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The Masonic Temple at 230 Pine Ave. in downtown Long Beach, California was built in 1903. It is listed on the List of City of Long Beach historic landmarks. [2] [3]It is "one of the last remaining examples of eminent local architect Henry F. Starbuck, who designed many of the city's turn-of-the-century buildings."
445-455 Pine Ave. 16.52.780: Gaytonia Apartment Building: 212 Quincy Ave. 16.52.790: Masonic Hall Commercial Building: 5351-53 Long Beach Blvd. 16.52.800: Art Theater Building: 2025 E. 4th St. 16.52.810: Ambassador Apartment Building: 35 Alboni Place 16.52.830: Merrill Building: 810-812 Long Beach Blvd. 16.52.840: Flossie Lewis House: 628 West ...
In 2017 the office building was purchased by Long Beach based Pacific6 with plans for conversion to residential units. [7] The project was started in 2019, and when finished it will have approximately 80 units with access to rooftop terraces, the ground floor along Ocean Blvd. and Pine Ave. will have space for restaurants and boutiques. [8]
The Edison Building (100 Long Beach Blvd.) [16] Adelaide M. Tichenor House (Greene and Greene) (852 E. Ocean Blvd.) [17] Breakers Hotel (200-220 E. Ocean Blvd.) Walker's Department Store; First National Bank of Long Beach; Masonic Temple (Long Beach, California) (230 Pine Ave.) Ocean Center Building (110 W. Ocean Blvd.) Scottish Rite Cathedral
California First National Bank of Long Beach (11873) (1929-1936) Bank of America, National Trust & Savings Association (13044) 1936 to sometime in the 1960s. During the 1950s, many of the original decorative elements such as the decorative cornice were removed or covered as part of modernizations efforts.
Downtown Long Beach station (formerly Transit Mall station) is an at-grade light rail station on the A Line of the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. The station is located in the middle of 1st Street between Pine Avenue and Pacific Avenue in Downtown Long Beach, California, after which the station is named. [7] It is the southern terminus of the A ...
Long Beach Municipal Pier, 1905 The pier, ca. 1910 Looking towards the shore from the pier; a horse-drawn carriage sits on the beach, c. 1895-1905. Stretching Pine Avenue south from Ocean Avenue into the Pacific Ocean, the Long Beach Municipal Pier had an upper and lower deck to a service building on the end.
The Long Beach Professional Building is a historic medical office building in downtown Long Beach, California added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005. The eight-story Art Deco two-part vertical block building with its pink and black lobby was built in 1929. It was designed by architect William Douglas Lee. [2]