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The Security Building is an 11-story high-rise building located at 510 South Spring Street within the Spring Street Financial District in Downtown Los Angeles, California. It has been converted to the residential Lofts at the Security Building. It was the former headquarters office building of Security First National Bank, completed in 1906.
This is a list of Los Angeles federal buildings, meaning past or present United States federal buildings located within the city of Los Angeles. It includes buildings that, prior to the creation of the USPS as an independent agency in 1971, contained post offices but no buildings that were exclusively post offices.)
Today, the building's primary tenants are the United States Department of Homeland Security and the Internal Revenue Service. Holdings of the National Archives and Records Administration for the Pacific region were once located in the building but have since been relocated to a new center in Perris, California .
The building hosts three glass mosaics by Los Angeles artist Richard Haines: Celebration of our Homeland, Recognition of All Foreign Lands, and Of the People, for the People, by the People. [5] The building design was a collaboration between Welton Becket & Associates, Albert C. Martin & Associates, and Paul R. Williams & Associates. [5]
U.S. Post Office-Los Angeles Terminal Annex; United States Courthouse (First Street, Los Angeles) United States Post Office and Courthouse (Los Angeles, California, 1892) United States Post Office and Courthouse (Los Angeles, California, 1910)
The Van Nuys Government Center (aka Van Nuys Civic Center or San Fernando Valley Administrative Center [1]) is a 17.3-acre (70,000 m 2) [2] cluster of buildings in the Van Nuys neighborhood of Los Angeles that houses various local, state and federal government offices and services.
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In April 1971, Los Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty suggested that there was a connection between the federal building bomb and a Chicano Moratorium march that had occurred the same weekend. [8] At the time of the 1974 LAX bombing it was noted that the FBI had not identified any suspects in the 1971 federal building bombing and the case remained open. [6]