The Griffith Park Pool Is Coming Back — And It's Going to Be Worth the Wait

Los Angeles is investing $40 million to fully rebuild the Griffith Park Pool — closed since 2020 — with a 50-meter competition pool, a new training pool, and a restored 1927 Spanish Colonial Revival pool house, targeting completion by mid-2029.

By Debbie Pisaro | Los Feliz Real Estate Specialist | March 2026

Griffith Park Pool historic 1927 Spanish Colonial Revival pool house at Riverside Drive and Los Feliz Boulevard Los Angeles

If you've driven past the corner of Riverside Drive and Los Feliz Boulevard lately, you've seen it — the chain-link fence, the empty basin, the beautiful 1927 Spanish Colonial Revival pool house sitting dry and silent behind it all.

The Griffith Park Municipal Plunge has been closed since 2020. And for anyone who lives in Los Feliz, who grew up here, or who chose this neighborhood in part because of what Griffith Park means to daily life — that closure has been a quiet loss.

That's about to change.

Last week, the City of Los Angeles unveiled plans to fully rebuild the Griffith Park Pool — not patch it, not band-aid it, but tear out the failing structure and build something new, substantial, and designed to last for another century. The price tag is approximately $40 million. The target completion date is mid-2029. And the scope of what's planned is genuinely exciting.

Here's what you need to know — and why it matters if you're thinking about buying or selling a home in Los Feliz.

What Happened to the Griffith Park Pool?

The Municipal Plunge opened in 1927, the same era that gave Los Feliz its Spanish Colonial Revival mansions, its Craftsman bungalows, and the architectural character that still defines the neighborhood today. For decades it was the largest outdoor pool in Southern California — a grand, public gesture at the edge of one of the country's great urban parks.

In 2020, pandemic closures shut it down. When the city tried to refill it afterward, they discovered what anyone paying attention had suspected: the foundation had cracked, and the pool no longer held water. Rather than attempt a repair that wouldn't last, city engineers made the call to start over.

That decision set off a multi-year planning process that culminated last Thursday night in a community open house at the Griffith Park Visitor Center — where about 50 Los Feliz residents showed up to hear what's coming.

What's Being Built

Architecture firm Perkins Eastman — the same firm that led the expansion of Griffith Observatory from 2002 to 2006 — is designing the new complex. Here's what the plans call for:

A 50-meter competition pool. Full Olympic length, year-round use. This makes Griffith Park one of the only public facilities in Los Angeles with a proper competition-grade pool.

A 25-yard training pool with a gentle ADA-compliant slope — meaning true accessibility for all ages and abilities, including children just learning to swim and older adults who need a gradual entry.

A fully modernized pool house — with the Spanish Colonial Revival exterior preserved. Inside: a new elevator, updated accessibility features, energy efficiency upgrades, and a gender-neutral bathhouse with private changing rooms.

The 1927 exterior stays. The interior gets rebuilt for 2029 and beyond.

The Timeline — Realistic but Ambitious

City officials were candid at the meeting. The schedule as presented runs roughly 40 months from now:

  • Construction documents: 6 months

  • Permits: 5 months

  • Contractor selection: 5 months

  • Construction: 18 months

  • Project close-out: 6 months

If everything goes according to plan, the rebuilt pool opens around July 2029.

City engineer Ohaji Abdallah told attendees directly: "I expect this to be about $40 million" — acknowledging that costs have increased from an earlier $28M estimate due to soft costs and current market conditions. Officials also noted the project faces real complications: the proximity of the 405 freeway and the Los Angeles River make logistics complex, haul routes for demolition trucks are still being finalized, and construction funding will compete with other city priorities.

The honest read: 2029 is the goal, not the guarantee. But the planning is further along than it has ever been, the design firm is under contract, and the community meeting signals that this is moving.

Why This Matters for Los Feliz Real Estate

I want to be direct about something: public infrastructure investment is one of the clearest signals of long-term neighborhood value.

When a city commits $40 million to rebuild a historic landmark — not just patch it, but rebuild it to competition grade — it is making a statement about the neighborhood it sits in. Griffith Park is already one of the defining amenities that makes Los Feliz one of the most desirable places to live in Los Angeles. A world-class aquatic facility at its edge makes that argument even stronger.

For buyers who are on the fence about Los Feliz vs. other Eastside neighborhoods, this is exactly the kind of tangible, irreversible quality-of-life investment that tips the scales. A 50-meter competition pool within walking distance of Laughlin Park and The Oaks is not a small thing.

For sellers, it's a narrative point. "Your backyard is Griffith Park, and by the time the new owners' kids are old enough to swim lessons, there will be a rebuilt public pool four minutes from the front door." That's a real selling story.

