North Sycamore Avenue is the quintessential Cinderella story. Formerly an industrial back lot for Los Angeles’s motion picture industry — its warehouses stored props and set materials — the thoroughfare is finally stepping into the spotlight. In the past few years, the neighborhood has welcomed Jay-Z’s Roc Nation studios, two groundbreaking art galleries, outposts of Paris and New York boutiques, and celebrity-filled restaurants.
Sycamore is the kind of place where you stumble onto an unassuming record store (Supervinyl) and find out it has hosted record-release parties for Beyoncé and the Rolling Stones. “There are so many creatives walking around day and night,” says Lina Lee, vice president of development for CIM Group, which was responsible for the makeover. Here are the spots to know.
This eclectic fashion and art store has works by emerging designers, like God’s True Cashmere, and blue-chip artists, like Damien Hirst (one of his cherry-blossom paintings hangs front and center). There’s also jewelry and furniture (some designed by Brad Pitt) and cinematic cred: the lofty art deco building was once Howard Hughes’s headquarters.
The people-watching is second to none at this warehouse-style café, wine store, and grocer. Join the remote-working crowd in the morning or linger until the late afternoon, when espresso (small-batch beans roasted on site), pastries, and clicking keyboards turn to wine, charcuterie, and creative chatter.
The only U.S. location of this Parisian perfume house is stocked with fragrances, oils, lotions, and home sprays — including Hailey Bieber’s signature scent, Fleur Narcotique. You can even create your own custom blend with one of the store’s perfume masters.
Tsuyoshi Miyazaki (“Mr. T”) hired L.A.-born chef Alisa Vannah to bring California flavors to this American version of his Paris hot spot. Nab a seat on the tree-lined patio, order a cocktail named after a hip-hop song (like the Gin & Juice, made with, yes, gin and lemon juice, topped with Prosecco and boba pearls), dig in to the bigeye-tuna crudo, and you’ll see she understood the assignment.
The Canadian skin-care brand Formula Fig makes its U.S. debut, offering fast yet effective 30-minute facials. Products are science-backed and treatments are performed by medical professionals, so while the space is full of mirrors, there’s certainly no smoke.
The pioneering contemporary art dealer opened this immersive space as a museum-caliber platform for lesserknown artists. This past spring, the gallery held the first major solo exhibition by Refik Anadol, a digital artist who makes AI-generated moving LED paintings.
A version of this story first appeared in the December 2023/January 2024 issue of Travel + Leisure under the headline “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.”