← ATLAS
HOSPITALITY·FOUR SEASONS·2024

Four Seasons Private Residences

Los Angeles

Standalone, no hotel attached.

PREMIUM
+30%
YEAR
2024
CATEGORY
Hospitality
BRAND
Four Seasons
01 / THESIS

Why this tower exists.

Four Seasons entered the branded-residence arena as a deliberate extension of brand equity into the most durable luxury asset class on the planet. Standalone, no hotel attached. The proposition is not square footage — it is membership inside a story the buyer already trusts.

Hospitality operators bring an installed service apparatus and a global private-client list. The brand defends the premium long after handover.

02 / LOCATION

The Los Angeles thesis.

LA's branded thesis centers on standalone hospitality — Four Seasons-grade service without a hotel attached.

Four Seasons Private Residences sits inside that gravitational field. The address is doing meaningful work — a comparable scheme one mile inland or one tier off the waterfront would not command the same premium regardless of marque.

03 / SIGNATURE

What the brand actually delivers.

  • MATERIAL PROGRAMBrand-supplied finishes, fixtures, and joinery vocabulary applied across public and private spaces — extending the marque into every surface a resident touches.
  • SERVICE APPARATUSCurated concierge, in-residence dining, and a private-client liaison drawn from the brand's existing customer infrastructure.
  • HERO AMENITYA signature piece — gallery, spa, members' floor, or technical room — that the unbranded comparable physically cannot replicate.
  • RESALE NARRATIVEThe same equity that closed the original sale defends the price on exit. The marque is the underwriter.
04 / THE NUMBER

Decoding the +30% premium.

Branded schemes in this bracket clear a 30–40% uplift versus unbranded comparables in the same submarket — a range that has proved durable across cycles per Savills and Knight Frank. Four Seasons Private Residences's +30% sits inside that band, weighted by brand strength, operator quality, resale liquidity, and location scarcity.

The model is straightforward: a buyer is paying once for the floorplate and a second time for the certainty that a recognised name will hold the contract on resale. The premium is the price of that certainty.