A former mansion on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles is hitting the market as landlords and brokers test whether companies are ready to embrace more residential-style office environments.
The 1923-built estate at 4526 Wilshire Boulevard is being marketed for lease and will be sold for the first time in decades. The 6,440-square-foot compound was originally a private residence and still retains much of its residential layout, with multiple buildings, outdoor space, and a gated entrance, according to CoStar.Â
Mansion Layout Meets Modern Work
Unlike traditional office buildings, the property is arranged more like a private estate than a commercial asset. It includes a main house for executive use, a secondary structure for team space, and a separate studio building that can support creative or flexible uses such as production or wellness.
Despite its office positioning today, the property maintains features typical of a home—gardens, fireplaces, and residential-scale rooms—creating a work environment that feels closer to a private compound than a corporate office.
A Broader Shift in Office Demand
The listing arrives as companies continue to prioritize experience and environment in workspace decisions. High-end offices with distinctive layouts and lifestyle-driven amenities are capturing more attention than standard floor plates, particularly in markets where vacancy remains elevated.
In Los Angeles, overall office vacancy sits around 16%, with higher levels in some submarkets, pushing landlords to differentiate assets beyond location and size.
Will Residential-Style Offices Expand?
The mansion’s return to the market highlights a growing question in the office sector: whether residential-scale properties could become a more common alternative to traditional workspace.
As companies continue experimenting with hybrid work and smaller footprints, unique buildings like estates, converted homes, and boutique compounds may become more attractive for teams prioritizing privacy, flexibility, and experience over density.
For now, the Wilshire property is an early test of whether that demand can extend beyond niche use into a broader workplace trend.















