Historic Preservation
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Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM) List City Declared Monuments
Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM) List City Declared Monuments No. Name Address CHC No. CF No. Adopted Community Plan Area CD Notes 1 Leonis Adobe 23537 Calabasas Road 08/06/1962 Canoga Park - Winnetka - 3 Woodland Hills - West Hills 2 Bolton Hall 10116 Commerce Avenue & 7157 08/06/1962 Sunland - Tujunga - Lake View 7 Valmont Street Terrace - Shadow Hills - East La Tuna Canyon 3 Plaza Church 535 North Main Street and 100-110 08/06/1962 Central City 14 La Iglesia de Nuestra Cesar Chavez Avenue Señora la Reina de Los Angeles (The Church of Our Lady the Queen of Angels) 4 Angel's Flight 4th Street & Hill Street 08/06/1962 Central City 14 Dismantled May 1969; Moved to Hill Street between 3rd Street and 4th Street, February 1996 5 The Salt Box 339 South Bunker Hill Avenue (Now 08/06/1962 Central City 14 Moved from 339 Hope Street) South Bunker Hill Avenue (now Hope Street) to Heritage Square; destroyed by fire 1969 6 Bradbury Building 300-310 South Broadway and 216- 09/21/1962 Central City 14 224 West 3rd Street 7 Romulo Pico Adobe (Rancho 10940 North Sepulveda Boulevard 09/21/1962 Mission Hills - Panorama City - 7 Romulo) North Hills 8 Foy House 1335-1341 1/2 Carroll Avenue 09/21/1962 Silver Lake - Echo Park - 1 Elysian Valley 9 Shadow Ranch House 22633 Vanowen Street 11/02/1962 Canoga Park - Winnetka - 12 Woodland Hills - West Hills 10 Eagle Rock Eagle Rock View Drive, North 11/16/1962 Northeast Los Angeles 14 Figueroa (Terminus), 72-77 Patrician Way, and 7650-7694 Scholl Canyon Road 11 The Rochester (West Temple 1012 West Temple Street 01/04/1963 Westlake 1 Demolished February Apartments) 14, 1979 12 Hollyhock House 4800 Hollywood Boulevard 01/04/1963 Hollywood 13 13 Rocha House 2400 Shenandoah Street 01/28/1963 West Adams - Baldwin Hills - 10 Leimert City of Los Angeles May 5, 2021 Page 1 of 60 Department of City Planning No. -
1680 N Vine Street, Los Angeles Building Highlights
1680 N VINE STREET, LOS ANGELES BUILDING HIGHLIGHTS • The Taft Building-Hollywood’s most authentic office environment • Built in 1923 and completely renovated in 2019 • Located in the heart of the famous Hollywood Walk of Fame • Onsite amenities: Starbucks, Wood & Vine, APL and walking distance to everything else Hollywood has to offer • Directly adjacent to the W Hotel which provides ample onsite valet parking • Connected to the Metro Red line at Hollywood and Vine- linking to Downtown and the San Fernando Valley • Two blocks from 101 Freeway BUILDING DESCRIPTION • 12 floors • Building size: +/-125,888 rentable square feet • Average floor plate: +/-10,000 rentable square feet • Ceiling heights: 12’-14’ • Exposed brick, concrete floors and exposed concrete ceilings, operable windows throughout • Creative space available from 1,000- 10,000 square feet APL Restaurant | Wood & Vine Located at the iconic intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street WALK SCORE ® OF 95 Untitled map Untitled layer 1680 Vine St LUXURY HOUSING LUXURY HOTEL AMENITIES MAP 1680 VINE STREET, LOS ANGELES KIMPTON HOTEL PANTAGES ARGYLE HOUSE NETFLIX HOLLYWOOD + HIGHLAND STATION HOLLYWOOD BLVD HOLLYWOOD + WESTERN STATION HOLLYWOOD + VINE STATION TRADER JOE’S CAHUENGA BLVD VIACOM SELMA AVENUE VINE ST CROSSROADS OF THE WORLD EQUINOX COLUMBIA SQUARE SUNSET BLVD NETFLIX HIGHLAND AVE ESSEX & HOLLYWOOD PALLADIUM DREAM HOTEL TENDER GREENS NETFLIX ON VINE KATSUYA FOUNTAIN AVENUE ST N GOWER SANTA MONICA BLVD AVA HOLLYWOOD yucca street carlos avenue Taft Building 41 3339 -
Historic Resources Survey, Hollywood Redevelopment Project Area Historic Districts, Planning Districts, and Multi‐Property Resources – 01/28/20
