The Pink Palace
The Beverly Hills Hotel
Since 1912, it has hosted royalty, film legends, and power brokers.
The Pink Palace is not a hotel. It is a chapter of American glamour.

Pass the cameras.
Past the covetable.
Past the threshold of time, you enter a second Beverly Hills—one unseen, untamed, external.
In the shadows of 90210, legends are made—not recorded.

The Vault — Cultural Artifact

  • Rodeo Drive has been documented through photography, film, architecture, and fashion.
  • It has also been interpreted.
  • The Vault exists to preserve these interpretations as cultural artifacts — objects created not to advertise or sell, but to reflect meaning.

Featured Artifact

  • This one-of-one trading card artwork presents Rodeo Drive as a timeless symbol rather than a contemporary street.
  • Absent of brands, traffic, or crowds, the piece captures the atmosphere that made Rodeo Drive iconic long before it became globally recognized.

Contextual Note

  • While Rodeo Drive continues to evolve, certain representations are designed to remain unchanged.
  • Rodeo Drive — Eternal is preserved as a static interpretation — a visual pause in the street’s ongoing history.

Provenance

  • This artifact is part of the Beverly Hills Card Vault, a digital archive dedicated to original trading card art inspired by cultural landmarks and legacy.
  • The Vault exists independently and is not affiliated with any commercial retail operation.

Rodeo Drive is not owned. It is entered.