Cameo Beverly Hills, LXR Hotels & Resorts
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Review
Character and identity
Cameo Beverly Hills emerges from a $30 million reinvention of the former Mr. C, opening fully in January 2026 as the second LXR in the city. The 12-storey, 138-room tower sits on the quieter outer edge of Beverly Hills, near Pico, with all rooms balconied. Inside, Premier's design firm has pushed the look toward mid-century modern with a deco accent: patterned floors, ornate wallpaper, amoeba-shaped sofas, Italian marble baths and Byredo amenities. Silhouette anchors the ground floor with all-day dining and weekend jazz; Zampo brings Nikkei-Peruvian cooking; the Starlight Rooftop Ballroom sweeps from Santa Monica to the Hollywood sign.
Who's it for
Best for:
Design-minded couples and style-led travellers who want Beverly Hills proximity without the Rodeo Drive churn at the door. It suits diners tired of the neighbourhood's steakhouse-and-Italian rotation, Hilton Honors loyalists chasing a luxury redemption, and anyone who values balconied rooms, a calm pool deck and a genuinely cinematic rooftop for events.
Should look elsewhere:
Guests who want to step straight onto Rodeo or into the thick of West Hollywood will find the residential-fringe setting a short drive removed. The spa won't be finished until summer 2026, so wellness-focused stays before then will feel incomplete. Families wanting kids' programming should look elsewhere.
Bottom line
The pull here is the reinvention itself: a fresh, design-forward product with two distinctive restaurants and a rooftop few Beverly Hills hotels can match, on a quieter perimeter address. Book a suite for the soaking tub and added space, target the early post-opening months for introductory rates, and wait until after summer 2026 if the spa matters to your trip.
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Location
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