Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hollywood's Bank of America Building, also known as the C.E. Toberman and Co. Building, is a historic building located at 6780 W. Hollywood Boulevard and 1668 Highland Avenue in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California. Named after its former tenant, the building currently houses a Ripley's Believe It or Not! Odditorium.
Hollywood's First National Bank Building, built in 1927 and opened 1928, was designed by Meyer & Holler, the same architectural firm that designed the nearby Chinese and Egyptian theaters. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Combining art deco and neo-Gothic styles, the building was designed to suggest the sense of fantasy in the area, [ 3 ] and at 13 stories and in ...
The second at Hollywood and Highland was developed by Whitley and Toberman and saw the Bank of America Building rise opposite the Hollywood Hotel in 1914. [1] Hollywood Boulevard looking west towards Highland, 1914. Bank of America Building and Hollywood Theater are center-left. Hollywood's first theaters also emerged during this time.
Bank of America Plaza, formerly Security Pacific Plaza, is a 55-story, 224.03 m (735.0 ft) class-A office skyscraper on Bunker Hill, Los Angeles, California.It was completed in 1974 with the headquarters of Security Pacific National Bank, Capital Group Companies and Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton as its main tenants.
Bank of Hollywood moved into the building as soon as phase one construction was completed, and the building was thus named the Bank of Hollywood Building. Myron Selznick 's talent agency, the first talent agency in Hollywood, occupied the entire seventh floor, and Kenneth P. Butler 's Butler Health Institute occupied the twelfth floor, with an ...
Bank of America Corp. FleetBoston Financial Corp. Bank of America Corp. $47 billion Bank of America: 2004 J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. Bank One: JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPMorgan Chase & Co. 2004 Banco Popular: Quaker City Bank: Banco Popular: Banco Popular: 2004 Regions Financial Corporation: Union Planters Corporation: Regions Financial Corporation ...
The Hollywood Citizen said of him after his death: "He is remembered by the affectionate title which his community long ago bestowed upon him, the 'Father of Hollywood.'" [9] He was identified with the founding of Home Savings Bank, the First National Bank of Hollywood, the First National Bank of Van Nuys, and the State Banks of Owensmouth ...
In February 2007, the company acquired the BB&T Center for $117 million. [5] In June 2017, it sold the property to Arden Group for $148.8 million. [6] In October 2008, the company acquired the Ordway Building, the tallest building in Oakland, California as part of a $412 million acquisition from Brandywine Realty Trust. [7]