Template:Street grid of landmarks in the Historic Core, Los Angeles
Landmarks are shown on the following street grid of the Historic Core of Downtown Los Angeles.
Abbreviations and notes[edit]
- Abbreviations: DS=Department Store. Res.=residential building
- Architectural styles: AD=Art Deco, BA=Beaux-Arts, BR=Baroque Revival, CR=Classical Revival, IRR=Italian Renaissance Revival, It=Italianate, Rom=Romanesque, RR=Renaissance Revival
- Architects: C&B=Curlett & Beelman, JP=John Parkison, P&B=Parkinson & Bergstrom, RBY=Robert Brown Young
- Italics indicate the building's current name or main tenant.
- Non-italics indicate a historic name or tenant of an existing building.
- *An asterisk indicates a demolished building.
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] | —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) |
- ^ "Historic downtown Los Angeles high-rise sold to Canadian investors". Los Angeles Times. 2014-10-15. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
- ^ "Spring Street Housing Tower Sells for $43 Million". Los Angeles Downtown News - The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
- ^ "PCAD - City Club Building, Los Angeles, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
- ^ "PCAD - White Log Coffee Shop, Los Angeles, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
- ^ "Skyscraper with condos and a hotel proposed for downtown Los Angeles". Los Angeles Times. Apr 10, 2020.