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Using the facilities of the SD&AE, in July 1981 the agency was able to open the first line of the San Diego Trolley, between downtown San Diego and the international border in San Ysidro. [5] The San Diego Trolley added a second line to the east on March 20, 1986, with the two lines meeting at a station near 12th and Imperial Avenues, just ...
The San Diego Museum of Art is a fine art museum in Balboa Park in San Diego, California, that houses a broad collection with particular strength in Spanish art. It opened as the Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego on February 28, 1926, and changed to its current name in 1978.
The Pythias Lodge Building in San Diego, California, also known as Community Arts Complex or Intercultural Council of the Arts, is a Beaux Arts architecture building built in 1911. It was designated a San Diego Historical Landmark in 1980, [ 2 ] and it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1981.
Robert Mosher (September 27, 1920 – July 26, 2015) was an American architect who operated primarily in Southern California. [1] [self-published source] Mosher was a Taliesin apprentice of Frank Lloyd Wright, and a pioneer of the post-war modernist architecture movement in San Diego.
MCASD Downtown – 1100 Kettner Boulevard, San Diego, CA 92101. In 1986 MCASD established a small gallery space in downtown San Diego and later opened a larger downtown outpost in 1993 inside America Plaza adjacent to the San Diego Trolley line, designed by artists Robert Irwin and Richard Fleischner along with architect David Raphael Singer. [12]
John D. Spreckles, the creator of the Spreckels organ pavilion, gifted the organ and the building to the city of San Diego. When it was given to the city, it was said it would be used for free entertainment for the people. John D. Spreckle s has invested in or owned many places such as the Hotel del Coronado, and the San Diego Union-Tribune.
The San Diego County Administration Center is a historic Beaux-Arts/Spanish Revival–style building in San Diego, California. It houses the offices of the government of San Diego County . Due to its notable architecture and location fronting San Diego Bay , it is nicknamed the Jewel on the Bay .
Samuel I. Fox Building, Gaslamp Quarter, San Diego, 1929; San Diego Athletic Club, San Diego, 1928; San Diego Central Post Office, San Diego, 1937; San Diego County Administration Center, San Diego, 1938; San Diego Firehouse Museum, San Diego, 1920s; Silverado Ballroom, San Diego, 1931; Silver Gate Three Stars Masonic Lodge No 296, San Diego ...