Almanac note · History and culture
The Hollywood Sign began as a hillside real-estate billboard
The Hollywood Sign feels like it has always belonged to movies, but its first job was selling houses. In 1923, it read Hollywoodland and stood above a real-estate development in the hills. Los Angeles Times publisher Harry Chandler built it as a huge electric billboard for the project.
The scale was bold even for Los Angeles. The sign cost $21,000, and the original letters were built to stand out from far below. Early newspaper accounts place the sign in 1923, with nearby roads, grading, workers, and hillside development all part of the same push to sell a new idea of life in the hills.
That is the fun twist. A sign built for one neighborhood slowly became a sign for a whole city, then for an industry, then for a dream people recognize around the world. The word changed too. Hollywoodland became Hollywood, and the real-estate ad became a landmark.
The sign is best enjoyed from public viewpoints, not by trying to reach it directly. Its story works from a distance anyway. You can look up at the white letters and remember that one of Los Angeles’ most famous symbols started as salesmanship, spectacle, and a very confident hillside bet.
Where to see it
Views of the Hollywood Sign from Griffith Park, Lake Hollywood, and signed public viewpoints.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 2, 2026
California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.
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Connected places
Where it fits on the map
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