Historic Resources Survey, Hollywood Redevelopment Project Area Historic Districts, Planning Districts, and Multi‐Property Resources – 01/28/20 Districts Name: De Longpre Park Residential Historic District Description: The De Longpre Park Residential Historic District is a concentration of pre‐World War II residences in central Hollywood. The district is flat and moderate in size. It encompasses an irregularly shaped area that is generally bounded by Leland Way on the north, Fountain Avenue and Homewood Avenue on the south, Hudson and Wilcox avenues on the east, and Cherokee Avenue on the west. The district is primarily composed of small, modest, single‐family residences that were built between the very early 20th century and the 1920s. These houses are sited on deep, narrow lots, and are one (and occasionally two) stories in height. They are designed in a variety of architectural styles that were popular at the time; the American Colonial Revival, Craftsman, and Spanish Colonial Revival styles are the most common, though some of the earlier houses exhibit characteristics of Late Victorian era styles. Common architectural features include flat or moderately pitched roofs with projecting eaves, exposed rafters, and eave returns; clay tile trim and coping (on Spanish Colonial Revival houses); front porches with articulated supports; wood clapboard and stucco wall cladding; and multi‐light wood windows. Many houses feature a detached garage or ancillary building at the rear of the lot. Common alterations include the replacement of original doors, windows, and wall cladding, and the addition of security bars and perimeter fences. Interspersed between these houses are a handful of multi‐family dwellings that generally complement the neighborhood’s scale and character, as well as a few examples of larger‐scale multi‐family properties – mostly apartment houses – that were built after World War II and do not contribute to the district. -
Individual Artist Fellowships C.O.L.A
INDIVIDUAL ARTIST FELLOWSHIPS C.O.L.A. 2013 C.O.L.A. 2013 INDIVIDUAL ARTIST FELLOWSHIPS Department of Cultural Affairs City of Los Angeles This catalog accompanies an exhibition and performance series sponsored by the City of Los CITY OF Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs featuring LOS ANGELES its C.O.L.A. 2013 Individual Artist Fellowship recipients in the visual and performing arts. 2013 INDIVIDUAL Exhibition: May 19 to July 7, 2013 ARTIST Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery FELLOWSHIPS Barnsdall Park Opening Reception: May 19, 2013, 2 to 5 p.m. Performances: June 28, 2013 Grand Performances 2 Antonio R. Villaraigosa LOS ANGELES CITY COUNCIL CULTURAL AFFAIRS COMMISSION Department of Cultural Affairs DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AffaiRS Mayor City of Los Angeles City of Los Angeles City of Los Angeles Ed P. Reyes, District 1 York Chang Paul Krekorian, District 2 President Olga Garay-English Aileen Adams Dennis P. Zine, District 3 The Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA) generates and supports high-quality Executive Director Deputy Mayor Tom LaBonge, District 4 Josephine Ramirez arts and cultural experiences for Los Angeles’s 4 million residents and 40 million Strategic Partnerships Paul Koretz, District 5 Vice President Senior Staff Tony Cardenas, District 6 annual overnight and day visitors. DCA advances the social and economic impact of the arts and ensures access to diverse and enriching cultural activities through Richard Alarcon, District 7 Maria Bell Matthew Rudnick Bernard C. Parks, District 8 Annie Chu grant making, marketing, public art, community arts programming, arts education, Assistant General Manager Jan Perry, District 9 Charmaine Jefferson and building partnerships with artists and arts and cultural organizations in Herb J. -
View Radiology Remodel, Clinton Kieth Master Plan, L.A
12 LOS ANGELES BUSINESS JOURNAL JANUARY 29, 2018 NEXT WEEK ARCHITECTURE FIRMS The Top Gifts received THE LIST Ranked by 2017 L.A. County Billings in L.A. County Rank Company L.A. County Current Projects Profile Top Local Executive • name Billings (partial list) • L.A. architects • name • address • 2017 • L.A. employees • title • website • 2016 • offices (L.A./total) • phone (in millions) • headquarters Gensler $90.3 LAX, Los Angeles Football Club Stadium, Westfield Century City, 141 John Adams 1 500 S. Figueroa St. $85.2 Herald Examiner, Caruso Palisades Village, Waldorf Astoria, 337 Barbara Bouza Los Angeles 90071 AltaSea at the Port of Los Angeles 1/44 Michael White gensler.com SanN/A Francisco Co-Managing Directors (213) 327-3600 ZGF Architects 44.8 Hilton Foundation headquarters Phase 2, Caltech Bechtel 42 Ted Hyman 2 515 S. Flower St., Suite 3700 39.2 