Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Village Green is located between Obama Boulevard and Coliseum Street, and between Hauser Blvd. and slightly west of La Brea Avenue, in the northwestern South Los Angeles region. The Baldwin Village neighborhood is just east of Village Green and La Brea Avenue. The site design consists of outer vehicular circulation roads, with spur roadways ...
603 BH Los Angeles metro area: Beverly Hills: Beverly Hills Main store 9600 Wilshire Blvd. Men's Store 101-119 S. Bedford Dr. 265,000 sq ft (24,600 m 2) Apr 25, 1938 [22] open 1938 building: The first building at 9600 Wilshire Boulevard had 3 floors, each of either 50x132 ft [30] or 60x180 feet [31] according to different sources.
Normandie Avenue is one of Los Angeles County's longest north–south streets, with a stretch of about 22.5 miles (36.2 km). It lies between Western Avenue to the west and Vermont Avenue to the east.
Line 656 was a route that ran between Hollywood & Panorama City via Highland Ave, Cahuenga Blvd, Lankershim Blvd, Sherman Way & Van Nuys Blvd. It operated as an owl route for Line 156 (then Line 237 in 2016, and later Line 222 in June 2021). This route used to run as far as Vermont / Sunset Station when it began service.
Beverly Fairfax Historic District. The historic Mission Revival style El Greco Apartments, built 1929.. Beverly–Fairfax (sometimes simply called Fairfax) [1] is a 3.2-square-mile neighborhood bordered by Willoughby Avenue on the north, Wilshire Boulevard on the south, La Brea Avenue on the east, and La Cienega Boulevard on the west.
The Hotel Café, at 1623 1/2 N. Cahuenga Blvd, is owned by Marko Shafer and Maximillian Mamikunian and opened in 2000. [10] The Baked Potato, one of the city's most prominent jazz clubs, is situated near the intersection with the Hollywood Freeway, and the Hollywood Theatre of Note is also on the boulevard.
Larchmont Blvd., looking south (circa 1920–25) Larchmont Village was developed in the late 1800s. By 1920, it had become a streetcar suburb of Los Angeles. Julius LaBonte (1879–1968), a developer from the midwest, is credited as the visionary who made Larchmont Village what it is today. [7] [8] Larchmont was originally named Glenwood.