And for the neighborhood as a whole — Los Feliz has always justified its pricing through lifestyle. Griffith Park. The Observatory. The Village. The architecture. The trails. The schools. A functioning, beautiful public pool is a piece of that lifestyle that has been missing for five years. Its return closes a gap that buyers have noticed and sellers have had to work around.

The Architecture Connection

There's something worth noting about who is designing this rebuild.

Perkins Eastman — previously known as Pfeiffer Partners — is the firm that transformed Griffith Observatory into the experience it is today. That renovation, completed in 2006, is widely considered one of the most successful public restoration projects in Los Angeles history. The firm preserved the Art Deco exterior while modernizing everything inside, and the result is a landmark that feels both historic and contemporary.

They are being asked to do the same thing here: preserve the 1927 Spanish Colonial Revival shell while rebuilding the interior for a new century.

For a neighborhood that cares as deeply about architectural integrity as Los Feliz does — a neighborhood with more than 50 Historic-Cultural Monuments and some of the most significant residential architecture in California — the choice of this firm is the right one. They understand the difference between renovation and replacement. They know how to honor the bones of a building while making it work for the next hundred years.

What Happens in the Meantime

Construction is not expected to begin until late 2026 at the earliest, and the site will remain fenced through the entire build. The nearby Los Feliz Nursery School — which sits close to the pool — was a specific concern raised by residents at the meeting, and planners said they are working through construction staging to minimize disruption.

In the meantime, the nearest city-run pools for Los Feliz residents are in Echo Park, Hollywood, and Glassell Park.

If you have questions or want to submit comments on the design, the city has set up a dedicated email: griffithparkpool@lacity.org

What I'm Watching

As someone who has lived and worked in this neighborhood for over two decades, I've watched the pool fence go up, stay up, and quietly become part of the landscape. Its absence has been felt — in the summers especially, when Griffith Park fills up and the one amenity that could handle real volume sits empty behind chain link.

The $40M rebuild is real momentum. The design firm is the right choice. The community showed up last Thursday, which matters more than people realize — engaged neighborhoods get funded projects over neighborhoods that don't.

I'm watching the budget process closely. I'm watching contractor selection. And when this pool opens, I'll be writing about it again — because it will be one of the best things that has happened to this neighborhood in a long time.

If you want to talk about what this means for your specific home, your block, or your plans to buy in Los Feliz — that's exactly the kind of conversation I love to have.

Explore the Los Feliz neighborhood guide →

Frequently Asked Questions

  • The city's current target is mid-2029, approximately 40 months from the start of the rebuild process. The timeline depends on permit approvals, contractor selection, and available funding. City officials describe the schedule as "ambitious but achievable."

  • City engineers have estimated the full rebuild at approximately $40 million, up from an earlier estimate of $28 million due to increased soft costs and current construction market conditions.

  • When the city attempted to refill the pool after COVID-19 closures in 2020, workers discovered the foundation had cracked so severely it could no longer hold water. Engineers determined a full rebuild was necessary rather than a repair.

  • The rebuilt complex will feature a 50-meter competition pool, a 25-yard training pool with an ADA-compliant gradual slope entry, a modernized pool house with gender-neutral changing facilities, improved accessibility throughout, and energy efficiency upgrades — while preserving the 1927 Spanish Colonial Revival exterior of the pool house.

  • Public infrastructure investment at this scale is generally a positive signal for surrounding neighborhoods. A fully rebuilt, year-round competition-grade aquatic facility adjacent to Griffith Park strengthens one of Los Feliz's core lifestyle amenities — proximity to the park — and adds a tangible quality-of-life asset that buyers actively consider.

  • The Griffith Park Pool is located at the corner of Riverside Drive and Los Feliz Boulevard, at the eastern edge of Griffith Park in Los Feliz, Los Angeles 90027.

  • Perkins Eastman is leading the design. The firm previously led the highly acclaimed renovation and expansion of Griffith Observatory from 2002 to 2006, when it was known as Pfeiffer Partners.

  • The City of Los Angeles has set up a dedicated email for community feedback: griffithparkpool@lacity.org

Explore Los Feliz
Sources

Note: The LA Times published the primary report on this story on March 20, 2026. That article is behind a paywall — the sources linked above are open-access and cover the same community meeting and project details.

About the author
Debbie Pisaro
Los Feliz real estate specialist with 24 years of experience and founder of Coastline 840 (DRE #01369110). Specializes in architectural and historic homes — including Historic-Cultural Monuments and Mills Act properties — in Laughlin Park, The Oaks, Franklin Hills, and Silver Lake.