residence, Hercules campus renovation, LA BioMed Research 100 Partner Los Angeles 90071 Building A, California ARB consolidation project 1/6 (213) 617-1901 zgf.com Portland,N/A Ore. Aecom 40.7 NBC Universal, UCI, LA2028 Olympic Committee, LAX, Metro, 60 Robert Lavey 3 300 S. Grand Ave. 34.8 L.A. County, U.S. Navy 185 Regional Managing Principal, Buildings Los Angeles 90071 4/595 and Places aecom.com Los Angeles (213) 593-8100 CallisonRTKL 37.0 Perla, 5th and Hill, 11th and Olive, Oceanwide Plaza, The Alexan, 161 Kelly Farrell 4 333 S. Hope St., Suite C200 39.0 888 Hope, Four Seasons, Los Angeles private residences, 3700 197 Vice President Los Angeles 90071 Wilshire, Figueroa Centre 1/20 (213) 633-6000 callisonrtkl.com Baltimore DLR Group 36.4 Macerich Fashion Outlets of Los Angeles, 41 Adrian O. -
Will Connell Papers LSC.0893
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf5199n9r9 Online items available Finding Aid for the Will Connell papers LSC.0893 Manuscripts Division staff; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé UCLA Library Special Collections Online finding aid last updated 2020 July 30. Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575 [email protected] URL: https://www.library.ucla.edu/special-collections Finding Aid for the Will Connell LSC.0893 1 papers LSC.0893 Contributing Institution: UCLA Library Special Collections Title: Will Connell papers Creator: Connell, Will Identifier/Call Number: LSC.0893 Physical Description: 76 Linear Feet(152 boxes) Date (inclusive): 1928-1961 Abstract: Will Connell (1898-1961) was a self-taught photographer. He opened a studio in downtown Los Angeles in 1925 and became a member of the Camera Pictorialists. He taught at Art Center College in Pasadena from 1931 until his death. His work included movie publicity shots, magazine assignments and other commercial photography. The collection consists of photographs, negatives, experimental work, correspondence, instructional materials, and ephemera. Stored off-site. All requests to access special collections material must be made in advance using the request button located on this page. Language of Material: English . Conditions Governing Access Open for research. All requests to access special collections materials must be made in advance using the request button located on this page. Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements PORTIONS OF THIS COLLECTION HAVE BEEN DIGITIZED. Please consult digital facsimiles instead of originals. Conditions Governing Use Property rights to the physical objects belong to UCLA Library Special Collections. -
No. 2 Newsmaker of 2016 Was City Manager Change Rodgers Christmas Basket Fund Are Still Being Accepted
FRIDAY 162nd YEAR • No. 208 DECEMBER 30, 2016 CLEVELAND, TN 22 PAGES • 50¢ Basket Fund Donations to the William Hall No. 2 Newsmaker of 2016 was city manager change Rodgers Christmas Basket Fund are still being accepted. Each By LARRY C. BOWERS Service informed Council members of year, the fund supplies boxes of Banner Staff Writer the search process they faced. food staples to needy families TOP 10 MTAS provided assistance free of during the holiday season. The The Cleveland City Council started charge, and Norris recommended the fund, which is a 501(c)(3) charity, the 2016 calendar year with a huge city hire a consultant. This was prior is a volunteer-suppported effort. challenge — an ordeal which devel- NEWSMAKERS to the Council’s decision to hire Any funds over what is needed to oped into the No. 2 news story of the Wallace, who had also assisted with pay for food bought this year will year as voted by Cleveland Daily the city’s hiring of Police Chief Mark be used next Christmas. Banner staff writers and editors — The huge field of applicants was Gibson. Donations may be mailed to First when the city celebrated the retire- vetted by city consultant and former Council explored the possibility of Tennessee Bank, P.O. Box 3566, ment of City Manager Janice Casteel Tennessee Bureau of Investigation using MTAS and a recruiting agency, Cleveland TN 37320-3566 or and announced the hiring of new City Director Larry Wallace, of Athens, as but Norris told them she had never dropped off at First Tennessee Manager Joe Fivas. -
A Guide to Historic Santa Monica City Hall
