• Home
  • News
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA News and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
This Arctic village wants to revive its polar bear tourism industry

This Arctic village wants to revive its polar bear tourism industry

April 24, 2026
Look Like a Scottsdale Socialite in These Desert-Inspired Pieces — Tops, Cargo Pants and More

Look Like a Scottsdale Socialite in These Desert-Inspired Pieces — Tops, Cargo Pants and More

April 24, 2026
City manager ‘begged’ fired Cincinnati police chief for more officers on street as crime skyrocketed

City manager ‘begged’ fired Cincinnati police chief for more officers on street as crime skyrocketed

April 24, 2026
Justice Department announces it’s readopting the firing squad as a means of execution

Justice Department announces it’s readopting the firing squad as a means of execution

April 24, 2026
Biden admin ‘deliberately protected’ 562K pandemic-era loans in .2B suspected fraud scheme: SBA, Vance

Biden admin ‘deliberately protected’ 562K pandemic-era loans in $22.2B suspected fraud scheme: SBA, Vance

April 24, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Just In
  • This Arctic village wants to revive its polar bear tourism industry
  • Look Like a Scottsdale Socialite in These Desert-Inspired Pieces — Tops, Cargo Pants and More
  • City manager ‘begged’ fired Cincinnati police chief for more officers on street as crime skyrocketed
  • Justice Department announces it’s readopting the firing squad as a means of execution
  • Biden admin ‘deliberately protected’ 562K pandemic-era loans in $22.2B suspected fraud scheme: SBA, Vance
  • Jets draft pick Kenyon Sadiq thought he was getting pranked during phone call
  • Budget airline passenger hoped to avoid paying for a return flight — by hiding in the overhead bin
  • IS GOD IS Featurette Offers New Look at Aleshea Harris Film
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise
  • Contact
US Times MirrorUS Times Mirror
Newsletter
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
 Weather Login
US Times MirrorUS Times Mirror
Home » Exclusive | LA’s hottest neighborhood was once one of its worst — built from nothing into a walkable art and dining destination
Lifestyle

Exclusive | LA’s hottest neighborhood was once one of its worst — built from nothing into a walkable art and dining destination

staffstaffApril 24, 20261 ViewsNo Comments
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Pinterest Email
Exclusive | LA’s hottest neighborhood was once one of its worst — built from nothing into a walkable art and dining destination

At 1 p.m. on a warm spring Thursday, a crowd spills onto the sidewalk at Melrose and Western in Los Angeles — long one of the city’s more commercially undesirable intersections, but today an epicenter of cool.

Influencers and the casually affluent, purse dogs in tow, they’re here for jamón serrano y queso arepas, coconut cream pie, and strawberry cheesecake matcha lattes at Chainsaw, the Venezuelan pop-up-turned-bakery and cafe from Karla Subero Pittol that has quickly become one of the most popular — and viral — all-day hangs in Los Angeles.

At the same time, just around the corner, bestie dates unfold over late-afternoon glasses of natural wine at Bar Étoile, where veteran wine geek Jill Bernheimer pours — and a deeply savory cheese tart quietly steals the show.

Wine lovers mingle at a tasting event at Bar Etoile in Los Angeles — a gathering spot in the trendy Melrose Hill neighborhood. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

Steps from there, the design-forward Café Telegrama is filled with chattering groups and quiet solo readers, both inside and out on the extensive, shaded patio away from the bustle of the street — facing across to one of the neighborhood’s collection of cutting-edge art galleries.

Like a California-fied West Chelsea — in the shadow of the Hollywood sign, in case you forget which city you’re in — Melrose Hill, once one of the most unloved and overlooked areas on the trendy east side, has quickly become one of LA’s most compelling micro-neighborhoods, packed with art, fine dining and chic cafes.

More walkable than much of the city famous for not walking, the revival of this corridor — in a former commercial dead zone between East Hollywood, Larchmont Village, Koreatown, and Hollywood — has taken shape through a tightly woven network of owner-operators emboldened to prioritize creativity, design, programming, and community over scale.

Karla Subero Pittol, owner of Chainsaw restaurant, serves customers at Chainsaw, a Melrose Hill bakery that has recently gone viral on social media. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

It’s a neighborhood model other L.A. developers should be watching in a city where so many gathering places can feel like constructed standalone islands, thriving at the expense of the streetscape.

At the center of this new/old way of imagining SoCal city life are developers Zach Lasry (son of billionaire hedge fund-manager and owner of the Milwaukee Bucks, Marc Lasry) and Josh Tohl, who, through a series of quiet acquisitions and partnerships, assembled the neighborhood as you experience it today — and put Melrose Hill on the map.

