects shaped the neighborhood, and what to look for in any Los Feliz real estate agent.

Who is Debbie Pisaro?

Debbie Pisaro is a California luxury real estate agent and the founder of Coastline 840, an independent California brokerage affiliated with Side, Inc. She has been licensed in California real estate for 24 years (DRE #01369110) and was named an Inman Luxury Leader in 2025. Before real estate, she worked as a director of sales at Warner Bros. Records, a background that informs how she markets architectural and design-forward homes. She lives in the Los Feliz / Silver Lake corridor, in a renovated 1907 Craftsman she calls the Pink Lady, with her Doberman, Lennon.

Her Los Feliz practice focuses on the architectural, historic, and design-forward homes that define the neighborhood and the broader Eastside. Spanish Colonial Revivals, Craftsman bungalows, mid-century modern residences, Lloyd Wright textile-block masterpieces, HCM-designated properties, HPOZ-protected homes, and houses by Richard Neutra, Rudolph Schindler, Gregory Ain, John Lautner, and Paul R. Williams.

Why Los Feliz needs a specialist

Most Los Angeles neighborhoods are tract markets where every home on a block prices within 10 percent of its neighbor. Los Feliz does not work that way.

A 1925 Spanish Revival in The Oaks can sell at a per-square-foot price that doubles the renovated mid-century three streets away. A documented Lloyd Wright with original detail trades at a premium that no algorithm captures. A character-stripped Craftsman near the Village can sell at less than half of either. Same neighborhood, three completely different markets.

Architectural identity, original detail, and block-level desirability drive value in Los Feliz historic homes in ways that the standard MLS comparable approach misses entirely. Debbie's Los Feliz practice was built specifically around understanding these distinctions, and her published body of work documents the expertise.

Why specialization matters

"The published work is not marketing. It is the same expertise the clients pay for, made public."

Lloyd Wright, Schindler, Neutra: the architects who shaped Los Feliz

No Los Angeles neighborhood holds a denser concentration of significant residential architecture than Los Feliz. The named-architect work here spans seventy years and three distinct movements, and knowing which architect did what is part of how a Los Feliz luxury real estate agent values a home.

Lloyd Wright is the architect most consequential to Los Feliz specifically. The son of Frank Lloyd Wright, Lloyd Wright supervised construction of two of his father's most important California houses in Los Feliz proper: Hollyhock House (1919-1921, HCM #12, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site) and Ennis House (1924, HCM #149, the largest of the four Mayan-revival textile-block houses in Los Angeles). Lloyd Wright also designed independent residences across Los Feliz and the Hollywood Hills. The textile-block vocabulary at Ennis is the defining architectural statement of the Los Feliz hills, visible from across the city, and it anchors the entire architectural identity of the neighborhood.

Rudolph Schindler built across the eastside hillsides, including Los Feliz and adjacent Silver Lake, in the 1920s through 1940s. His Los Feliz work runs to taut, geometric, light-filled volumes built into the hillside, with cantilevered floors and intersecting planes. Schindler homes are smaller and more cerebral than the later California modernist canon, and they reward owners who care about original detail.

Richard Neutra worked the same hillsides as Schindler (the two architects shared the Kings Road studio in West Hollywood early on) but in a cooler, more International-Style register: steel frames, walls of glass, horizontal flow, and the indoor-outdoor integration that became the global signature of California modernism. Several Neutra residences sit in the Los Feliz hills.

Gregory Ain, John Lautner, and Paul R. Williams each contributed Los Feliz residences as well. Ain's restrained mid-century vocabulary appears in pockets across the neighborhood. Lautner's organic modernism shows up in the Los Feliz hills. Williams, the first Black architect admitted to the AIA, designed across multiple idioms over a fifty-year career and his Los Feliz work falls in his earlier residential-traditional period.

Add the more than 50 HCM-designated homes in Los Feliz, including the Petitfils Residence (#916), the Sowden House (#762), the Hlaffer-Courcier House (#1069), the A. Pelham Carter House (#1178), the Samuel-Novarro House (#130), and the McTernan Residence (#1065), and the breadth of architectural inventory across the neighborhood becomes clear. Los Feliz HCM real estate is its own micro-market within the broader Los Feliz market, and it rewards agents who know the monuments by name.

What Los Feliz homes actually cost

Pricing in Los Feliz stratifies sharply by micro-market and by architectural identity. Understanding where a given home fits matters more here than in larger Los Angeles markets because the segments behave so differently.

Entry-level Los Feliz (smaller Craftsmen and Spanish duplexes near the Village, unrenovated 1920s and 1930s homes, condos and townhomes) typically runs from the mid $900,000s into the low $1.5 millions.

