10919 Strathmore Dr
Los Angeles, CA 90024, USA

  • Architectural Style: Colonial
  • Bathroom: 13
  • Year Built: 1949
  • National Register of Historic Places: N/A
  • Square Feet: 7,300 sqft
  • National Register of Historic Places Date: N/A
  • Neighborhood: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Area of Significance: N/A
  • Bedrooms: 12
  • Architectural Style: Colonial
  • Year Built: 1949
  • Square Feet: 7,300 sqft
  • Bedrooms: 12
  • Bathroom: 13
  • Neighborhood: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Date: N/A
  • National Register of Historic Places Area of Significance: N/A
Neighborhood Resources:

Property Story Timeline

You are the most important part of preserving home history.
Share pictures, information, and personal experiences.
Add Story I Lived Here Home History Help

Mar 04, 2022

  • Charmaine Bantugan

Sheats Apartments

With its fluid curves bending out above the street and a mature tree jutting upward from the central courtyard the Sheats Apartments building (also known as L’Horizon or, more informally, The Treehouse) stands out from the UCLA student housing that makes up its immediate Westwood surroundings. Completed in 1949, the building was designed by master architect John Lautner for owners Helen Taylor Sheats, an artist who had input into the design, and Paul Henry Sheats. It was intended from the beginning to be occupied by students, and it has been for the bulk of its lifespan. The Mid-Century Modern-style building contains eight units, each completely separated from the others and possessed of its own terrace, deck, and outdoor garden space. The front façade is dominated by a massive stucco canopy separating parking from the units above, with a central stairway leading up and into the hillside complex through a narrow slot and into the landscaped central courtyard. Asymmetrically arranged shapes, from circular volumes to long, flat planes, step up the hill and around each other to form a strangely harmonious, abstractly futuristic, and truly organic-feeling whole. The building seems to undulate around the courtyard, with cantilevered roofs offering shade and complicating the whole design in a wonderful way. The Sheats Apartments are an outstanding example of Lautner’s mastery of organic form and function—envy the lucky students who get to call it home! Photo courtesy Architectural Resources Group

Sheats Apartments

With its fluid curves bending out above the street and a mature tree jutting upward from the central courtyard the Sheats Apartments building (also known as L’Horizon or, more informally, The Treehouse) stands out from the UCLA student housing that makes up its immediate Westwood surroundings. Completed in 1949, the building was designed by master architect John Lautner for owners Helen Taylor Sheats, an artist who had input into the design, and Paul Henry Sheats. It was intended from the beginning to be occupied by students, and it has been for the bulk of its lifespan. The Mid-Century Modern-style building contains eight units, each completely separated from the others and possessed of its own terrace, deck, and outdoor garden space. The front façade is dominated by a massive stucco canopy separating parking from the units above, with a central stairway leading up and into the hillside complex through a narrow slot and into the landscaped central courtyard. Asymmetrically arranged shapes, from circular volumes to long, flat planes, step up the hill and around each other to form a strangely harmonious, abstractly futuristic, and truly organic-feeling whole. The building seems to undulate around the courtyard, with cantilevered roofs offering shade and complicating the whole design in a wonderful way. The Sheats Apartments are an outstanding example of Lautner’s mastery of organic form and function—envy the lucky students who get to call it home! Photo courtesy Architectural Resources Group

1949

Property Story Timeline

You are the most important part of preserving home history.
Share pictures, information, and personal experiences.
Add Story I Lived Here Home History Help

Similar Properties

See more
Want a free piece of home history?!
Our researchers will uncover a free piece of history about your house and add it directly to your home's timeline!