Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Broadway Hollywood Building (sometimes Broadway Building or Broadway Department Store Building) is a building in Los Angeles' Hollywood district. The building is situated in the Hollywood Walk of Fame monument area on the southwest corner of the intersection referred to as Hollywood and Vine, marking the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street.
Attie Building: Playmates of Hollywood Building [44] 6436 Hollywood Blvd: Commercial: Art Deco: Henry A. Minton [45] 1931: Creque Building: Hollywood Building [37] 6400 Hollywood Blvd: Office: Art Deco: E. Fossler (1913) B. B. Homer (1931) [46] 1913 1931: Julian Medical Building: Owl Drug Store Building [47] 6380 Hollywood Blvd: Medical ...
The Hollywood Professional Building, also known as SEVENTY46, is a historic eight-story building at 7046 W. Hollywood Blvd. in Hollywood, California.The Los Angeles Department of City Planning describe the building as exhibiting "character defining features of Neo-Gothic style architecture" [1] and the United States Department of the Interior describe it as "an excellent example of Neo-Gothic ...
The second at Hollywood and Highland was developed by Whitley and Toberman and saw the Bank of America Building rise opposite the Hollywood Hotel in 1914. [1] Hollywood Boulevard looking west towards Highland, 1914. Bank of America Building and Hollywood Theater are center-left. Hollywood's first theaters also emerged during this time.
In 1950, Hollywood Toys & Costumes moved into the building, where they would remain until the early 1990s, when they moved one building west. [3] In 1984, the Hollywood Boulevard Commercial and Entertainment District was added to the National Register of Historic Places, with Hollywood Toys listed as a contributing property in the district. [1]
When Boadway's went out of business the next year, B. H. Dyas, a Downtown Los Angeles–based department store, [8] opened in the 130,000-square-foot (12,000 m 2) building in March 1928, then sold their lease to The Broadway in 1931 – the building still a landmark today, known as the Broadway Hollywood Building.
In 1931 or 1934, architect B. B. Homer enlarged the building to four stories and added an Art Deco facade. [1] [3] In 1984, the Hollywood Boulevard Commercial and Entertainment District was added to the National Register of Historic Places, with Creque Building listed as a contributing property in the district. The building's patterned brick ...
Petersen Building, built in 1929, was designed by the architectural firm Meyer & Holler, [1] the same firm responsible for many of Hollywood's most notable landmarks, including Hollywood First National and the Chinese and Egyptian theatres. [3]