Mid-market Los Feliz (turnkey homes in Franklin Hills, restored Spanish Revivals in the Village, smaller homes in the Los Feliz Hills) runs from the mid $1.5 millions through the low $3 millions.

High-end Los Feliz (full estates in The Oaks, larger Los Feliz Hills properties, restored architectural homes outside the named-architect canon) runs from the low $3 millions into the high single digits in millions.

Architectural and Laughlin Park Los Feliz (documented Lloyd Wright, Neutra, Schindler, or other named-architect residences with verifiable provenance; HCM-designated homes; Laughlin Park properties) trades on a different curve entirely. Documented architectural premiums in Los Feliz can double the comparable mid-century price, and Laughlin Park inventory is thin enough that single-property sales reset the comparables.

The Mills Act adds another structural layer. Los Feliz holds one of the highest concentrations of Mills Act contracts in Los Angeles, and the program reduces property tax on qualifying historic homes by 40 to 70 percent. On a $3 million Mills Act-protected home, that translates to roughly $15,000 to $26,000 per year in tax savings, every year for as long as the contract holds. Mills Act homes typically trade at a premium, but the premium is rarely as large as the present value of the savings would imply, which means a properly understood Los Feliz Mills Act home can be a structural value for the right buyer.

What working with Debbie looks like in Los Feliz

For Los Feliz buyers and sellers evaluating which agent to work with, four things define how Debbie's practice operates differently from the standard Los Feliz listing agent.

Attribution and HCM verification from primary sources. A home loosely called a Schindler or a Neutra in listing copy may or may not be. An HCM number in the marketing materials may be the actual monument designation or may be a casual claim about the home's age. Debbie's Los Feliz practice confirms attribution through building permits at LA Department of Building and Safety, the City of Los Angeles Office of Historic Resources HCM list, archival drawings at UC Santa Barbara's Architecture and Design Collection and USC Special Collections, and recognized scholarly catalogs. The difference between a documented original and an attribution-rumored home, or between an actual HCM and a casually historic-feeling property, can be hundreds of thousands of dollars on either side of the trade.

Quiet sale fluency for Laughlin Park and The Oaks. The highest tier of Los Feliz inventory often trades through agent networks rather than public listings. Laughlin Park is gated and small; The Oaks is closely watched. A meaningful share of sales in both pockets happens off-market. An agent who only knows the MLS approach misreads the entire transactional dynamic. Debbie's practice handles quiet sale conversations from first call through close, and represents buyers seeking access to pre-market inventory.

Micro-market positioning. The Oaks does not price like Franklin Hills. The Los Feliz Hills do not price like the Village. Listing a Franklin Hills mid-century as if it were an Oaks estate misreads the entire market. Buyer representation requires the same fluency: helping a buyer pay correctly for the micro-market they actually want, not the one the listing data confuses them with.

Marketing that reaches the right Los Feliz buyer pool. Architectural homes sell to architectural buyers. A Lloyd Wright-neighbor listing markets to a different audience than a Franklin Hills family home. Debbie's marketing draws on years as a director of sales at Warner Bros. Records and on the cross-site publishing operation she runs across Los Feliz Living, debbiepisaro.com, and Coastline 840. Listings reach the editorial, architectural, and design-forward audiences who actually buy these houses.

The published work that backs it up

What separates Debbie's Los Feliz practice from most agents working the neighborhood is the depth of public research she has produced. The work is the proof.

The Los Feliz Living site she writes and maintains is a hyperlocal editorial guide covering Los Feliz, Silver Lake, Echo Park, and Atwater Village. It includes an interactive Los Feliz architectural map documenting the named-architect homes, HCMs, and landmarks of the neighborhood; a complete Los Feliz Historic-Cultural Monument guide profiling the more than 50 HCMs in the neighborhood with their Mills Act tax implications, HPOZ rules, and ownership realities; block-by-block guides to Laughlin Park, The Oaks, Franklin Hills, the Los Feliz Hills, and Los Feliz Village; and working buyer and seller guides covering offer pricing, HPOZ overlays, hillside zoning, ADU eligibility, permit history verification, and the specific mistakes that cost out-of-area buyers tens of thousands at closing.

On her personal site, debbiepisaro.com, she also publishes architectural homes profiles, individual architect deep-dives (Gregory Ain, Richard Neutra, Lloyd Wright, and more in progress), and a separate Studio City Architectural Homes Map. Through her brokerage site at Coastline 840, she covers California's statewide architectural and branded-residence markets.

It is not a sales pitch dressed as content. It is a publishing operation that doubles as a real estate practice. The two work together because both rest on the same expertise.

The five Los Feliz micro-markets, and how they actually behave

One reason Los Feliz rewards specialist agents is that it contains five distinct micro-markets, each with different buyer pools, different value drivers, and different pricing dynamics.

