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This camera obscura was destroyed when the restaurant burned down in 1907. When the third Cliff House opened in 1937, the owner was approached by businessman Floyd Jennings with the idea of adding a camera obscura to the cliffs beside the restaurant. It was installed on the site in 1946 and has been in continuous operation since then. [4]
The Cliff House appears in a scene in the 1948 film Race Street, starring George Raft. The Cliff House is featured in the Ubisoft video game Watch Dogs 2. The Cliff House appears briefly in the climax of the 1958 film The Lineup, at Sutro Baths, starring Eli Wallach and directed by Don Siegel.
Los Angeles Harbor Region: Historic house: 1844 two-story Monterey-style adobe home Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology: Claremont: San Gabriel Valley: Paleontology: Part of The Webb Schools, vertebrate, invertebrate, and track fossils Redondo Beach Historical Museum Redondo Beach: Greater Los Angeles Area: Local history: Located in the 1904 ...
The Cliff House – a historic restaurant first built in 1863, rebuilt following fires in 1894 and 1907. It also houses the Camera Obscura , a historic building containing a device that projects a 360° image
Cliff House of Folsom was named “best new restaurant” in 1990 by Five Star Review, The Orangevale News reported at the time. The restaurant served breakfast, lunch and dinner.
Children's Museum of Los Angeles, closed in 2000; Hollywood Erotic Museum, closed in 2006; Sports Museum of Los Angeles, closed in 2016 [5] VIVA Art Center – Valley Institute of Visual Art, Sherman Oaks, closed in 2011 [6] Wells Fargo History Museum (Los Angeles), closed in 2020 [7]
Heritage Square Museum is a living history and open-air architecture museum located beside the Arroyo Seco Parkway in the Montecito Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, in the southern Arroyo Seco area. The living history museum shows the story of development in Southern California through historical architectural examples.
In 2002, when renovations to the Cliff House had begun, the National Park Service announced plans to relocate the Musée Mécanique temporarily to Fisherman's Wharf. A portion of the $14 million renovation was devoted to moving the museum, with support from the National Park Service, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and museum owner Ed Zelinsky.