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The most prominent of these is the city's new tallest building, Salesforce Tower. [64] Two of the skyscrapers, Salesforce Tower and 181 Fremont, are linked directly to the rooftop park. [65] Salesforce Tower has a dedicated pair of elevators, open to the public and accessible via the rear lobby, which serve as one of the access points to the park.
Silicon Beach is the Westside region of the Los Angeles metropolitan area that is home to more than 500 technology companies, including startups.It is particularly applied to the coastal strip from Los Angeles International Airport north to the Santa Monica Mountains, [1] but the term may be applied loosely or colloquially to most anywhere in the Los Angeles Basin.
Salesforce Tower is 61 stories tall, [3] and covers 1,400,000 sq ft (130,000 m 2) of floorspace. [19] The building's top 150 feet (46 m) above the 61st floor have been described as "largely ornamental". [16] The 61st floor is known as the Ohana Floor and serves as an observation deck and lounge for Salesforce employees and guests. [20]
As 2025 begins, Camélia is right where it needs to be: The restaurant finds fresh meaning in the bistro genre — an exuberant evening out framed around food, driven by honed technique — that ...
LAX/Metro Transit Center station (called the East ITF by LAX and known as Aviation/96th Street station during planning) is an under construction light rail transport hub in the Los Angeles Metro Rail system, located near Aviation Boulevard and 96th Street in the Westchester district of Los Angeles.
Salesforce West, also known by its address 50 Fremont Center, is a 43-story, 183 m (600 ft) high-rise office building completed in 1985 at Fremont and Mission Streets on the boundary of the financial district and SoMa of San Francisco, California. The stepped-back facade design of the building resembles Eliel Saarinen's Tribune Tower design. [5]
In the 1960s, 70s and 80s there was a restaurant at the top of the building—The Tower—that served award-winning French cuisine. [5] It originally included two other large buildings - a 225,000-square-foot (20,900 m 2 ) building at 1149 Hill Street, a 300,000-square-foot (28,000 m 2 ) building at 514 W 12th Street (which was later sold to ...
Side view. In December 1926, Sears, Roebuck & Company of Chicago announced that it would build a nine-story, height-limit building on East Ninth Street (later renamed Olympic Boulevard) at Soto Street to be the mail-order distribution center for the Rocky Mountain and Pacific Coast states, to be constructed by Scofield Engineering Company.