Studio City Real Estate · Architectural Homes · California Luxury Market
Inside the $28M Studio City Architectural Compound Redefining Luxury Real Estate
12309 Viewcrest Road, Studio City. The Shou Sugi Ban exterior at dusk, with the Fryman Canyon canopy as backdrop.
What is the most expensive home for sale in Studio City right now?
As of April 2026, the most expensive home for sale in Studio City is a newly completed seven-bedroom, 11-bathroom architectural compound at 12309 Viewcrest Road, asking $28 million. The 10,833-square-foot property was designed and developed by writer-producer Doug Prochilo with architect Adrian Koffka of Koffka/Phakos Design and landscape architect Ross Woodley of EPT Design. It sits on more than an acre above Fryman Canyon, with Shou Sugi Ban cladding, a metal roof, two chef\'s kitchens, two catering kitchens, a sunken media pit, and what may be the most refined fire-resilient build to surface in Studio City this year. It is being co-listed by Sotheby\'s International Realty and Compass.
There is a moment, walking up to a great architectural home, when you stop reading the house as a building and start reading it as an idea. The new compound at 12309 Viewcrest Road is one of those houses, and it has just become the most talked-about Studio City luxury listing of 2026.
You arrive on a hillside that has been heavily wooded for decades, the kind of mature canopy that took a previous generation to grow in. Below the property, the Fryman Canyon trails fold into the Santa Monica Mountains. The original house, by all accounts, was a modest mid-century with poor flow and a roofline that fought the topography. It is, as Prochilo himself describes it, unrecognizable now.
What stands there today is a 10,833-square-foot Studio City architectural home that reads like a treehouse from the inside and a quietly modern object from the trail. The cladding is Shou Sugi Ban, the Japanese practice of charring cedar to seal and protect it. The roof is metal. The sheathing under the skin is DensGlass. Every one of these decisions, made mid-construction during the January 2025 fires, points to a new chapter in how Studio City\'s hillside homes are being built.
This is the kind of house that lands once or twice a decade in a single Valley submarket. It deserves a closer read.
The Silver Triangle, Defined
Buyers and sellers ask me regularly to map the architectural pockets of Studio City, and most of the conversation centers on the same handful of names. Colfax Meadows. Fryman Estates. Studio City Hills. Footbridge Square, the micro-neighborhood I gave a name to last year because the corner deserved one. The Viewcrest property sits inside a less-discussed pocket that working agents call the Silver Triangle, the cluster of streets that thread between Coldwater Canyon, Laurel Canyon, and Mulholland.
The Silver Triangle is, in a word, leverage geography. From the Viewcrest address, you reach the 101 in roughly a minute. Hollywood is five. The studio lots, ten to fifteen. CBS Studio Center, Universal, Warner Bros., and Netflix\'s Hollywood operations all sit inside a tight commute radius that no comparable neighborhood north of the boulevard can match.
For decades, that convenience was the Silver Triangle\'s quiet selling point. It was a working executive\'s neighborhood, not a trophy one. What is changing, and what the Viewcrest compound makes plain, is that the architecture has caught up to the location. The Silver Triangle is becoming a destination address. For the broader picture of architectural homes across the neighborhood, the Studio City architectural homes map covers every significant property and pocket across the area.
A double-height entry organized around a curved staircase and stacked-stone wall, with the kitchen and living spaces flowing beyond.
A Treehouse, Rigorously Designed
Prochilo describes his vision for the compound as a treehouse for entertaining, and the description holds up. The orientation of the windows is the giveaway. From every level, on every face, the view is green. The Fryman Canyon ridgeline sits directly across, framed by a tree canopy the design team worked aggressively to preserve.
Inside, the house is organized around hospitality without descending into showroom polish. Prochilo\'s instinct, which I share with most of my architectural home clients, is that big white box homes with all the windows and shiny marble do not age well in California light. The Viewcrest interior reads warmer. The finishes are curated rather than stacked. The volumes are generous but resolved.
A few features stand out:
- Two chef\'s kitchens plus two catering kitchens. The catering setup, with a dedicated stage area off the garage and a second back-of-house kitchen behind the main one upstairs, is the detail that experienced entertainers will read first. It is a house designed to disappear the labor of a dinner party.
- A sunken media pit in place of the standard home theater. Prochilo\'s read on this is correct: most home theaters built in the last two decades go unused. A pit that seats twenty for a screening, a Super Bowl, or an Oscars party is a more honest answer to how houses at this scale actually get used.
- A primary suite occupying the top level as a private retreat, with five en-suite bedrooms on the middle level. This is the right configuration for the buyer who wants the house to flex between a primary residence, a multi-generational home, and a long-weekend host\'s compound.
- A guest house and pool on a property that previously had neither, integrated into the landscape design by Ross Woodley at EPT Design.
- A valet-ready driveway, which sounds like a small thing until you have hosted a function on a hillside lot and watched the street become a logistical problem.
The sunken media pit, in place of a traditional home theater. The architect\'s argument is that almost no one uses theaters; pits get used.
The Fire-Resilient Build
The most consequential design decisions on this property may be the ones you cannot see.
