The 1914 estate was built to house the Bernhiemers' priceless collection of Asian treasures. In order to have an authentic Japanese design, hundreds of skilled craftsmen were brought from Asia to recreate an exact replica of a palace located in the Yamashiro mountains near Kyoto, Japan. Superbly landscaped gardens and a Sacred Inner Court in the center of the home filled with sculptured plants, pools and fish add to the Japanese character of the estate. The hillside terraces included 30,000 varieties of trees, shrubs, waterfalls, hundreds of goldfish, and even exotic birds and monkeys. After the death of one of the brothers in 1922, the art collections were auctioned off. A few years later, the estate served as headquarters for the exclusive Hollywood "400 Club," an organization for the elite of the motion picture industry. After WWII, the home was remodeled and converted into apartments. Soon thereafter, Thomas O. Glover purchased the property and began the restoration of what was to become the Yamashiro restaurant. The stylish Queen Anne style mansion is the Rollin B. Lane Estate (now the Magic Castle). Aerial view of a Hollywood neighborhood including the expansive hilltop Japanese estate and gardens of brothers Charles and Adolph Bernheimer, located at 1999 N. Sycamore Avenue in Hollywood.
Rollin B. Lane Estate (Hollywood, Los Angeles, Calif.) Bernheimer Estate (Hollywood, Los Angeles, Calif.) Dwellings--California--Hollywood (Los Angeles) Architecture--California--Hollywood (Los Angeles)--Japanese influences Queen Anne revival (Architecture)--California--Hollywood (Los Angeles) Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments Aerial photographs Hollywood (Los Angeles, Calif.)
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