Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Carroll Avenue is a street in Angelino Heights, one of the older neighborhoods of Los Angeles. It consists of Victorian-era houses, and is located within a picturesque neighborhood that has served as the backdrop for countless motion pictures.
1329 Carroll Avenue - appeared in the TV series Charmed and the films Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo and Earthquake. [10] 1345 Carroll Avenue - the setting for Michael Jackson's Thriller music video. The 3,532-square-foot Queen Anne style house was originally built for a local warehouse operator named Michael Sanders in 1887. [11]
The hospital agreed to contribute to the move of the house, and Prager agreed to restore the home. [9] In December 1992, the house was moved to its third location at 1337 Carroll Avenue. The Foy House was the seventh house to be moved to Angelino Heights, the first and largest historic preservation zone in the City of Los Angeles. [9]
Residence at 1300 Carroll Avenue: May 10, 1967: 1300 Carroll Ave. Angelino Heights: Queen Anne-Eastlake style of architecture that was built by Aaron P. Phillips in 1887. 52: Residence at 1330 Carroll Avenue: May 24, 1967: 1330 Carroll Ave.
Now, the house is a total loss and Carroll Township, where the family lives, says it must be demolished. "It's hard to look at it,” Cameron said. “Every time I think about when I got to start ...
Description: Eastlake Stick style Victorian house at 1329 Carroll Avenue — in the Angelino Heights neighborhood of the Echo Park district, Los Angeles.. The "Charmed House" — used for filming in the "Charmed" TV series and for the Movie "Earthquake" and for the tall woman's house in Deuce Bigalo, Male Gigalo.
The Home Alone house is officially off the market!. The famous setting of the beloved 1990 Christmas classic, located in Winnetka, Ill., has officially sold over the asking price for $5.5 million ...
115–119 Eighth Avenue, also known as the Adams House, is a historic house at Eighth Avenue and Carroll Street in Park Slope, Brooklyn, New York City.It was built in 1888 as a double house, and was commissioned by Thomas Adams Jr., who invented the Adams Chiclets automatic vending machine.