Template:Street grid of landmarks in the Historic Core, Los Angeles

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Landmarks are shown on the following street grid of the Historic Core of Downtown Los Angeles.

Abbreviations and notes[edit]

For the area north of Third Street, see Victorian Downtown Los Angeles
For the area to the west of Hill Street, see Financial District, Los Angeles
H
I
L
L

S
T.
  Irvine Byrne Block/
now Pan American Lofts (1895)
B
R
O
A
D
W
A
Y
  Douglas Bldg. (1899) S
P
R
I
N
G

S
T
R
E
E
T
Stimson Bldg. (1893–1963)   M
A
I
N

S
T
R
E
E
T
    L
O
S

A
N
G
E
L
E
S

S
T
R
E
E
T
THIRD ST. THIRD ST. THIRD ST. THIRD ST. THIRD ST.
Million Dollar Theatre Bradbury Bldg. (1893)
Ronald Reagan State Bldg. (1990) Toy District
Angels Flight Homer Laughlin Building (1898):
Now Grand Central Market.
formerly Coulter's, Ville de Paris
Broadway Spring Center parking structure (1990) Round House
Jacoby Bros. DS* (#331–5; 1900–1935)
Grant Bldg. (1898)
Trustee Building (#340, 1905 PB)
O. T. Johnson Block (#350, 1895 It RBY)
O. T. Johnson Bldg. (#356, 1902 JB Rom)
parking lot Hellman Bldg. (1902)
FOURTH ST. FOURTH ST. FOURTH ST. FOURTH ST. FOURTH ST.
The Broadway DS/
Junípero Serra State Office Bldg. #2
vacant parking lot Continental Bldg. (1902) San Fernando Bldg. (1906 IRR) Toy District
Subway
Terminal
Bldg.
/
Now "Metro 417"
—Hotel Clark
—Occidental Hotel
—Boos Bros. Cafeteria
—St. Clarenden Hotel
Judson C. Rive Bldg. (1907) 419 S. Spring
435 S. Spring
Stowell/El Dorado Hotel/
El Dorado Lofts
(1913)
Dog Park
Title Guarantee Bldg. (1930) Metropolitan Bldg. (1913)/Newberry's 5&10¢/Now Fallas Paredes DS and lofts Chester Williams Bldg. (1926) Crocker Bank/
Spring Arts Tower (1915)
Title Insurance and Trust Company Building/
Trust Bldg. (1928)
Rowan Bldg (1912) King Edward Hotel (1906 P&B)
FIFTH ST. FIFTH ST. FIFTH ST. FIFTH ST. FIFTH ST.
Pershing Square Pershing Square station (Metro Rail) Fifth Street Store DS Roxie Theatre
Cameo Theater
Arcade Theatre
(now retail)
Hotel Alexandria (1906) Security Trust and Savings Bank/
Security Bldg. Lofts (1907)
Hotel Rosslyn Annex Pershing Hotel/
Pershing Apts. (1889)
Baltimore Hotel (1910)
Spring Arcade Los Angeles Theater Center (1916) Parking Structure (#545) Topaz Apts.
Paramount Theatre/
International Jewelry Center
Swelldom DS Silverwoods DS/
Broadway Jewelry Mart
Pacific Southwest Bank (1910) Santa Fe Bldg. (1906)
SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST.
—Consolidated Reatly Bldg./
California Jewelry Mart (1908/1935)
—Sun Realty Bldg./
Los Angeles Jewelry Center (1931)
—Harris & Frank Bldg./
Wholesale Jewelry Exchange (1925)
—Western Jewelry Mart
William Fox Bldg.
(Fox Jewelry Plaza)
(1932)
Los Angeles Theatre Mullen & Bluett DS/ Walter P. Story Bldg.
Desmond's Bldg.
Palace Theatre
J. E. Carr Bldg.
Harris & Frank 1947-1980
Hotel Hayward
E. F. Hutton (1931)
California Canadian Bank (1923)
Barclays Bank (1919)
United California Bank
Stock Exchange
Mortgage Guaranty Building (1913)
Banks & Huntley Bldg. (1930)
Pacific Electric Bdng. (1905)
Cecil Hotel (1924)
Warner Bros. (a.k.a. Pantages, Warren) Theatre (1920)
Now Jewelry
Theater Center
Bullock's DS/
St. Vincent Jewelry Center
Bank of Italy/
Bank of America/
SB Lofts (1924)
Bartlett Bldg. (1911)
SEVENTH ST. SEVENTH ST. SEVENTH ST. SEVENTH ST. SEVENTH ST.
Foreman & Clark DS/
Foreman & Clark Bldg. (1928, Curlett & Beelman, Art Deco and Neo-Gothic)
State Theatre Hotel Lankershim
Globe Theatre
Dearden's DS
Garfield Bldg. (1930) Union Bank & Trust Company Bldg.
Union Lofts (1922)
Griffin on Spring Apts. (2018) Great Republic Lofts (1923)
EIGHTH ST. EIGHTH ST. EIGHTH ST. EIGHTH ST. EIGHTH ST.
RKO Hillstreet
Theatre

(1922-1963)/
820 Olive/
825 South Hill (res.)
Hamburger's DS (1908-1923)/
May Company DS (1923-1986)/
May Company Building
Tower Theatre (1927 BR)
Rialto Theatre (1917 AD/CR)
Orpheum Theatre (1926 BA)
Lane Mortgage Bldg. (1923) National City Tower (1924)[1]

[2]



California Theatre (1918–1990 BA)
Gray Bldg. (#824)
Coast Fed. Savings Bldg. (1926) Parking lot
Alexan tower (planned)
Eastern Columbia Bldg. (1930) City Club Bldg. (1925)[3] Harris Newmark Bldg. (1926 RR C&B) Cooper Bldg. (1926 C&B)
NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST.
small retail May Co. Garage Bldg.(1926) Blackstone's DS (1907–1917)—United Artists Theatre/
Ace Hotel
Gerry Building (1947 SM)
South Park by Windsor Apts. Broadway Palace Apts. (2017)
OLYMPIC BL. (formerly TENTH ST.) OLYMPIC BL. (formerly TENTH ST.)
Mayan Theater
Belasco Theatre
Broadway Palace Apts. (2017)
Western Pacific Bldg. (1925)
White Log Coffee Shop[4] Los Angeles Railway HQ/
Hoxton Hotel (1925)
ELEVENTH ST. ELEVENTH ST. ELEVENTH ST. ELEVENTH ST.
Proposed 43-story Sky Trees res. tower[5] Herald-Examiner Bldg. (1914) Commercial Club/
Proper Hotel (1926)
Harris Building (1923 BA)
  1. ^ "Historic downtown Los Angeles high-rise sold to Canadian investors". Los Angeles Times. 2014-10-15. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  2. ^ "Spring Street Housing Tower Sells for $43 Million". Los Angeles Downtown News - The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  3. ^ "PCAD - City Club Building, Los Angeles, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
  4. ^ "PCAD - White Log Coffee Shop, Los Angeles, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
  5. ^ "Skyscraper with condos and a hotel proposed for downtown Los Angeles". Los Angeles Times. Apr 10, 2020.