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When completed, it became the tallest residential tower in Los Angeles and the tallest residential tower in California. [4] It surpassed the 58 floors 647 ft (197.2 m) Millennium Tower in San Francisco and 820 Olive Tower 637 ft (194.2 m) in Los Angeles. [5] The building site was previously a vacant lot. [6] The tower has 785 apartment units.
Historic Filipinotown (alternately known as HiFi [1]) is a neighborhood in the city of Los Angeles.. In 2008, it was one of the five Asian Pacific Islander neighborhoods (Chinatown, Little Tokyo, Historic Filipinotown, Koreatown, and Thai Town) in the city that received federal recognition as a Preserve America neighborhood.
B. Bank of America Plaza (Los Angeles) Barclay Hotel (Los Angeles) Barker Brothers Building; The Beaudry; Belasco Theater (Los Angeles) Biscuit Company Lofts
Map of Little Tokyo Japantown, Los Angeles; Little Tokyo Japantown Guide; Visit Little Tokyo at the Wayback Machine (archived 2006-11-08) Japanese American Cultural and Community Center; Japanese American Network – Little Tokyo at archive.today (archived 2013-04-15) Strategies for the Preservation of Little Tokyo as an Historic Community
Tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 1970s [16] 4 Two California Plaza: 750 (229) Arthur Erickson: 54 1992 Office Tallest building constructed in Los Angeles in the 1990s [17] [18] 5 Gas Company Tower: 749 (228) Richard Keating: 52 1991 Office 77th-tallest building in the United States [19] [20] 6 Bank of America Plaza: 735 (224 ...
The cafe opened in 1946, during the post-war Atomic Age marked with a pop culture obsession with all things atomic. [1] It was owned and operated by the Matoba family and founded by Ito and Minoru Matoba. [2] The cafe was notable as a popular gathering place for adherents of punk rock in Los Angeles from 1977 forward. [3]
Little Tokyo/Arts District station is an underground light rail station on the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. It replaced an at-grade station with the same name that was located on the east side of Alameda Street between 1st Street and Temple Street , on the edge of Little Tokyo and the Arts District in Downtown Los Angeles .
Genius Sonority was incorporated in June 2002 for the original purpose of developing Pokémon games for home consoles, with funding provided by Nintendo president Hiroshi Yamauchi’s Q Fund, a cash reserve used for Nintendo game company start-ups. [3]