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Downtown Los Angeles's Fifth Street Store Building was designed by Alexander Curlett and built by Milliron's in 1927. In the building's early years, it was home to a department store that repeatedly changed its name, including Walker's, Fifth Street Store, Walker's Fifth Street Store, and in 1946 it changed to Milliron's. A $300,000 ($4.69 ...
Biscuit Company Lofts In 2006, the building underwent a $25,000,000 renovation by Aleks Istanbullu Architects to convert the building to lofts. [ 4 ] In 2007, developer Linear City LLC completed restoration of the property, part of the larger downtown L.A. gentrification effort that saw the repurposing of the area's mostly-abandoned industrial ...
Oceanwide Plaza is an unfinished residential and retail complex composed of three towers in downtown Los Angeles, California, across the street from Crypto.com Arena and the Los Angeles Convention Center. [2] The complex, designed by CallisonRTKL, is owned by the Beijing-based developer Oceanwide Holdings.
Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Downtown Los Angeles" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 240 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Los Angeles County has agreed to buy the Gas Company Tower, center, one of the most prominent office skyscrapers in downtown Los Angeles, for $215 million in a foreclosure sale. (Myung J. Chun ...
The Roosevelt Building is a high-rise residential building located along 7th Street in Downtown Los Angeles. It was completed in 1926 and was designed by Claude Beelman and Alexander Curlett in an Italian Renaissance Revival style. It was later converted to lofts. In 2007, the building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [1]
The building was also listed as Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #544 in 1991. [ 1 ] The building's ground-floor housed a Giant Penny discount store from the 1980s to 2004, after which the building underwent a $20 million ($32.3 million in 2023) conversion to residential.
The A.G. Bartlett Building is a 14-floor building at 215 West Seventh Street in Downtown Los Angeles. When completed in 1911, it was the tallest building in the city for five years. It is within the Spring Street Financial District, a historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [4]