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In her novel Stormy Weather, Paula L. Woods wrote: "Hollywood Tower was a seven-story, indecisive gray building at the corner of Franklin and Vista Del Mar in Hollywood. The faux French Normandy apartment building was so old it probably had a view of the sea when it was built [...] Hollywood Tower, though, was a last vestige of an earlier era.
Hollywood Pantages [2] 6233 Hollywood Blvd: Theater: Art Deco: B. Marcus Priteca: 1930: LAHCM #193 [3] Equitable Building: 6253 Hollywood Blvd: Office: Neo-Gothic and Art Deco: Aleck Curlett: 1929: LAHCM #1088 [3] Residential conversion in 2007 [4] Palace Theater: Hollywood Playhouse Hollywood Palace Avalon Hollywood [5] 1735 Vine St: Theater ...
Though the Hollywood Hotel was an architectural landmark and had housed many of the great Hollywood stars in its day, it was razed in August 1956 to make way for a US$10 million ($112 million in 2023) development. It was replaced by a twelve story office building for the First Federal Savings & Loan Association of Hollywood, a shopping center ...
Christie Hotel is a historic eight-story building at 6724 W. Hollywood Blvd. in Hollywood, California.Considered Hollywood's first skyscraper [1] and also its first luxury hotel, [2] the building features Georgian Revival architecture and has been described as "an excellent example of its style" by the United States Department of the Interior.
Celebrated architect Norman Foster has unveiled plans for a new $1-billion office tower in Los Angeles that will see greenery spilling out from a series of terraces spiraling up its facade.. The ...
With the project in firm development, Disney licensed the rights to use the Twilight Zone intellectual property from CBS. [15] [b] The Imagineering team settled on a 1930s-era Hollywood hotel with a Twilight Zone theme, but a new ride system had to be built, which would allow both more capacity inside the ride and make the drop fast.
Hollywood real estate developer doubles down on plans for "the Star," a proposed office tower on Sunset Boulevard, designed by Norman Foster, with a $1-billion price tag.
Johnny Grant Building, also known as Arthur Murray, is a historic two-story building located at 7024 W. Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California. It was formerly home to a Arthur Murray Dance Studio [ 1 ] and is currently part of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel complex.