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Marilyn Monroe’s House Saved From Demolition in California

The Actress Was Found Dead in the Brentwood Residence in 1962


By Moira Ritter
CoStar News

June 27, 2024 | 1:31 P.M.

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The house where Marilyn Monroe was found dead in 1962 has been designated a California landmark, ending a year-long battle over its demolition.

The Los Angeles City Council unanimously voted on Wednesday to make the property in Brentwood, located at 12305 Fifth Helena Drive, a Historic-Cultural Monument, saving it from demolition, according to an archived livestream of the video.

It’s a decision that comes after media reported in September that the owners of the estate had filed for demolition. Following that filing, local officials took steps to temporarily protect the property and moved to make those protections permanent.

Councilwoman Traci Park, who represents the district where the residence is located, spoke at the city council meeting on Wednesday in support of the move to name the house a landmark.

“There is no other person or place in the city of Los Angeles as iconic as Marilyn Monroe and her Brentwood home,” she said. “Some of the most world-famous images ever taken of her were in that home, on those grounds, near her pool. And that Marilyn tragically died there forever ties her in time and place to this very home.”

The house, built in 1929, was the first and only house Monroe ever owned, according to the Los Angeles Department of City Planning. Monroe purchased the property in February 1962 and moved in the following month. She was found dead in the house in August of that same year after an apparent overdose. She was 36.

download (8).jpg

The house where Marilyn Monroe was found dead in 1962 has been designated a California landmark, ending a year-long battle over its demolition.

The Los Angeles City Council unanimously voted on Wednesday to make the property in Brentwood, located at 12305 Fifth Helena Drive, a Historic-Cultural Monument, saving it from demolition, according to an archived livestream of the video.

It’s a decision that comes after media reported in September that the owners of the estate had filed for demolition. Following that filing, local officials took steps to temporarily protect the property and moved to make those protections permanent.

Councilwoman Traci Park, who represents the district where the residence is located, spoke at the city council meeting on Wednesday in support of the move to name the house a landmark.

“There is no other person or place in the city of Los Angeles as iconic as Marilyn Monroe and her Brentwood home,” she said. “Some of the most world-famous images ever taken of her were in that home, on those grounds, near her pool. And that Marilyn tragically died there forever ties her in time and place to this very home.”

The house, built in 1929, was the first and only house Monroe ever owned, according to the Los Angeles Department of City Planning. Monroe purchased the property in February 1962 and moved in the following month. She was found dead in the house in August of that same year after an apparent overdose. She was 36.

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