Hollywood Production Company Fifth Season Signs Big Office Lease in West LA

Film and TV production company Fifth Season has signed on as the first tenant at a recently completed Class A office campus on the Westside of Los Angeles, according to reports.

The Beverly Hills-based firm known until recently as Endeavor Content will take 65,000 square feet at the Lumen office campus developed by McCarthy CookCoStar reported. The 550,000-square-foot office is at 11355 West Olympic Boulevard at the south entryway to the Sawtelle Japantown district.

Fifth Season is owned by South Korean entertainment and media company CJ ENM, perhaps best known for producing the 2019 film “Parasite.” The company changed the name after acquiring an 80 percent stake from Ari Emanuel’s Endeavor Group.

McCarthy Cook built Lumen to attract L.A.’s tech and entertainment firms while demand for and the value of traditional office space — including the 1980s law office that Lumen replaced — sinks around the country. Fifth Season’s lease for the high-end space represents the popular “flight to quality” trend considering Lumen’s resort-style amenities.

The campus features a 1-acre amenity deck with 65,000 square feet of private outdoor space, which includes a 250-person indoor-outdoor conference center and a set of smaller cabana-style meeting rooms, as well a restaurant, a beer and wine bungalow, a coffee bungalow, and an exhibition kitchen with a pizza oven. The building also includes another hospitality-focused restaurant, an 80-person screening room in the penthouse space, and a 5,000-square-foot gym.

“People are working from home and the question is, ‘What’s going to bring you back to the office?’ ” Mike Coppin, senior vice president of leasing and marketing at McCarthy Cook, told Commercial Observer last fall. “It’s got to be a game-changing experience to get you here … with employees who want happy hours, social gatherings, fitness classes, and great convenient food and beverage options, and collaborative entertainment events. That’s the evolution of the office environment and what we’re trying to do here.”

McCarthy Cook Is Building a Reason to Return to the Office in LA

October 21, 2022
Published in: Commercial Observer
Author: Greg Cornfield

McCarthy Cook Is Building a Reason to Return to the Office in LA – Commercial Observer

McCarthy Cook Is Building a Reason to Return to the Office in LA

‘People who work in these projects want to know that they’re coming back to something that is different and special, and isn’t your ordinary workplace.’

Office space is a tough sell these days.

Major questions remain about how workspace fits in the post-pandemic world with a tug of war for employees being pulled into work and drawn back to their home base. Since the COVID-19 outbreak began, office construction has shifted away from gateway cities like Los Angeles, and users have displayed a clear preference for flight to quality. And that’s to say nothing of new headwinds brought on by inflation and rising interest rates.

Leasing activity and in-person office attendance in L.A. also demonstrates far less confidence as companies like Netflix, Sweetgreen, Snap and Live Nation put up a record 10.7 million square feet of sublease space. According to Kastle Systems, which reports on keycard entries at offices in major markets, L.A.’s occupancy ticked up slightly last week, to just 46.6 percent, and Newmark’s third-quarter office report found more than one-fourth of L.A.’s total office space is currently vacant or available for sublease.

Demand has clearly shifted away from traditional office projects like the 1980s law office building at 11355 West Olympic Boulevard at the south entryway to the Sawtelle Japantown district in West Los Angeles. McCarthy Cook is almost done replacing the 385,000-square-foot building with a project called Lumen — a shimmering 550,000-square-foot, glass-like edifice that combines remarkable design and high-end creative space with far-reaching, resort-style amenities.

“People are working from home and the question is, ‘What’s going to bring you back to the office?’ ” said Mike Coppin, senior vice president of leasing and marketing at McCarthy Cook. “It’s got to be a game-changing experience to get you here … with employees who want happy hours, social gatherings, fitness classes, and great convenient food and beverage options, and collaborative entertainment events. That’s the evolution of the office environment and what we’re trying to do here.”

Despite workers’ desire to stay home, it’s clear many bosses want to tug workers back into one building, even if it’s not for five days a week. But they’re going to have to really sell it to give people a reason to leave their home workspace. McCarthy Cook is betting it created a formula with Lumen that will attract some of L.A.’s top tech or entertainment firms — and their employees — with a setup that’s far more appealing than the old-school cubicle layout.

“The last thing we wanted was for it to look like a 1980s flash cube,” said Edward Cook, co-founder and co-president of McCarthy Cook. “We wanted something organic, more ‘West L.A.,’ more ‘Hollywood’ and media and entertainment, and the nexus of the two.”

Lumen quickly taps into the social aspect that humans crave but cannot attain from working at home. After passing by the hospitality-focused restaurant on the ground floor, or through the touchless security system, and through the garden-style common areas, visitors come upon an imposing grand staircase between the two office structures that leads to a 1-acre amenity deck with 65,000 square feet of private outdoor space.

“We have this beautiful architecture and a magnificent project, but we want it to be approachable,” Coppin said. “We wanted that juxtaposition of the access to outside with the amenities of a home and hospitality.

McCarthy Cook says it built the largest private rooftop event venue in West L.A., and the most outdoor space in any office project throughout Southern California with a guest capacity of more than 2,200 people.

“You’d have to go to the Beverly Hilton to get close to this amount of [private entertainment space],” Coppin said.