Design Lessons Homeowners Borrow From Lloyd Wright

(And Why They Still Matter in Los Feliz Today)

By a Los Feliz real estate agent specializing in design-forward and historic homes.

When people talk about iconic Los Angeles architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright is usually the first name that appears — but his son, Lloyd Wright, left a quiet but powerful impression on the Eastside and the Hollywood Hills. His homes are instantly recognizable: geometric blocks, jungle-like courtyards, layered shadows, and an almost mystical sense of privacy.

For homeowners in Los Feliz — a neighborhood filled with Spanish Revivals, mid-century hillside homes, and restored Craftsman bungalows — Lloyd Wright’s design vocabulary still offers some of the best, most practical lessons for how to live beautifully and functionally in the California landscape.

Even if you’re not renovating a Mayan Revival masterpiece, you can take cues from the way Wright used light, nature, materials, and spatial flow. These principles help homes show better, live better, and sell better — especially in micro-markets like The Oaks, Franklin Hills, and Laughlin Park, where lifestyle is as much a value driver as square footage.

Below are the design takeaways I walk through with clients all the time — things modern homeowners borrow (consciously or not) from Lloyd Wright’s century-old ideas.

1. Indoor–Outdoor Living Before it Had a Name

Long before “indoor-outdoor flow” became a real estate tagline, Lloyd Wright treated sunlight, courtyards, and terraces as core architectural tools. His homes rarely present a single, flat façade. Instead, they unfold — each turn revealing a garden pocket, a shaded walkway, or a new angle of the view.

How to Borrow This at Home

  • Add a simple bench, potted tree, or lantern to a side yard or unused corner — define “micro-courtyards.”

  • Switch heavy drapery for lighter woven shades that soften light rather than block it.

  • Open up one tight doorway: even widening a kitchen doorway by 6–12 inches can dramatically improve movement and energy.

Why This Matters in Los Feliz

Buyers here want a feeling — expansiveness, calm, retreat.
You can deliver that feeling without architectural reconstruction.

2. Shadows Are a Design Material

Lloyd Wright’s textile-block designs weren’t just ornamental. They created shadows — moving, textured patterns that change throughout the day. This gives his homes warmth and dimension that newer, flat-paneled remodels often lack.

How to Borrow This at Home

  • Add uplights under a tree, not floodlights over it.

  • Mix one textured element (limewash, tile, cane, ribbed glass) into an otherwise simple room.

  • Replace one bright, glare-heavy fixture with a dimmable, warm LED.

Why This Matters in Los Feliz

The strongest buyer reactions I see come from homes with a distinct mood.
Shadow + texture = mood.
It photographs beautifully and feels elevated in person.

3. Privacy Without Isolation

A defining feature of Wright’s homes — including the Derby House in Glendale and the Sowden House in Los Feliz — is that they feel incredibly private without feeling sealed-off. Courtyards soften sightlines. Entry sequences hide the front door. Openings are purposeful instead of random.

How to Borrow This at Home

  • Use screens, plants, or lattice to soften direct views from neighbors.

  • Shift seating areas slightly off-axis from windows.

  • Add a small fountain or sound element if you’re near a busy street.

Why This Matters in Los Feliz

Many hillside lots sit close together; privacy always ranks high with buyers.
Small design choices can make a home feel more peaceful — which boosts perceived value.

4. Bold Geometry Doesn’t Have to Be Loud

People often think Lloyd Wright = theatrical.
But the truth is: the geometry is bold, not the décor.

His homes balance strong lines with simple surfaces — meaning homeowners can layer their own style without chaos.

How to Borrow This at Home

  • Add one geometric anchor: a statement light fixture, a sculptural chair, a ribbed stone side table.

  • Square off wobbly furniture groupings — grids calm a space.

  • Use repetition: two large planters, not five small ones.

Why This Matters in Los Feliz

Design-forward homes stand out in competitive markets.
But subtle, thoughtful boldness sells better than over-styled spaces.

5. Natural Materials Make Homes Look More Expensive

Concrete, stone, wood, glass — Lloyd Wright homes elevate simple materials by pairing them intentionally, not lavishly.

And in Los Feliz, where Spanish Revivals meet modernist hillside homes, material choice alone can shift the entire feel of a space.

How to Borrow This at Home

  • Swap one synthetic looking surface for natural or natural-looking texture.

  • Replace chrome with aged brass or matte black.

  • Choose one stone or wood tone and repeat it across a room for cohesion.

Why This Matters in Los Feliz

When buyers walk into a listing and instantly think “quality,” it is almost always because the materials feel honest and quietly upscale.

