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Historic board recommends landmark status for director Edmund Goulding’s ‘Little White House’ estate

The home, built eight years before the city of Palm Springs was incorporated, represents the Spanish Colonial Revival architecture that dominated in the interwar period.

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The rear of the home at 1752 Ridge Road as seen from the east.

The Historic Site Preservation Board (HSPB) voted Tuesday to recommend that the City Council designate the Edmund Goulding Residence at 1752 Ridge Rd. as a Class 1 historic landmark, recognizing the property’s exceptional significance to Palm Springs’ development as an international resort destination.

The estate, known in the 1930s as “The Little White House,” was constructed in 1928 during the height of the first building boom in Palm Springs, according to a report about the property prepared by Steven Keylon for the Palm Springs Preservation Foundation. The original architect remains unknown, but the report said developer Edmond Fulford’s influences included Alfred Heineman of Pasadena and Paul R. Williams.

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The property was later transformed by acclaimed film director Edmund Goulding into a compound that hosted Hollywood royalty and European nobility.

The property exemplifies the Spanish Colonial Revival architecture that dominated Palm Springs development during the interwar period. The main residence and guest house feature hollow block concrete brick construction painted white with terra cotta barrel tile roofs, asymmetrical compositions, and distinctive indoor-outdoor integration through French doors and covered patios.

The estate’s landscape design by Paul H. Avery represents pioneering work in desert residential architecture. The centerpiece is a biomorphic swimming pool constructed in 1936, one of the first naturalistic pools ever created.

Avery, who also served as landscape architect at the San Diego Zoo, created a water feature system that included a bridge and waterfall.

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“The biomorphic swimming pool was designed to resemble a naturalistic pond, with enormous native granite boulders and smaller rocks embedded directly into the pool’s coping,” the report reads.

Avery also created a terraced garden system utilizing granite boulders found naturally on the site to create retaining walls that cascaded down the hillside. 

The property’s cultural significance stems from its role during Hollywood’s golden age. Film director Edmund Goulding purchased the estate in 1936 and transformed it into what became known as the “Little White House” compound, hosting celebrities including, Marlene Dietrich, the Duke of Warwick, and Greta Garbo, who stayed at the property the night “Camille” premiered at the Plaza Theatre.

Goulding directed “Grand Hotel” in 1932 and “Dark Victory” in 1939, and directed nine actors to Oscar nominations during his career.

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The report also notes the property was used as a destination for the LGBTQ+ community at the time, “where Goulding’s well-documented ‘bisexual orgies’ and gatherings created one of the first safe spaces for Hollywood’s LGBTQ+ community during an era of intense studio surveillance and moral restrictions.”

By the time of its 1941 sale, contemporary accounts described it as “the most famed of Palm Springs winter colony estates” and the property’s canyon swimming pool was recognized as “one of the most beautiful private pools in the U.S.”

Current owner Lucien Wolff submitted the application for historic designation following discussions about future alterations to the property.

“I’d like to see it back where it used to be, because it’s so unique,” Wolff said. He said he intends to restore the property, including the pool, waterfall, and terraced landscaping.

If the City Council approves the Class 1 designation, the property would be subject to certificates of appropriateness for any future demolition or alteration of the historic resource.


Authors

Kendall Balchan was born and raised in the Coachella Valley and brings deep local knowledge and context to every story. Before joining The Post, she spent three years as a producer and investigative reporter at NBC Palm Springs. In 2024, she was honored as one of the rising stars of local news by the Coachella Valley Journalism Foundation.

Articles with the AI Assist byline are produced in part utilizing innovative generative AI technology called Satchel, which was created by our publisher and used by newsrooms throughout the globe. For more on this technology, see our About page.

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