The deck includes a 250-person indoor-outdoor conference center and a set of smaller cabana-style meeting rooms, as well as another chef-inspired restaurant, open green space, and garden-style seating. It features a beer and wine bungalow, a coffee bungalow, and an exhibition kitchen with a pizza oven. And in addition to the deck, tenants will be able to use the 5,000-square-foot gym, or play basketball or pickleball on the sports court.

L.A.’s Westside has held up better than most office submarkets since the pandemic hit due to its inventory of Class A creative space, and Lumen clearly stands to benefit from office users’ flight to quality.

“Lumen” is a measurement of brightness or the amount of light emitted, and it’s perhaps the perfect name for a development where natural light seems to fill every inch. McCarthy Cook spent four years figuring out how to develop a building with 22-foot, floor-to-ceiling glass and also work with today’s energy restrictions, which Cook said was “almost impossible.” All the glass used to build the Gensler-designed Lumen came from Germany and Switzerland.

“We chased all over the world to find a glass with an incredible limited reflectivity,” he said, explaining that Lumen has North America’s first triple-pane, double-air gap glass-curtain on 100 percent of the structure. That creates “97.5 percent openness factor” looking out from the office, but maintains privacy looking in, and deflects heat from the sun.

The development team at McCarthy Cook made the right decision to advance the project through the global pandemic and over new economic hurdles. Cook said if they started the project today, it would cost “$50 million more” due to inflation, rising interest rates, rising construction costs and supply chain issues.

A bridge between the two structures has been transformed and can be used as its own unique floor plate or an extension of one of the main areas, and more outdoor terraces stand out on top of the bridge facing southwest. The top floors sport clear views of the basin extending from The Getty museum to the north and SoFi Stadium to the south.

Coppin is leading the leasing effort as McCarthy Cook courts top-name media, entertainment and tech firms as tenants. For example, one of the penthouse levels will include an 80-person screening room for a streaming and production company.

Another amenity will be a private shuttle to and from the nearby subway stations, and visitors and employees can take advantage of adjacent nightlife with more than two dozen restaurants, pubs and bars that make up Sawtelle’s buzzing Japantown district.

Los Angeles’s LUMEN West LA Innovates In Glazing. Construction Management

August 23, 2021

Los Angeles’s Lumen West Innovates in Glazing, Construction Management | Glass Magazine

Under two of the many cranes lining the L.A. skyline, the existing Trident Center Building is undergoing an extensive renovation and reimagination as Lumen West, a new experiential office concept designed by Gensler. The project also features a very unique project management strategy for its Walters & Wolf glaziers, one involving steak and eggs.

It all started as a form of friendly challenge. Project superintendent Matt Cowles of Hathaway Dinwiddie, challenged the Walters & Wolf team to hit a goal of 120 panels installed in a day, offering to personally cook the entire crew a steak and egg breakfast, if achieved.

Cowles issued the challenge after witnessing the crew of Charles Anderson, glazing field superintendent for Walters & Wolf, hit 98 panels installed in one day. “I don’t do this for all of the subs all the time,” says Cowles. “But when I see a crew like Charlie’s out there busting their tails and getting the job done it is my pleasure to take care of them.”

Cowles made good on his word, as Anderson’s team set a total of 129 in a day. That week the glaziers working on Lumen West enjoyed 60-plus T-bone steaks and more than 120 eggs before their shift started.

The Trident Building’s modernization will completely re-skin the two-tower façade while adding restaurant and retail spaces, along with a fitness center and several terrace decks. The exterior will be wrapped in a unitized, triple-glazed curtain wall system designed and installed by Walters & Wolf, featuring insulating glass units manufactured by AGC Interpane. This floor-to-ceiling high performance glazing will provide optimal views, daylighting and thermal comfort

Let there Be Light

New Technologies Give Rise to West Los Angeles Metamorphosis in an exciting new Experiential Office Campus

DDC Journal, Spring 2021 issue

Renderings Revealed for Trident Center Expansion

2012 – URBANIZE LA

January 23, 2017
Published in: Urbanize.LA
Author: Steven Sharp

West L.A. office complex to add 120,000 square feet of office and retail space.

An initial study published by the Los Angeles Department of City Planning offers a sneak peak at the proposed expansion of West L.A.’s Trident Center.

The mid-rise office complex, which spans a full city block at 11355 W. Olympic Boulevard, currently consists of two 10-story buildings with a combined 383,000 square feet of leasable offices.  McCarthy Cook, the real estate firm that owns the facility, submitted plans to the city last summer to build an additional 120,000 square feet of offices and retail space on the property.

Renderings of the project, which is being designed by Gensler, show bridge multiple bridges between the two buildings would create some of the new office space, as well as opportunities for elevated amenity decks.  The second and third levels would be further extended out towards Olympic Boulevard, where offices would hover over a ground-floor plaza flanked by commercial space.

The existing buildings, which opened in 1983, would also be reclad with a glass curtain wall.

An existing parking garge and recreation deck at the back of the property would be retained.  No new parking is proposed within the expansion.

Construction of the Trident Center expansion is expected to occur over two phases, starting with the podium structure and followed with improvements to the towers.  Work is expected to occur between 2018 and 2020.

The property is located along the Olympic Corridor, which has among the lowest office vacancy rates for L.A. submarkets.  Besides the Trident Center, additional space is also planned as part of the nearby Martin Expo Town Center development.

Rendering of the expanded Trident Center from across Olympic Boulevard (Image: LADCP)

Rendering of the expanded Trident Center looking south (Image: LADCP)

Project site and surroundings (Image: Google Maps)