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Row DTLA (stylized as ROW DTLA, formerly known as Alameda Square) is a commercial district located in Downtown Los Angeles, which is situated at the intersection of Fashion District, Skid Row, and the Arts District. It spans over 30 acres and was repurposed from the historic Alameda Square complex. [1]
Street address: 777 S. Alameda St. City: Los Angeles ... State: California: Postal/ZIP Code: 90021: ... Kato is a Michelin Guide-starred Taiwanese restaurant in Los ...
Alameda Street is a major north-south thoroughfare in Los Angeles County, California. It is approximately 21 miles in length, running from Harry Bridges Boulevard in Wilmington ; and through Carson , Compton , Lynwood , Watts , Florence-Graham , Huntington Park , Vernon and Arts District to Spring and College in Chinatown .
The Arts District is a neighborhood on the eastern edge of Downtown Los Angeles, California in the United States. The city community planning boundaries are Alameda Street on the west which blends into Little Tokyo, First Street on the north, the Los Angeles River to the east, and Violet Street on the south.
Central Alameda is a 2.18 square miles (5.65 km 2) square mile area in South Los Angeles served by the Central Alameda Neighborhood Council. Central Alameda Neighborhood Council Map History
777 Tower (originally known as Citicorp Center and also known as Pelli Tower) is a 221 m (725 ft), 52-story high-rise office building designed by César Pelli located at 777 South Figueroa Street in the Financial District of Downtown Los Angeles, California.
The Alameda Corridor is a 20-mile (32 km) freight rail "expressway" [1] owned by the Alameda Corridor Transportation Authority (reporting mark ATAX) that connects the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach with the transcontinental mainlines of the BNSF Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad that terminate near downtown Los Angeles, California. [2]
Early maps show that the Terminal Island Freeway was to extend north to the Long Beach Freeway near the San Diego Freeway , [37] [38] but the location for SR 47 adopted by the California Highway Commission on January 22, 1969 led northwest from the Terminal Island Freeway's end at Carson Street to I-405 near Alameda Street, and then paralleled ...