The Story Behind
Seven Acres of Sovereign Coastal Living Above Lechuza Beach
From the moment the private gate opens onto a long, cypress-flanked motor court, it is clear that 31555 Pacific Coast Highway operates at a different register than even Malibu's most distinguished properties. The stone-paved arrival sequence — rising past a one-bedroom guard house, a pool pavilion, and a private tennis court — builds quiet anticipation before the newly built main house comes into view, its clean contemporary facade stepping across the hillside in a geometry of smooth stucco, glass, and intention.
Inside, the architecture makes its central argument immediately: the Pacific is not a backdrop here, it is a participant. Floor-to-ceiling sliding glass walls dissolve across the entire main level, collapsing the boundary between the open-concept great room and the massive ocean-view decks beyond. A geometric fireplace anchors the living space with quiet authority, while a floating tiered wood shelving unit draws the eye upward toward the staircase — a composition that is simultaneously sculptural and deeply livable. Warm hardwood floors, recessed lighting, and a neutral palette of materials ensure that nothing competes with the horizon.
The gourmet kitchen is the compound's culinary centerpiece, and it earns the designation. A white quartz waterfall island with an integrated gas cooktop commands the room, suspended beneath a sleek stainless steel range hood. Dark wood cabinetry conceals a wine refrigerator, while a built-in bar with illuminated open shelving serves as both functional infrastructure and an object of considered design. A dedicated dining room, anchored by a grand tiered chandelier and opening directly onto the deck through folding glass walls, ensures that the transition from kitchen to table to ocean breeze is entirely seamless.
Ascend — by staircase or by any of three private elevators — and the primary suite reveals its most distinctive gesture: a circular floor plan, designed entirely in the round, with wrap-around deck access and walls of glass that frame the Pacific in every direction. The effect is less bedroom than observatory, a room calibrated to the arc of the sun across the water from first light to last. Three additional en-suite bedrooms each claim their own private decks, while a full-sized tiered home theater delivers a dedicated cinematic experience of a different kind entirely.
The grounds match the interior's ambition at every turn. A heated pool and spa anchor the landscape, with dual stone waterfalls cascading into the water and an over-water wooden bridge extending to the compound's most theatrical element: a circular pool house with floor-to-ceiling glass walls, a curved interior bar, and both indoor and outdoor living rooms designed for extended entertaining. A private north-south tennis court sits within a manicured palm garden. The entire estate is managed through a fully integrated smart home system, operable via touchscreen or the HomeLink Connect App from anywhere in the world. Private beach access to Lechuza completes what is, in every respect, a self-contained world.
Malibu occupies a singular position in the American imagination — and in the geography of coastal California. Stretching approximately 21 miles along the Pacific Coast Highway between Los Angeles and Ventura County, it is home to some of the most celebrated shoreline in the world, a place where the Santa Monica Mountains meet the sea in a landscape of dramatic ridgelines, canyon mouths, and broad sandy beaches that have attracted artists, filmmakers, athletes, and visionaries for more than a century.
Lechuza Beach, at whose edge this compound holds private access, sits within the western reaches of Malibu — a stretch of coastline that is notably quieter and more secluded than the more publicized beaches to the east. Sheltered by the natural curve of Point Dume, this area of western Malibu has long been favored by those who prize genuine privacy alongside extraordinary natural beauty. The beach itself is characterized by soft sand, calm swells relative to more exposed breaks, and a sense of remove that is increasingly rare along the Southern California coast.
Point Dume State Beach and Preserve, visible directly from the compound's decks, is one of Los Angeles County's most significant coastal landmarks — a volcanic headland that rises dramatically above the Pacific and serves as a natural waypoint for migrating gray whales, dolphins, and sea lions. Zuma Beach, one of Los Angeles County's largest and most beloved public beaches, lies just to the north, offering an expanse of open shoreline that underscores the remarkable natural context surrounding the property.
The Channel Islands, visible on clear days from the compound's upper levels, are a federally protected National Park and Marine Sanctuary encompassing five islands off the Ventura and Santa Barbara coastlines. Their presence on the horizon is a constant, quietly extraordinary reminder of the scale and wildness of this particular edge of the continent.
Malibu's civic identity has been shaped in large part by its long resistance to incorporation and overdevelopment. The city incorporated only in 1991, in significant part to protect its coastal character from suburban encroachment — a history that continues to define its low-density, land-conscious ethos. The result is a community that has retained a genuine sense of landscape and openness even as it has become one of the most sought-after addresses in the world.
Within practical reach of the compound, Malibu's commercial corridor along Pacific Coast Highway offers Nobu Malibu, Soho House Malibu, and a curated collection of boutique restaurants, galleries, and wellness destinations that reflect the community's sophisticated, health-conscious culture. The Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area, immediately inland, provides tens of thousands of acres of protected open space for hiking, equestrian use, and mountain biking. Pepperdine University's Malibu campus, set dramatically above the coast, contributes an additional layer of cultural and intellectual vitality to the area.
Los Angeles International Airport is approximately 35 miles to the southeast, and the westside neighborhoods of Santa Monica, Brentwood, and Pacific Palisades are within comfortable driving distance — close enough for access, distant enough to preserve the compound's sense of sovereign remove.
Featured Highlights
Curated Content • Presented by Yar Meshkaty









