The January 2025 fires changed the construction conversation across the Santa Monica Mountains and the Hollywood Hills. Builders, owners, and architects who were mid-project that month had a choice: finish the original spec, or pivot. The Viewcrest team pivoted.
The exterior cladding, Shou Sugi Ban, is a centuries-old Japanese technique of pre-burning cedar to render it dimensionally stable, rot-resistant, and significantly more fire-retardant than untreated wood. Beneath the cladding, the team installed DensGlass, a fiberglass-faced gypsum sheathing engineered for moisture resistance and Class A fire performance. The roof is metal, the most fire-resilient roofing assembly currently specified for hillside California construction.
Taken together, this is the kind of envelope I expect to see specified on more Studio City and Hollywood Hills builds over the next several years. The Viewcrest compound is one of the first finished examples in the area to make the full set of decisions visible at this finish level. For buyers shopping architectural homes in California, it raises the bar on what fire-resilient construction looks like at the top of the market.
What This Property Says About Studio City Real Estate in 2026
The honest read on Studio City\'s luxury segment right now is that it is still being repriced in real time.
For most of the last decade, a property of this caliber, on this kind of acreage, with this finish level, would have been listed in Beverly Hills, Bel Air, or the Bird Streets. The asking price would have been twice what it is at Viewcrest. The developer himself has said as much, framing the listing as a thesis: that the Valley can support a compound at this price point, and that buyers are increasingly willing to trade a Westside zip code for trees, trails, acreage, and a 14-minute commute to the studio lots. It is a pattern I see repeating across California luxury markets right now, where buyers are quietly redrawing the map of where prestige lives.
It is worth pausing on the comp set here, because it tells the story.
Until the Viewcrest listing dropped, the highest-priced architectural property publicly on the market in Studio City was the Fryman Estate, currently asking $32.5 million. That listing originally came to market at $42 million and has since been reduced by roughly $9.5 million. After Fryman Estate and Viewcrest, the next highest active Studio City listing sits around $16 million, in the Fryman Canyon area as well. That is not a typo. The gap between the top of this market and the rest of it is roughly the price of a very nice Hollywood Hills home.
Studio City is in a price-discovery moment. The trophy tier is being tested. The ceiling is being rewritten in real time.
I have watched this thesis develop on the ground for the last several years. The buyers I am working with in Studio City right now are not making compromises. They are making a different choice. They are choosing the canopy over the flat. They are choosing the architectural home over the spec build. They are choosing a neighborhood with a working creative class still living in it, not a trophy block where the houses sit empty for ten months of the year.
The Viewcrest compound is the version of that choice taken to its logical conclusion. Whether it trades at $28 million, at $32.5 million, or at a recalibrated number, the listing will be a referenced comp in this market for years. Either outcome reshapes the conversation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most expensive home for sale in Studio City right now?
As of April 2026, the most expensive home for sale in Studio City is the newly listed architectural compound at 12309 Viewcrest Road, asking $28 million. The next highest active Studio City listing is the Fryman Estate at $32.5 million (originally listed at $42 million). After those two, the next highest active Studio City listing sits at approximately $16 million.
What is the Silver Triangle in Studio City?
The Silver Triangle is the working name for the cluster of streets between Coldwater Canyon, Laurel Canyon, and Mulholland Drive on the south side of Studio City. The pocket is known among local agents for its proximity to Hollywood, the 101, and the major studio lots, and it is increasingly home to architectural and design-forward properties.
What architectural style is the Viewcrest compound?
The home is a contemporary architectural compound designed by Adrian Koffka of Koffka/Phakos Design, with a Japanese-influenced exterior treatment using Shou Sugi Ban charred cedar cladding. The interior is organized around indoor-outdoor living with floor-to-ceiling glazing oriented toward the Fryman Canyon ridgeline.
What is Shou Sugi Ban cladding and why is it used in Studio City?
Shou Sugi Ban, also called yakisugi, is a Japanese wood preservation technique in which cedar boards are charred, cooled, brushed, and finished. The process makes the wood more dimensionally stable, weather-resistant, and fire-retardant. It is increasingly specified on Hollywood Hills and Studio City hillside builds for both its aesthetic and its fire-resilience properties.
Who designed and developed the Viewcrest property?
The compound was designed and developed by writer-producer Doug Prochilo in collaboration with architect Adrian Koffka of Koffka/Phakos Design and landscape architect Ross Woodley of EPT Design. It is Prochilo\'s fourth ground-up or major-remodel project in the Studio City area.
Are there other architectural homes for sale in Studio City right now?
Studio City has a small but consistently active inventory of architectural and design-forward homes across submarkets including Colfax Meadows, Fryman Estates, the Silver Triangle, and Studio City Hills. For a current view, see Debbie Pisaro\'s Studio City architectural homes map and the architectural homes profile series.
The Takeaway
A property like the Viewcrest compound does not arrive often. It is a clear, public statement that the Silver Triangle, and Studio City more broadly, can hold a $28 million architectural listing without flinching. Whether it trades at ask is almost beside the point. What matters is that the Valley is now in the conversation about California luxury real estate at the very top of the market.
If you are exploring Studio City architectural homes, or thinking about whether your own home belongs in this conversation, I work this market street by street as your Studio City real estate agent. You can reach me directly at debbie@coastline840.com or (310) 362-6429.