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Stanley Clark Meston (7 January 1910 – 30 December 1992) was an American architect most famous for designing the original Golden Arches of McDonald's restaurants. [1] [2] In an article about the origin of McDonald's Golden Arches, architectural historian Alan Hess wrote: "Nationwide success and proliferation have obscured the origins and creators of [the arches] in Southern California.
List table of the properties and districts — listed on the California Historical Landmarks in Los Angeles County, Southern California. Note: Click the "Map of all coordinates" link to the right to view a Google map of all properties and districts with latitude and longitude coordinates in the table below.
April 2, 1987 (655 W. Jefferson Blvd. University Park: Landmark large-event venue; headquarters of the Al Malaikah Temple, a division of the Shriners: 4: Aloha Apartment Hotel
The Villa Aurora, 520 Paseo Miramar, Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, has been an artists' residence since 1995. It is the former home of the German Jewish author Lion Feuchtwanger and his wife Marta. The Feuchtwangers bought this Spanish-style mansion in 1943.
Three Quintains, 1964, Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Four Arches, 1973, 333 S. Hope Street, Bunker Hill, Los Angeles; Spinal Column, 1968, San Diego Museum of Art; Le Faucon (The Falcon), 1963, Stanford University, Palo Alto; Button Flower, 1959, University of California, Los Angeles; Big Crinkly, 1969, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Landmark downtown Los Angeles hotel 61: Philharmonic Auditorium: July 2, 1969: 427 W. Fifth St. Downtown Los Angeles: Site of former home of Los Angeles Philharmonic; since demolished 64: Plaza Park: April 1, 1970: Between Chavez Ave., Main St., Los Angeles St. and Plaza Old Plaza District
By Cristin Zweig The Beverly House, the iconic estate that was the former residence of William Randolph Hearst, Marion Davies, and the honeymoon hideaway of Jacqueline and John F. Kennedy, is back ...
The Thomas Mann House is in the Riviera neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, a community in the Westside of Los Angeles.During the Nazi era, some German Jews fleeing persecution and the Holocaust found refuge in California, and especially the Pacific Palisades area became a refuge and a center for German Jewish culture, and was home to many artists, writers, and intellectuals, as well as others. [3]