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With the project in firm development, Disney licensed the rights to use the Twilight Zone intellectual property from CBS. [15] [b] The Imagineering team settled on a 1930s-era Hollywood hotel with a Twilight Zone theme, but a new ride system had to be built, which would allow both more capacity inside the ride and make the drop fast.
In her novel Stormy Weather, Paula L. Woods wrote: "Hollywood Tower was a seven-story, indecisive gray building at the corner of Franklin and Vista Del Mar in Hollywood. The faux French Normandy apartment building was so old it probably had a view of the sea when it was built [...] Hollywood Tower, though, was a last vestige of an earlier era.
A large 13 story free-fall thrill ride where guests enter the fictional Hollywood Tower Hotel, and follow the story inspired by the television series. The finale of the ride involves a series of drops at different lengths. This ride originated at Disney's Hollywood Studios and has varying copies both at Disney California Adventure and Tokyo ...
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM
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Originally built as a single-family residence in a 1913, the building was converted to a hotel and restaurant in 1938, converted again to the first Hollywood Sikh Temple in 1969, and demolished to make way for a larger temple in 1986. The second, larger temple opened in 1996. [16] 1302: Yucca Vine Tower: May 31, 2024
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Yucca Vine Tower was built in the Art Deco style by Henry L. Gogerty, the architect also responsible for the nearby Palace Theatre, Baine Building, and Hollywood Studio Building. Built in 1929, the building has been called Hollywood's first skyscraper, [2] although Christie Hotel, built five years prior, has also been given that distinction. [3]