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[1] After five years of work and schooling, Gaudi qualified as an architect in 1878. As Elies Rogent signed Gaudí's degree he declared, "Qui sap si hem donat el diploma a un boig o a un geni. El temps ens ho dirà." ("Who knows if we have given this diploma to a nut or to a genius. Time will tell.") Gaudi immediately began to plan and design.
The San Fernando Building was the first of the three buildings to reopen in August 2000, and by March 2001, the building was 93% leased to tenants paying rents between $790 and $6,000 per month. [17] [18] The converted buildings consisted of large, open lofts with high ceilings and no interior walls except for the bathrooms. The conversion was ...
Buildings and structures by Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí: Pages in category "Antoni Gaudí buildings" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total.
Los Angeles Athletic Club Building September 16, 1970: 431 W. Seventh St. Downtown Los Angeles: Beaux Arts building designed by Parkinson & Bergstrom in 1912; received publicity on opening for its 100-foot (30 m)-long swimming pool on the sixth floor 71: First African Methodist Episcopal Church: January 6, 1971: 801 Towne Ave. (at 8th St.)
Pan American National Bank of East Los Angeles: Pan American National Bank of East Los Angeles: March 27, 2017 : 3620-3626 E. 1st St. East Los Angeles: 124: Parkhurst Building: Parkhurst Building: November 17, 1978
The Casa Botines (built 1891-1892) is a modernista building in León, Spain designed by Antoni Gaudí.It currently houses a museum dedicated to Gaudi, Spanish art of the 19th and 20th centuries, and the history of the building itself.
In 1980, noted Los Angeles Times columnist Jack Smith referred to the structure as "the lovely old Spanish-style Granada Building." [6] Later renamed the Granada Buildings, the complex was purchased and restored by the Shidler Group in the late 1980s and received a preservation award from the Los Angeles Conservancy.
Antoni Gaudí in 1910. The building that is now Casa Batlló was built in 1877, commissioned by Lluís Sala Sánchez. [2] It was a classical building without remarkable characteristics within the eclecticism traditional by the end of the 19th century. [3] The building had a basement, a ground floor, four other floors and a garden in the back. [4]