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Bottega Louie is located in the Brockman Building and is credited with creating Downtown Los Angeles's "Restaurant Row." [3] [4] This particular area of Downtown Los Angeles underwent a rapid expansion of bars, restaurants and residences from 2012 to 2014 [2] [5] [6] that some real estate developers are calling a "7th Street Renaissance."
The Brockman Building was the first building west of the Broadway Commercial District to reach the city's 150-foot height limit. [2] Brockman's move started a westward movement of the downtown commercial district and turned Seventh Street into the city's high-end retail district.
7th Street Looking West from Spring, Los Angeles, Calif. (Tichnor Bros. postcard, 1930s) 7th Street is a street in Los Angeles, California running from S. Norton Ave in Mid-Wilshire through Downtown Los Angeles. It goes all the way to the eastern city limits at Indiana Ave., and the border between Boyle Heights, Los Angeles and East Los Angeles ...
Hoffman Building, built in 1906, was originally four-stories and currently is one. [2] [3] It was originally home to Yamato Inc., a Japanese bazaar that also served tea and cake, and then a Harry Fink & Co. women's clothing store in 1917.
Ninth and Broadway Building, built in 1929, was designed by Claude Beelman, the architect responsible for many Los Angeles landmarks, including the Eastern Columbia Building located at the same intersection as this one. [1]
Get the West Hollywood, CA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
Bottega Louie, a Los Angeles-based Italian restaurant, gourmet market, and French patisserie Bottega University , a distance-learning university headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah The Jeweller's Shop (also known simply as Bottega dell'orefice in Italian), a 1988 Italian-Austrian-Canadian-German drama film
Broadway Leasehold Building, built in 1914, was originally designed to house street-level retail with offices for Leasehold Company above. According to the United States Department of the Interior, the architect is unknown, [1] while other sources cite the architect as an employee of Milwaukee Building Company [6] /Meyer and Holler [7] and even more sources cite Meyer and Holler directly.