I’ve written before about iconic homes hitting the market, like the Palmer house, or David Lynch’s former Philadelphia home. But this one hits differently.
The Agency’s Marc Silver has listed 7017, 7029, and 7035 Senalda Road in Los Angeles, California. Together, the three-house compound has long been known to David Lynch’s fans, family, and collaborators as the hillside place where he lived, worked, and pursued ‘the art life.’
At the heart of the estate stands the Beverly Johnson House, designed in 1963 by Lloyd Wright, son of Frank Lloyd Wright. Recognized by Historic Places LA as an “excellent example of Mid-Century Modern/Organic residential architecture,” the house captures the drama of hillside modernism with its bold geometry, walls of glass, and easy flow between indoors and out.
Over the years, Lynch expanded the property into a true compound by acquiring two neighboring residences on Senalda Road. 7029 Senalda became home to Asymmetrical Productions, his production company. 7035 Senalda became something even more legendary: the Madison residence from Lost Highway, David Lynch’s private studio, editing suite, and screening room. The stories those walls could tell.

In 1991, Lynch commissioned Eric Lloyd Wright—grandson of Frank, son of Lloyd—to design a pool and pool house, extending the rare Wright lineage across generations. Beyond the historic Wright structures, Lynch himself collaborated on creating additional buildings: a two-story guest house and a unique one-bedroom living space finished in his favored smooth grey plaster bringing the bedroom count to ten. That’s a lot of rooms to dream.
Altogether, the compound spans five contiguous parcels, weaving three residences and multiple ancillary structures into one cohesive, secluded world tucked into the Hollywood Hills just off Mulholland Drive. The price to own this world? $15 million.
Most of us will have to settle for wandering through these incredible photos courtesy of Neue House, Rob Kallick, and Kyle Hurley. The future owner, on the other hand, will live inside a dream.




















































I have dreamed of seeing these photos, thank you for posting this. What a beautiful place!
Thank-you for posting these photos. Like ‘Marthyew’, I’ve imagined what David Lynch’s home and workspace looked like for such a LONG long time!