A G U I D E T O Historic Santa Monica City Hall The city seal, measuring 79 inches in diameter, was created with the same “Petrachrome” method and a palette of colors, textures and elements similar to those used in the Macdonald-Wright murals. Encircled by the words, “City of Santa Monica, California. Founded 1875,” the seal features a mermaid and Spanish galleon on the bay, with sun, mountains, clouds and airplanes behind. A ribbon near the base of the seal carries the city’s motto, Populus Felix en Urbe Felice, translated from the Latin as “Fortunate People in a Fortunate Land.” The seal is inlaid in the center of the foyer floor, surrounded by color tiles that run along the east-west axis of the foyer and halls. A serrated pattern of yellow triangles running against a brown field, bordered by black stripes, echoes the chevron pattern on the tiled wainscoting found nearby. T he Overview With a nautical quality befitting its seaside locale, Santa Monica City Hall reflects the character of its surroundings, making it a civic building truly connected to its constituency. Designed by two prominent Los Angeles architects, it is rec- ognized as an outstanding example of the Public Works Administration (PWA) Moderne style of architecture popularized by Depression-era architects. With original Gladding, McBean ceramic tiles found around the west entrance doorway and throughout the building, and historic Stanton Macdonald-Wright murals in the entry foyer that document the city’s and the state’s history, the building’s architecture has earned it a place in the California Register of Historical Resources (1996), designation as a city landmark and eligibility for listing in the federal Register of Historic Places. -
Department Stores on Sale: an Antitrust Quandary Mark D
Georgia State University Law Review Volume 26 Article 1 Issue 2 Winter 2009 March 2012 Department Stores on Sale: An Antitrust Quandary Mark D. Bauer Follow this and additional works at: https://readingroom.law.gsu.edu/gsulr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Mark D. Bauer, Department Stores on Sale: An Antitrust Quandary, 26 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. (2012). Available at: https://readingroom.law.gsu.edu/gsulr/vol26/iss2/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Publications at Reading Room. It has been accepted for inclusion in Georgia State University Law Review by an authorized editor of Reading Room. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Bauer: Department Stores on Sale: An Antitrust Quandary DEPARTMENT STORES ON SALE: AN ANTITRUST QUANDARY Mark D. BauerBauer*• INTRODUCTION Department stores occupy a unique role in American society. With memories of trips to see Santa Claus, Christmas window displays, holiday parades or Fourth of July fIreworks,fireworks, department storesstores- particularly the old downtown stores-are often more likely to courthouse.' engender civic pride than a city hall building or a courthouse. I Department store companies have traditionally been among the strongest contributors to local civic charities, such as museums or symphonies. In many towns, the department store is the primary downtown activity generator and an important focus of urban renewal plans. The closing of a department store is generally considered a devastating blow to a downtown, or even to a suburban shopping mall. Many people feel connected to and vested in their hometown department store. -
Heidi Mekkelson
Alejandro Huerta <[email protected]> Crossroads Hollywood Draft NOP 1 message Heidi Mekkelson <[email protected]> Tue, Oct 13, 2015 at 9:55 AM To: Alejandro Huerta <[email protected]> Cc: Luciralia Ibarra <[email protected]>, Stephanie EyestoneJones <[email protected]> Hi Alejandro, Attached is a draft NOP for your review. Still working on nailing down the scoping meeting location for Saturday, Nov 14, but I didn’t want that to hold up your review. Let me know if you have any comments and if the dates are ok. We’re also working on finalizing the IS. Thanks! Heidi Heidi Mekkelson Principal Planner 6701 Center Drive West, Suite 900 Los Angeles, California 90045 T (424) 2075333 F (424) 2075349 DIRECT (424) 2075346 Email [email protected] Statement of Confidentiality. The contents