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The Los Angeles Fashion District, previously known as the Garment District, is a business improvement district (BID) in, and often cited as a sub-neighborhood of, Downtown Los Angeles. The neighborhood caters to wholesale selling and has more than 4,000 overwhelmingly independently owned and operated retail and wholesale businesses selling ...
This is a list of notable districts and neighborhoods within the city of Los Angeles in the U.S. state of California, present and past.It includes residential and commercial industrial areas, historic preservation zones, and business-improvement districts, but does not include sales subdivisions, tract names, homeowners associations, and informal names for areas.
The Victory Clothing Company building was designed by Robert Farquhar Train and Robert Edmund Williams for Mr. & Mrs. J.F. Hosfield and built in 1914. [1] The building was originally built as a City Hall annex, [2] but by 2002 it contained ground-floor retail, second-story mezzanines for storage, and lofts on the third through fifth stories.
Some 1,400 manufacturers and contractors are clustered around downtown L.A.'s Fashion District. The Garment Worker Center took part Tuesday morning in a protest outside Los Angeles City Hall ...
Inside the New Moon restaurant, a Chinese eatery in the heart of the Los Angeles Fashion District, the lunch crowd was sparse on a recent afternoon when store owners and buyers were in town for ...
Row DTLA (stylized as ROW DTLA, formerly known as Alameda Square) is a commercial district located in Downtown Los Angeles, which is situated at the intersection of Fashion District, Skid Row, and the Arts District. It spans over 30 acres and was repurposed from the historic Alameda Square complex. [1]
910 S. Los Angeles St. Fashion District: Streamline Modern building in Fashion District originally used for garment manufacture 709: Gray Building: 824 S. Los Angeles St. Fashion District: 710: M. J. Connell Buildings 1, 2, 3 & 7
Textile Center Building is a 12-story Gothic Revival and Italian Renaissance Revival architectural styled brick building located in the Los Angeles Fashion District. Designed by William Douglas Lee in the Gothic Revival style, the building opened in 1926 as a center for garment manufacturing. [2] It has since been converted to condominiums.