“All the buildings were individually owned,” Lasry told The Post. “Almost all of them were owner users, so they ran their businesses and owned the property. Since all were individually owned, a lot of personal conversations and discussions took place — it was very old school.”

The design-forward Café Telegrama is one of the popular all-day hangs making Melrose Hill such a draw these days. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

Over the course of 2018 and 2019, the pair acquired roughly 15 properties in the neglected area — the district is about 80 percent leased and operational, Lasry said. Instead of demolishing and rebuilding, the developers preserved a rare concentration of 1920s-era commercial buildings, an uncommon move in Los Angeles, giving the area a wonderfully lived-in feel.

Lasry’s interest in the area began before any formal plan took shape. “I was living in Silver Lake at the time,” the actor-turned-place creator recalled. “I’d moved from New York after film school, and I would drive down Melrose all the time. It reminded me of the Bowery before the museums and newer stuff came. There were all these old buildings lined up on one street — that’s so rare in LA. It just seemed like it had the potential for walkability.”

What followed was not a conventional leasing strategy, but something closer to curation.

Developers Josh Tohl (L) and Zach Lasry take a time out at Melrose Hill’s Café Telegrama. The pair have developed the tightly-curated area over a period of years, formerly a forgotten commercial corner of the city’s east side. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

“It was really just thousands of connections and phone calls and lunches and dinners until there’s a match,” Lasry said, citing a food writer friend who also helped provided insight into up-and-coming chefs.

Rather than targeting established brands, Lasry and Tohl focused on first- and second-time operators. Gallerists and chefs who were often introduced through existing tenants or creative networks.

“We’re trying to solve for the most interesting possible outcome and the most talented people being experimental,” Lasry said. “If there’s just a ton of new ideas, then it’s going to be an attractive place to come.”

The pair’s vision for Melrose Hill draws in part from the book The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs.

“She talked about the magic of walking down a street with so much action and energy and creativity — it infuses you,” Lasry related. “You can create a real flow state within a community if you have a diversity of uses and ideas in one place.”

Central to that vision is restraint — and fighting the urge to sell out.

“A lot of up-and-coming neighborhoods will be really fun and experimental for a few years,” Lasry said. “And then once they reach a certain level, that’s when the chains come in, that’s when the whole thing starts to degrade. We don’t ever want that to happen.”

But before Melrose Hill became a destination, it required people who were truly willing to take a risk.

“When we met Zach and Josh, we were working out of a cloud kitchen in Koreatown and running out of money,” said Noah Holton-Raphael of Ggiata, a popular sandwich deli now boasting six locations across Los Angeles. “We were 23 years old and burning through our savings.”

Holton-Raphael and crew opened their first shop in Melrose Hill in 2021. To truly integrate with the area, what they built was intentionally communal. “We poured everything we had into making our Melrose shop a hub for the neighborhood,” Holton-Raphael told The Post. “The best delis from back home [on the East coast] were gathering places for the community.”

Five years later, the growth has not erased what came before. “We still see many of the same faces every day,” he said. “Our regulars from 2021 are our regulars in 2026.” 

Owners Jack Welles, Max Bahramipour, and Noah Holton-Raphael at their business, Ggiata Delicatessen, which got its brick-and-mortar start in Melrose Hill, back in 2021. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

Today, Ggiata is surrounded by all of the restaurants and galleries that followed suit. “The new restaurant wave in the neighborhood has been a rising tide for us,” he said. “Everyone has their own lane.”

And there are many lanes to swim in here, from award-winning Kuya Lord, one of LA’s best Filipino restaurants, to Little Fish, which draws in crowds for their perfectly parceled abalone cabbage rolls and vibes.

Across the way, chefs at Corridor 109 — one of Los Angeles’ most exciting new tasting menus from Michelin-starred Sushi Noz alum, chef Brian Baik — is now open for service, just steps from a newly opened Goop Kitchen by wellness magnate Gwyneth Paltrow.

Unlike many popular, developer-driven gathering places in Los Angeles, Melrose Hill’s cool was built from scratch — along the street grid, not away from it. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

The area’s reputation for art began on the early side, too, when the Los Angeles outpost of David Zwirner, one of the most globally significant contemporary art galleries, known for representing artists such as Gerhard Richter, Yayoi Kusama, and Kerry James Marshall, set down roots on Western Avenue.

