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The Warner Huntington Park is the sister theater to the Warner Beverly Hills and the Warner Grand in San Pedro. The Warner Huntington Park Theatre originally seated 1,468 people. [12] Huntington Park also boasted of the third Pussycat Theater to open in California. It was called The Lyric and was located at 7208 Pacific Boulevard. [13]
[42] [43] Art Deco architecture is found in Huntington Park's commercial district, and include the former theaters along Pacific Blvd. [44] [45] The 1,468 seat Warner Theater on Pacific Boulevard opened in 1930, and was designed by B. Marcus Priteca. [46] The California Theatre opened in 1925 and was operated by Fox Theatres as the Fox ...
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Huntington Park flagship, 6351 Pacific Bl., location opened in 1935 with 16,000 sq ft (1,500 m 2). Pacific Boulevard was the busiest shopping district in the southeastern Los Angeles suburbs from the 1930s through the 1950s. The store had expanded in 1940, 1957 and 1966 — from a 25-foot storefront in 1924 to one of 150 feet by 1966.
Lamanda Park: Pasadena: Colorado Boulevard: Lamanda Park: January 19, 1941 (cut back several blocks from Lamanda Park on 1936-03-01) MTA Line 181 N Sierra Madre: 6th & Main: Aliso Street, private ROW, Soto Street, Huntington Drive, Sierra Madre Boulevard Sierra Madre: October 6, 1950: MTA Line 487 N Monrovia–Glendora: 6th & Main
Cleveland metropolitan area, Euclid, Ohio, E. 222nd at Lake Shore Blvd. opened in April, 1951, originally a Scott-Burr store. [15] [16] Cincinnati, 616–628 Race Street, opened October 1, 1951. The store consisted of four sales levels and employed a staff of 200. [17] Butler Bros. covered the Victorian storefront in a sleek, then-modern brick ...
The Warner Grand Theatre is a historic movie palace that opened on January 20, 1931. It is located in San Pedro, Los Angeles, California, at 478 West 6th Street.. The design of the Warner Grand Theatre was a collaboration by architect B. Marcus Priteca and interior designer Anthony Heinsbergen, [3] in the Art Deco—Moderne style.
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