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Temple Street is a street in the City of Los Angeles, California. [1] The street is an east-west thoroughfare that runs through Downtown Los Angeles parallel to the Hollywood Freeway between Virgil Avenue past Alameda Street to the banks of the Los Angeles River. It was developed as a simple one-block long lane by Jonathan Temple, a mid-19th ...
The Temple Street gang also known as "TST" or "Templero Surenos" is a street gang in the downtown Los Angeles area and was founded by Filipino and Mexican youths in the 1920s and 1930s. [1] The gang is involved in murders, assaults, burglaries, drug trafficking, and gun trafficking. [2] Their gang colors are blue and black.
The Edward R. Roybal Federal Building and United States Courthouse is a United States federal courthouse of the United States District Court for the Central District of California, in the Civic Center district of Los Angeles, California. It is located on Temple Street in Downtown Los Angeles, east of and adjacent to the Federal Building at 300 ...
Over several years many other employee groups, mostly governmental, joined the plan. Ross-Loos was so successful that the first small medical office on Grand Avenue in Los Angeles expanded into an enormous organization with 29 medical offices and a large multi-specialty hospital, on Temple Street, Los Angeles, by 1979.
Los Angeles Times building, 1886. This building was razed after a 1910 bombing and a new headquarters was opened on this site in 1912. The newspaper later moved further south on Spring Street to the Los Angeles Times building, now part of Times Mirror Square, occupying the entire block between Broadway, Spring, First and Second streets. [7]
117-131 East 5th St., 455 South Los Angeles St. 34°02′46″N 118°14′52″W / 34.0462°N 118.2477°W / 34.0462; -118.2477 ( King Edward Downtown Los Angeles
Fact: Cafés are the backbone of any great city. Somewhere you can rendezvous, maybe go on a date, get some work done (ahem, procrastinate) or grab a coffee on the way to work. But with a caffeine ...
This block is, since 1928, the site of Los Angeles City Hall. Before 1926, Spring Street and Main Street met at Temple Street. From Temple, Main and Spring streets proceeded south; Spring at a more southwesterly angle. This created a narrow triangle with the triangle's northern point at Temple.