Harry Bosch’s House from “Bosch”

Harry Bosch's House (29 of 58)

I contemplated chronicling the best movie and television productions I discovered in 2018 as my first post of the new year.  Had I done so (and I still might later this month), Bosch would have topped the list.  As I mentioned in my recent write-up on Demitasse café, the Grim Cheaper and I started watching the Amazon original series just a few months ago and were immediately hooked.  A police procedural with a sarcastic and fabulously deadpan leading man set in Los Angeles – what more could this crime-obsessed, L.A.-loving stalker ask for?  The locations used are seriously phenomenal, by the way – none more so than the cantilevered hilltop home of titular character Detective Hieronymus “Harry” Bosch (Titus Welliver).  The pad couldn’t be more quintessentially Los Angeles if it tried.  So I, of course, ran right out to stalk it shortly after viewing the first episode.

[ad]

Bosch is based upon a bestselling series of novels by author Michael Connelly.  I have never read any of the books, but have been able to piece together the various info written about Harry’s house in them thanks to a detailed forum on MichaelConnelly.com.  In the novels, Detective Bosch is said to live on Woodrow Wilson Drive in the Hollywood Hills, though his specific address varies from “next to” 7203 Woodrow Wilson in 2010’s The Reversal to 8620 Woodrow Wilson in 2018’s Dark Sacred Night.  Per a commenter on the forum, Connelly has apparently stated that Harry’s pad doesn’t exist in real life, but that the site where he placed it in his stories is a burnt-out foundation of a former cantilevered residence that the author stumbled upon in 1992.  Additional commenters did some massive legwork on the subject and surmised that the location of said foundation is 7207 Woodrow Wilson Drive.  And they’re right – I came across a video of Connelly showing the exact spot where he imagined the home (a still of which is pictured below) and compared it to Street View imagery of that address (again, pictured below) and, sure enough, it’s the spot!  You can check out some photographs of the foundation and the land it sits on here.

7207 Woodrow Wilson Drive

In Blue Neon Night: Michael Connelly’s Los Angeles, a special limited edition DVD released in 2004 in which, as Amazon notes, the author “provides an insider’s tour of the places that give his stories and characters their spark and texture,” a house located at 7143 Woodrow Wilson is shown to be Harry’s and Connelly describes it as such, “Bosch’s home was fourth from the end on the right side.  His home was a wood-frame, one-bedroom cantilever, not much bigger than a Beverly Hills garage.  It hung out over the edge of the hill and was supported by three steel pylons at its mid-point.”

Screenshot-009749

Screenshot-009750

When it came time to start shooting the series in November 2013, producers found an even more perfect embodiment of that Blue Neon Night description at 1870 Blue Heights Drive in Hollywood Hills West.

Harry Bosch's House (1 of 58)

Harry Bosch's House (21 of 58)

Sitting high atop a hill, the architectural stunner, which was built in 1958, boasts 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1,513 square feet of living space, and a 0.26-acre lot.

Harry Bosch's House (10 of 58)

Per Zillow, it is currently worth a whopping $2,130,000.

Harry Bosch's House (24 of 58)

Harry Bosch's House (22 of 58)

The striking pad first popped up in Bosch’s pilot and has gone on to appear in pretty much every episode since.  It is the rear of the residence – its cantilevered side, which stands on a cliff overlooking the Sunset Strip, Culver City and beyond – that is regularly shown on the series.

Screenshot-009743

Screenshot-009730

The street side of the house, which is much less spectacular than the rear, was featured briefly in Season 4’s “Devil in the House.”

While situated on a private cul-de-sac, that side of the property can be viewed from a portion of Blue Heights Drive that is open to the public – though there is not much to see.

Harry Bosch's House (44 of 58)

Harry Bosch's House (43 of 58)

Just west of the home’s front entrance, though, in an area that is also publicly accessible, is an open expanse of land where views matching those of Harry’s pad can be gleaned.

Screenshot-009720

Harry Bosch's House (47 of 58)

And let me tell you, those views are absolutely incredible!

Harry Bosch's House (46 of 58)

Harry Bosch's House (57 of 58)

I mean, come on!

Harry Bosch's House (53 of 58)

Last one, I promise.

Harry Bosch's House (52 of 58)

We know – thanks to this video – that the actual interior of the Blue Heights Drive residence was utilized in Bosch’s pilot.  And I am fairly certain that a few additional early episodes were shot on location inside the home, as well (quite possibly all of Season 1).  At some point, though, a set re-creation was built on a studio soundstage that has since been used for all subsequent seasons.

Screenshot-009740

Screenshot-009733

How does a cop afford such a stellar pad, you ask?  Per the storyline of both the books and the series, Paramount made a movie based upon one of Harry’s cases, for which he was paid handsomely.

Screenshot-009738

Screenshot-009737

For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

Harry Bosch's House (14 of 58)-2

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Harry Bosch’s house from the television series Bosch is located at 1870 Blue Heights Drive in Hollywood Hills West.  The best views of the structure can be seen from the 1600 block of Viewmont Drive and the 8800 block of Hollywood Boulevard.

37 Replies to “Harry Bosch’s House from “Bosch””

  1. Oh that’s so nice…childhood memories are the best..some house it must have been that your father designed…hope you get to go back and revisit your childhood home

  2. As a child, I lived in a nearby house with a nearly identical view, on Cody Road, off Mulholland, overlooking the Valley. Unfortunately, my parents sold it before dragging us to the midwest so I could learn to shovel snow. Our place wasn’t on stilts, just a lot on the side of the hill. We did have a pool, though, which was pretty sweet. My dad had designed the house and was amazed that they got nearly $1M for it when they sold it in the early ’60s. I certainly wish it was still in the family today. Watching Bosch is like going home.

  3. Thanks for stalking this house. What an unbelievable view. If that ever goes on airbnb I’m gonna try it!

  4. The best show, acting,cast, the house, music.
    One can feel LA, the last episode is 4 K and I feel I am inside the house.
    Thanks Mr Connelly for Bosh and your book, Titus you are perfect for the role.
    I wish we did not have to wait a year for the next one.

  5. It is the night views from that house that are so stunning! Makes me think of flying at night and passing over a city

  6. Hmm…. I just watched a YouTube video with several of the principals done right after filming season 4. They said the house is on Blue Jay Way….

  7. After being quarantined for 6 weeks, took a drive up to Viewmont to see the house. Lot of fun and a pretty drive. Thanks for all the info so we could see it. Have finished season 6 of Bosch and can’t wait for season 7 next year.

  8. If i won the lottery i would offer an obscene amount to the owner for it, we are on series 4 at the moment

    1. Hey… flexibility is strength. As it turns out, all of those houses on stilts in the LA foothills have survived all of the earthquakes intact. I’d bet more have been lost to fire than anything else. What is TRULY scary about living up there is watching brush fires burning houses on the next hill over, then watching the flames race up from the valley floor at you. Another interesting phenomenon, is that the rattlesnakes that live in those hills decide to come for a visit at the first hint of a fire. As a child, my nightmares were filled with flames and snakes.

      1. Thanks for your local insights Bill. As a fan from Down-under who has read all the books and met Mr Connelly at a writers’ festival, your observations add colour and reality to the Bosch narrative that we’ve grown to love.

Leave a Reply