“David opening the gallery in the neighborhood was a huge risk on his end, and it took a lot of courage,” Lasry said. “I think it might have been the turning point for everything.”

The gallery brought with it not just collectors, but a signal that this was a place worth paying attention to. That Melrose Hill could be a destination for art. For gallerists that followed suit — like Emma Fernberger of Fernberger gallery, the appeal of Melrose Hill was immediate.

Most of the seating at Chainsaw is on the sidewalk — which doesn’t stop the crowds who love the casual vibe and excellent baked goods. Carlin Stiehl for CA Post

“Coming from New York, I was drawn to the idea of being in a place that contained a high concentration of galleries,” Fernberger told The Post. “I loved the concept of being able to walk around a neighborhood in Los Angeles and see a bunch of shows in one outing. I’m learning that that is a very New York sensibility.”

Her program reflects that New York sensibility and artists circle — focusing on creatives that the Los Angeles market may be less familiar with.

“I’ve concentrated on showing artists who haven’t shown in Los Angeles before,” she said, including Nik Gelormino, Alina Perkins, Phil Davis, Vicky Colombet, and Anne Wehrley Bjork. “I see my role here more as importing talent.”

For many of the business owners here, Melrose Hill worked because other neighborhoods didn’t.

“We looked for a long time on Larchmont Boulevard,” Bar Etoile’s Jill Bernheimer told The Post. “The cost per square foot was extremely high, even in the pandemic. The spaces were generally quite long and narrow, inhospitable to getting enough seats to make a business model work. And at the time there were some zoning restrictions that made it difficult to get even a beer and wine license.”

In Tohl and Lasry’s Melrose Hill, Bernheimer found something different.

“We saw a space we fell in love with, with rent we could afford and a supportive landlord who heard our vision,” she said.

And more are falling in love, too — coming soon is a new tasting menu Thai concept from Wedchayan “Deau” Arpapornnopparat of Holy Basil, alongside additional projects including one from Los Angeles restaurant darling Tyler Wells of Betsy, and a soon-to-come movie theater. The developers wouldn’t allow details on the record, but called the signing of a lease “very exciting.”

Now, for Lasry and Tohl, the challenge now is preservation. Not of just their buildings but of the intent behind the growth of the neighborhood.

“If we can focus on it always being a place where really exciting things always seem to be happening,” Lasry said, “then it kind of feeds itself.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram WhatsApp Email

Related News

Budget airline passenger hoped to avoid paying for a return flight — by hiding in the overhead bin

Budget airline passenger hoped to avoid paying for a return flight — by hiding in the overhead bin

Extra large pizza fest serves up slices from 40 different spots in LA this weekend

Extra large pizza fest serves up slices from 40 different spots in LA this weekend

Kellogg is putting toys back into some cereal boxes as a ‘Toy Story 5′ tie-in

Kellogg is putting toys back into some cereal boxes as a ‘Toy Story 5′ tie-in

Exclusive | I’ve been to 193 countries — here’s where my favorite coffee, food and scenic views are

Exclusive | I’ve been to 193 countries — here’s where my favorite coffee, food and scenic views are

Fox News Digital’s News Quiz: April 24, 2026

Fox News Digital’s News Quiz: April 24, 2026

Single dad, 26, has 4 inches of his penis amputated after cancer ate away a ‘big crater’

Single dad, 26, has 4 inches of his penis amputated after cancer ate away a ‘big crater’

Hotel guest shocked after using ‘free’ bathroom items that came with hidden charges

Hotel guest shocked after using ‘free’ bathroom items that came with hidden charges

JetBlue hit with lawsuit after accusation airline used personal data to hike ticket prices

JetBlue hit with lawsuit after accusation airline used personal data to hike ticket prices

Dear Abby: My boyfriend refuses to work or quit drugs — now I’m stuck paying his mortgage

Dear Abby: My boyfriend refuses to work or quit drugs — now I’m stuck paying his mortgage

Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest News

Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

January 11, 2021
EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

January 11, 2021
World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

January 11, 2021
Melbourne: All Refugees Held in Hotel Detention to be Released

Melbourne: All Refugees Held in Hotel Detention to be Released

January 11, 2021

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA News and updates directly to your inbox.

Editor's Picks
Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

Review: Record Shares of Voters Turned Out for 2020 election

January 11, 2021
EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

EU: ‘Addiction’ to Social Media Causing Conspiracy Theories

January 11, 2021
World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

World’s Most Advanced Oil Rig Commissioned at ONGC Well

January 11, 2021
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
2026 © US Times Mirror. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?