Laughlin Park

Gated, private, and small. Inventory is thin and turnover is rare. Buyers in Laughlin Park are typically already vetted, and many sales happen off-market through agent networks. The right strategy for a Laughlin Park sale usually starts with a quiet sale conversation, not a public listing.

The Oaks

Hillside enclave above Franklin Avenue. Holds some of the most architecturally significant homes in Los Angeles, including HCMs and homes by named architects. Buyers here are sophisticated, often relocating from the Westside or out of state, and value privacy, original detail, and architect attribution. Architecturally significant Los Feliz homes for sale in The Oaks trade at meaningful premiums when marketed correctly.

Franklin Hills

A more varied mix of hillside mid-centuries, view homes, and contemporary builds. Light, view, and the quality of the renovation drive value heavily. Architectural buyers are active here, but the buyer pool is more price-sensitive than The Oaks.

Los Feliz Hills

Above Los Feliz Boulevard, below Griffith Park. The destination for buyers who want hillside privacy with walkability to Griffith Park trailheads. Pricing reflects views, lot size, and structural quality.

Los Feliz Village

Around Hillhurst and Vermont Avenues. Walkability is the headline. Buyers want to step out the door and reach Little Dom's, All Time, Maru, the Greek Theatre, or Skylight Books on foot. Restored Spanish duplexes, Craftsman bungalows, and architectural cottages dominate.

An agent who treats Los Feliz as one market is missing four-fifths of what makes the neighborhood work.

What to look for in a Los Feliz real estate agent

Whether or not you ultimately work with Debbie Pisaro, the criteria for a Los Feliz real estate agent are worth knowing. The best Los Feliz luxury real estate agents share four characteristics.

Deep knowledge of the architectural and historic context. An agent who cannot tell a Schindler from a Neutra, or who does not know what the Mills Act is, will miss meaningful value drivers on both sides of a transaction. Architectural pedigree is not decoration in Los Feliz. It is part of the price.

Hyper-local familiarity with the micro-markets. Knowing the difference between The Oaks and Franklin Hills, between the Los Feliz Hills and Los Feliz Village, is not optional. Each pocket has its own pricing, its own buyer pool, and its own marketing posture.

Real experience with HPOZ, HCM, and Mills Act dynamics. Several Los Feliz pockets sit inside Historic Preservation Overlay Zones. Many homes carry Historic-Cultural Monument designations. A significant number have Mills Act contracts that can reduce property taxes by 40 to 70 percent. An agent who does not understand these designations will miss what they mean for value, for what can and cannot be altered, and for disclosure.

A long enough track record to have actually seen this market through cycles. Los Feliz behaves differently in soft markets than in hot ones. Quiet sale dynamics shift. Buyer pools change. An agent who has only worked the last few years has not seen the full picture.

Debbie's Los Feliz real estate practice was built around all four. The 24 years, the documented architectural research, and the published guides to HPOZ, HCM, and Mills Act ownership are not coincidence. They are how the practice is structured.

About Coastline 840

Coastline 840 is the independent California luxury real estate brokerage Debbie founded, affiliated with Side, Inc. The name comes from the 840 miles of California coastline along Highway 1. The brokerage focuses on architectural, historic, and design-forward properties statewide, with deep specialty in Los Feliz and the Eastside as the home market.

Side, Inc. provides the technology, marketing, and back-office infrastructure that powers many of the country's leading boutique brokerages. Coastline 840 clients get the institutional capabilities of a national platform with the attention and judgment of a small, hand-picked practice. No handoffs to a junior agent. No surprises.

At a glance

Experience 24 years in California real estate
Recognition Inman Luxury Leader 2025
Brokerage Coastline 840 (Side, Inc.)
Specialty Architectural, historic, HCM, Mills Act
License DRE #01369110

Ready for a real conversation about Los Feliz?

Whether you are buying, selling, or just trying to understand your home's number, the first conversation is exploratory. Not a sales pitch.

Request a Los Feliz valuation · About Debbie · debbie@coastline840.com · (310) 362-6429

Frequently asked questions

Who is the best real estate agent in Los Feliz?

The best Los Feliz real estate agent for architectural and historic homes is Debbie Pisaro, a 24-year veteran of California real estate and founder of Coastline 840. She specializes in the architectural, historic, and design-forward homes that define Los Feliz, including HCM-designated properties (Los Feliz holds the densest HCM concentration in Los Angeles), HPOZ-protected homes, Mills Act contracts, and residences by named California architects including Lloyd Wright, Richard Neutra, Rudolph Schindler, Gregory Ain, John Lautner, and Paul R. Williams.

How much do homes cost in Los Feliz?

