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Real Estate

Culver City's 4,500-Unit Pipeline Attracts Developers as Pro-Growth Policies Diverge From L.A.

Culver City has assembled a multifamily development pipeline of just over 4,500 units—enough to increase the city's 40,000-resident population by as much as 20 percent—as institutional developers including Hudson Pacific Properties, Lendlease, and Lincoln Property Company concentrate projects in the pro-growth 5-square-mile municipality while Los Angeles remains constrained by Measure ULA.

Culver City has assembled a multifamily development pipeline of just over 4,500 units, enough to increase the city's population by as much as 20 percent, as institutional developers including Hudson Pacific Properties, Lendlease, and Lincoln Property Company cluster projects in the 5-square-mile, 40,000-resident municipality.

Hudson Pacific Properties () is converting the former NFL Network office campus into a mixed-use project with 508 apartments and retail space. Lincoln Property Company has two projects at 11111 Lincoln Avenue and 1238 Lincoln Avenue that will add hundreds of units. Alliance Residential is redeveloping the Fox Hills area with 100 Corporate Pointe, which includes 351 units. Link Logistics received approval to replace low-rise office buildings near Westfield Mall with more than 1,000 units. RCB Equities and REDA's 6201 Residences will deliver 846 apartments. Lendlease began leasing Habitat in May, a mixed-use project with 260 luxury apartments at the Culver City–Los Angeles border. The city also sold a former gun store site on Washington Boulevard for $6 million in 2024 to West Hollywood Community Corporation, which will build 87 deed-restricted affordable units.

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