6. A Sense of Ceremony (Without the Drama)

Lloyd Wright understood arrival.
Even small homes feel intentional in how you enter, move, and transition to the next space.

How to Borrow This at Home

  • Style your entry consistently — one nice rug, a plant, and a single clean console is enough.

  • Light your hallways and transitions.

  • Keep the line of sight clean as you enter the home.

Why This Matters in Los Feliz

Your entry sets the tone.
Buyers decide how they feel about a home within 8–10 seconds.

7. Your Home Should Have a Story

Architecture is narrative.
And narrative is one of the most powerful tools in real estate.

A Lloyd Wright home has a clear story: materials, geometry, light, privacy, flow.
You don’t have to own a landmark to create that same clarity.

How to Borrow This at Home

Choose a theme and repeat it:

  • Light

  • Nature

  • Texture

  • Curves

  • Symmetry

  • Shadows

  • “California outdoors”

When every room whispers the same idea, buyers feel it.

8. Why These Principles Still Matter in Los Feliz Today

Because Los Feliz buyers are not looking for generic.
They are looking for:

  • a feeling

  • a perspective

  • a sense of place

  • a connection to California architecture

  • a home that feels curated rather than remodeled to death

As a Los Feliz neighborhood specialist, I see the same truth again and again: Homes that borrow from architectural principles — even lightly — outperform their comps.

9. Where to Find Lloyd Wright Influence Across the Eastside

If you're exploring architecture in and around Los Feliz, here are nearby examples:

  • Sowden House (Los Feliz)

  • Ennis House (Los Feliz / Los Feliz Hills)

  • Derby House (Chevy Chase Canyon)

  • The John Sowden House courtyard patterns (Los Feliz)

  • Frank Lloyd Wright’s Millard House (Pasadena)

  • Frank Lloyd Wright’s Storer House (Hollywood Hills)

  • Modern textile-block-inspired remodels across Silver Lake and Los Feliz

Conclusion

Lloyd Wright’s work teaches us that design isn’t about trends — it’s about feeling, texture, light, privacy, and intention. Whether you live in a hillside architectural or a charming Spanish, the lessons still translate. And when you apply them thoughtfully, your home not only lives better — it shows better and sells better.

If you’re searching for a Los Feliz real estate agent who specializes in design-forward and historic homes, I’d love to talk about your next chapter and how design impacts value.

For more local insight, here’s my guide to Los Feliz real estate advice

2025 Market Update: The Oaks & Laughlin Park

The Oaks: One of LA’s Most Iconic Neighborhoods, Tucked into the Hills of Los Feliz

You’ve probably heard someone talk about The Oaks like it’s a secret — something whispered, not shouted. That’s because it kind of is.

Tucked into the Los Feliz hillside above Franklin and Vermont, The Oaks isn’t just a neighborhood. It’s a feeling. A moment. A place where the light falls just right and the streets wind with intention. It’s the kind of place you don’t stumble into — someone shows it to you.

📍 Where Is The Oaks?

The Oaks sits just north of Los Feliz Boulevard, bordered by Bronson Canyon to the west and Commonwealth Avenue to the east. It winds into the hills with no clear grid, no gates, and no signs saying “you’ve arrived” — which is exactly how residents like it.

There’s only one way in and one way out. And for the people who live there, that sense of quiet anonymity is part of the appeal.

🏡 What Makes The Oaks So Special?

  • Architectural soul: The neighborhood is a mix of 1920s Spanish Revivals, mid-century gems, and thoughtfully updated contemporaries.

  • Winding streets and hillside lots: No two homes are the same — and neither are their views.

  • A sense of calm: Even though you’re just minutes from Hillhurst or Franklin Village, The Oaks feels like another world.

  • History and charm: HCM-designated homes, discreet past celebrity residents, and stories behind every curve.

  • The light: If you know, you know.

💬 What Locals Love

  • Morning hikes through Bronson Canyon or Griffith Park

  • Hidden stairways and winding drives

  • City views and backyard stillness

  • That sense of “I live here — but I’ll never take it for granted”

💸 What You’ll Pay

As of 2025, homes in The Oaks typically start around $3.5M and can climb to $10M+ depending on architectural significance, lot size, and view. The neighborhood sees limited turnover — when a home hits the market, it tends to move fast and quietly.

🛠️ Real Estate in The Oaks

The Oaks isn’t just sought-after — it’s watched. Many buyers wait months (or years) for something specific to become available. Pocket listings are common. Off-market deals are standard.

If you're serious about The Oaks, it helps to work with someone who understands the neighborhood’s rhythm — and knows when something’s coming.

👉 Want to talk about what’s coming up? Let’s connect →

📚 Want More on The Oaks?