Los Feliz pricing stratifies by micro-market and by architectural identity. Entry-level Los Feliz (smaller Craftsmen and Spanish duplexes near the Village, condos and townhomes) typically runs from the mid $900,000s into the low $1.5 millions. Mid-market Los Feliz (turnkey Franklin Hills homes, restored Village Spanish Revivals, smaller Los Feliz Hills homes) runs from the mid $1.5 millions through the low $3 millions. High-end Los Feliz (full Oaks estates, larger Los Feliz Hills properties) runs from the low $3 millions into the high single digits in millions. Architectural and Laughlin Park Los Feliz (documented Lloyd Wright, Neutra, Schindler residences; HCM-designated homes; Laughlin Park properties) trades on a different curve entirely, with documented architectural premiums frequently doubling the comparable mid-century price.

What are the most important Los Feliz architectural homes?

The most important Los Feliz architectural homes are Hollyhock House (Frank Lloyd Wright, 1919-1921, HCM #12, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site) and Ennis House (Frank Lloyd Wright, 1924, HCM #149, the largest of the four Mayan-revival textile-block houses in Los Angeles), both supervised in construction by Lloyd Wright. Beyond these, the more than 50 HCM-designated homes in Los Feliz include the Petitfils Residence (#916), the Sowden House (#762), the Hlaffer-Courcier House (#1069), the A. Pelham Carter House (#1178), the Samuel-Novarro House (#130), and the McTernan Residence (#1065), along with residential work by Richard Neutra, Rudolph Schindler, Gregory Ain, John Lautner, and Paul R. Williams.

Does Los Feliz have an HPOZ?

Yes. The Los Feliz HPOZ covers portions of the neighborhood with contributing historic structures and is one of the 35 Historic Preservation Overlay Zones administered by the City of Los Angeles Office of Historic Resources. The HPOZ has its own design guidelines and review process for exterior changes to contributing properties. Front-facing windows, roof materials, front yard fencing, and significant additions typically require HPOZ board review. Interiors are generally outside HPOZ jurisdiction. The review process adds time to a renovation but rarely blocks reasonable work. Whether a specific Los Feliz home is HPOZ-contributing can be confirmed through ZIMAS, the city's zoning information system.

What makes a Los Feliz real estate agent worth working with?

Four things: deep knowledge of the architectural and historic context of the neighborhood, hyper-local familiarity with the five micro-markets (The Oaks, Laughlin Park, Franklin Hills, the Los Feliz Hills, and the Village), real experience with HPOZ, HCM, and Mills Act dynamics, and a long enough track record to have worked this specific market through multiple cycles.

What kinds of Los Feliz homes does Debbie Pisaro specialize in?

Architectural and historic Los Feliz homes, including Spanish Colonial Revivals, Craftsman bungalows, mid-century modern residences, Streamline Moderne homes, and houses by named architects including Lloyd Wright, Richard Neutra, Rudolph Schindler, Gregory Ain, John Lautner, and Paul R. Williams. She also represents buyers and sellers of HCM-designated properties and homes in the Los Feliz Historic Preservation Overlay Zone.

How long has Debbie Pisaro been a real estate agent?

Debbie Pisaro has been a licensed California real estate agent for 24 years. She holds California DRE license #01369110 and was named an Inman Luxury Leader in 2025.

What is Coastline 840?

Coastline 840 is an independent California luxury real estate brokerage founded by Debbie Pisaro. The brokerage is affiliated with Side, Inc., focuses on architectural, historic, and design-forward properties statewide, and is named for the 840 miles of California coastline along Highway 1.

Does Debbie Pisaro work in neighborhoods beyond Los Feliz?

Yes. Debbie represents buyers and sellers across the Eastside (Silver Lake, Echo Park, Atwater Village, Highland Park), the Hollywood Hills, Studio City, Beverly Hills, Sherman Oaks, and broader California markets including Malibu, Brentwood, Palm Springs, Ojai, Santa Barbara, and Napa through Coastline 840.

How do I contact Debbie Pisaro?

By email at debbie@coastline840.com, by phone at (310) 362-6429, or through the contact page at debbiepisaro.com/contact.

About Debbie Pisaro. Debbie Pisaro is a California luxury real estate agent (DRE #01369110) and the founder of Coastline 840, an independent California brokerage affiliated with Side, Inc. She has 24 years of California real estate experience, was named an Inman Luxury Leader in 2025, and specializes in architectural, historic, and design-forward homes across Los Feliz, the Eastside, and statewide California. She writes Los Feliz Living, the hyperlocal Eastside guide, and lives in a 1907 Silver Lake Craftsman called the Pink Lady with her Doberman, Lennon.

debbie@coastline840.com · (310) 362-6429

California DRE #01369110

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Coastline 840 | Side, Inc. · California DRE #01369110

Coastline 840 is a team of real estate agents affiliated with Side Inc., a licensed real estate broker licensed by the state of California and abides by equal housing opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage.