The 88,000-square-foot mixed-use collection along Laguna Canyon Road heads to auction following 2021 loan breach
A mixed-use arts portfolio in Laguna Beach that hit the market earlier this year is now headed for a public foreclosure auction, according to a Notice of Trustee’s Sale filed with Orange County records.
The collection of properties at 777 and 22446 Laguna Canyon Road—part of the larger 88,000-square-foot portfolio that includes the Seven-Degrees event venue, Laguna Festival Center, and Laguna Arts Center—faces a trustee sale scheduled for October 1, 2025, at 3:00 PM on the steps of the Orange Civic Center.
The foreclosure affects a cornerstone of Laguna Beach’s cultural infrastructure. The broader portfolio, marketed by Coastal Commercial brokers Nathan Holthouser, Maggie Attashian, and Rebecca Canalez in July, encompasses multiple income-producing properties at 891, 805-859, 775-793, and 777 & 22446 Laguna Canyon Road.
The Seven-Degrees venue at 891 Laguna Canyon Road serves as the portfolio’s anchor, hosting events, exhibitions, and private functions since its development. The neighboring Laguna Festival Center and Laguna Arts Center house a diverse mix of gallery, studio and commercial tenants that form part of the city’s longstanding arts ecosystem.
These properties sit along Laguna Canyon Road, a main thoroughfare connecting downtown Laguna Beach to coastal areas, benefiting from steady circulation of local residents, festival attendees, and seasonal visitors—particularly during signature events like the Sawdust Art Festival and Pageant of the Masters. The corridor’s proximity to local institutions, including the Laguna Playhouse and Laguna College of Art + Design, further anchors its cultural significance.
The foreclosure notice comes roughly two months after Coastal Commercial brought the broader Laguna Canyon Portfolio to market in July 2025. That marketing effort highlighted the collection’s role as an anchor for Laguna Beach’s arts community, emphasizing that tenants—including creative businesses, galleries, retailers and office users—were generating stabilized cash flow with room for operational improvement.
The properties benefit from Arts District (AD) zoning, which permits creative commercial, live/work and community-focused uses. Brokers had positioned this designation as offering flexibility for future redevelopment or adaptive reuse projects, subject to city planning requirements and alignment with Laguna Beach’s cultural and economic objectives.
However, the pending foreclosure suggests the current ownership structure has been unable to service the underlying debt despite the portfolio’s income-generating capacity and strategic location in a corridor with limited new development opportunities due to ongoing land constraints.
Marketing materials for the original listing emphasized that the absence of large-scale new development in the surrounding area, combined with Laguna Beach’s natural land constraints, contributed to the portfolio’s potential long-term investment value. The properties’ natural canyon setting, surrounded by residential neighborhoods, adds to their unique positioning within the market.
Brokers had noted that additional upside might be achievable through reconfiguration of tenancy, redevelopment strategies, or capital upgrades—opportunities that will now be available to whoever emerges as the winning bidder at the foreclosure auction.
Property records show the foreclosure is being handled under California Civil Code Section 2924g, which governs non-judicial foreclosure procedures. The sale will be conducted “as is” without warranties, with the winning bidder required to pay in lawful money of the United States.
Potential bidders have been advised that placing the highest bid does not automatically entitle them to ownership, as California law provides certain redemption rights to borrowers. The notice also warns that senior liens may take priority and that buyers should investigate all outstanding encumbrances before bidding.
The foreclosure highlights ongoing challenges facing commercial real estate owners in high-value coastal markets, where property values may not always align with debt service requirements despite strong operational fundamentals. For Laguna Beach specifically, the outcome could impact the continuity of arts programming that has defined the Laguna Canyon corridor for decades and supports the city’s cultural identity.
The trustee sale represents a potential opportunity for new ownership to acquire a strategically located arts portfolio in a market where development constraints limit supply. However, buyers will need to navigate existing tenant relationships and local zoning requirements that prioritize cultural uses over pure commercial development.
