Location on the Wilshire Corridor
The Wilshire is located on the south side of Wilshire Boulevard, just steps east of Westholme Avenue and approximately one-half mile west of Beverly Glen Boulevard.
The Wilshire Corridor can be roughly defined as the 1.5-mile stretch along Wilshire Boulevard from the Los Angeles Country Club to the east and from Westwood Boulevard to the west.
The Wilshire and its Wilshire Corridor neighbors — aerial view looking west.
Architecture and Construction
The Wilshire at 10580 Wilshire Boulevard is a 27-story, 328-foot high-rise completed in 1991. Designed by Richard Magee of KMD Architects, it features a structural steel frame, limestone and copper facade, and a distinctive Art Deco-inspired, tiered silhouette.
Approved in 1988, the building originally had 97 units across 0.86 acres and is engineered for high-density urban living. Notable features include private elevator foyers for each residence, three levels of subterranean parking, and storage, which was uncommon in Los Angeles buildings of that era.
- Year Completed
- 1991 Public record
- Floors
- 27 Public record
- Total Units
- 97* MLS
- Architect
- Richard Magee and Kaplan McLaughlin Diaz
- Construction
- Steel and concrete, limestone and copper exterior elements
Operations
The Wilshire management runs a full-service model: concierge, doorman, valet, onsite engineering team. At under one hundred units, the staff-to-resident ratio is in a rarefied class, one of the highest on The Wilshire Corridor, reminiscent of a white-glove Manhattan or London building.
What that ratio means in practice: consistent, named staff who know the building and the residents. The due diligence question is not whether the model exists. It does. The question is whether you can appreciate the value received for an all-encompassing monthly HOA fee.
Transaction Information
Resale patterns at The Wilshire are consistent with full service Wilshire Corridor buildings in this class. Hold periods are typically long, annual turnover remains limited, and pricing is shaped more by floor level and exposure than by market timing alone.
Specific unit histories, transaction dates, and pricing details are intentionally excluded from this page by editorial standards. For a more detailed discussion of resale history, valuation patterns, and building specific context, please contact Native Angelino Real Estate.
Tom’s Read
The Wilshire sits on one of the most important and often misread stretches of residential real estate in Los Angeles, and the list price is the least interesting number on the page. What matters sits behind the deal: staffing stability, reserve health, governance, and how individual units have actually traded through cycles.
A serious Buyer is underwriting a decision, not shopping a listing. The HOA documents, the financials, and the resale history are where risk and upside reveal themselves, and where unit-specific value separates from building-wide assumptions.
A serious Seller is positioning an asset, not posting a price. The same documents that protect a Buyer dictate what a Seller can credibly defend. Floor, exposure, layout, and the building's current market standing each carry weight. Buyer-side and Seller-side, the same facts read differently.
That work belongs in private.
Every Client Is a Private Client. Whether you are evaluating a purchase or a sale at The Wilshire, the conversation that matters happens here, by appointment.