of this email message and any attachments are confidential and are intended solely for addressee. The information may also be legally privileged. This transmission is sent in trust, for the sole purpose of delivery to the intended recipient. If you have received this transmission in error, any use, reproduction or dissemination of this transmission is strictly prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please immediately notify the sender by reply email or phone and delete this message and its attachments, if any. 4 attachments 15127A Radius Map.PDF 2422K Conceptual Site Plan.pdf 498K Crossroads NOP_draft 10.13.15.doc 2731K Project Location Map.pdf 235K A1 B4 308 HOTEL KEYS 123 RENTAL UNITS -
8 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 a B C D a B
Public Plaza Art Spot Farmers Museum/ Bike Path Cultural Eco-LEED Solar Recycling Best Walks Light Rail Green Vegetarian Historical Special Market Institution Site Building Energy Public Transit Business Natural Cafe Feature Garden A B C D 7 3 Main St. Griffith Park/ Elysian Park/ Observatory Dodger Stadium 1 Metro Gold Line to Pasadena • Cornfield • Arroyo Seco Park • Debs Park-Audubon Broadway Society 8 Cesar Chavez Ave. 1 • Lummis House & 1 Drought Resistant Demo. Garden • Sycamore Grove Park 3 • S. Pasadena Library MTA • Art Center Campus Sunset Blvd. • Castle Green Central Park 3 Los Angeles River Union 6 Station 101 F R E E W AY 13 LADWP 1 Temple St. 12 12 10 9 8 Temple St. 2 2 San Pedro St. Broadway Main St. Spring St. 11 Los Angeles St. Grand Ave. Grand Hope St. 10 Figueroa St. Figueroa 1 11 9 3 3 Hill St. 1st St. 4 10 Alameda St. 1st St. Central Ave. Sci-Arc Olive St. Olive 7 1 2nd St. 2nd St. 6 5 8 6 2 3rd St. 4 3rd St. Flower St. Flower 4 3 2 W. 3rd St. 6 5 11 4 1 8 4th St. 4th St. 3 3 3 2 7 3 1 5 5th St. 1 5 12 5th St. 8 2 1 7 6 5 2 W. 6th St. 3 6th St. 3 7 6th St. 10 6 3 5 6 4 Wilshire Blvd. 9 14 Public Transportation 7th St. MTA Red Line 6 4 3 7 MTA Gold Line 7th St. 2 2 Metro Red Line to Mid-Wilshire & 5 MTA Blue Line North Hollywood 4 8th St. -
Cities As Entertainment Centers: Can Transformative Projects Create Place?
NOT FOR CITATION OR DISTRIBUTION WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE AUTHORS “Cities as Entertainment Centers: Can Transformative Projects Create Place? Lynne B. Sagalyn and Amanda G. Johnson Paper Prepared for “Explaining Metropolitan Transformation: Politics, Functions and Symbols” Special Master Class University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, The Netherlands January 25-26, 2013 Cities have long been identified as centers for entertainment. By historical evolution or deliberate public policy, across the globe the core of the entertainment industry has lodged itself in the city center. Times Square in New York and the West End of London may be the most iconic centers, but Toronto’s Entertainment Center and Cleveland’s Playhouse Square derive from a similar centralizing root, as did Potsdamer Platz before the Berlin Wall divided that city. City life itself is often considered theater, a place of real-time performance, street dance, and impromptu staccato of entertainment. Akin to this informal, popular side of city entertainment, amusement parks first found vibrant, if temporary, expression in the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, whereas by the turn of the century the People’s Playground of Coney Island had become the uncontested epicenter of America’s emerging mass culture. As an idea to shape and promote city identity and draw large numbers of tourists and residents, arts districts fashioned out of whole cloth and invented by public policy began to spring into being in Dallas, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Kansas City and numerous other urban centers in the 1980s. Whether for live- theater performance, mass amusement, or arts entertainment, as a location of centrality, cities have 1 C:\Users\lbs4\Documents\Papers\Amsterdam_2013\FINAL DRAFT FILES\Cities as Entertainment Centers_Sagalyn_Johnson_012413.docx long had a competitive advantage, and this has been no less the case as evolving cultural notions of entertainment increasingly have shifted to sports events and produced new large-format entertainment centers such as London’s O2, L.A.