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Godzilla Jan 27, 2020 10:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tovangar2 (Post 5929741)


1940's Ralphs anniversary poster:
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Ei2Ik5quiI...940+lineup.jpg
pleasantfamilyshopping.com

Yes moxie that's it. My fave pic of the house so far. The evening-wear-clad couple makes it look very glam.




:previous: Westwood Ralphs (undated)



https://66.media.tumblr.com/13c33feb...1kyo1_1280.jpghttps://66.media.tumblr.com/13c33feb...1kyo1_1280.jpg

oldstuff Jan 28, 2020 12:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Godzilla (Post 8813048)

In the lists of old Ralph's markets with the pictures, I recall the one in Burbank, it was built on a sloping corner and the parking lot in the back was almost a full story higher than the interior of the store, with a ramp going up to the parking. it was the width of the building so the slope was not so bad and my mom would sometimes let me ride on the shopping cart down the slope. This would be considered child endangerment now, but then it was just fun.

CityBoyDoug Jan 28, 2020 1:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ethereal_reality (Post 8812870)
:previous: Shameless plug welcomed. ;)



Here are two original snapshot of the back of the Blackstone Apartment Building taken from a parking lot below.

I happened upon this first.

http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...923/TQAN3s.jpg
ebay


Here's a closer look at the entrance.

http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/102...922/rU8BPr.jpg
detail



And a few days I came across this second photograph.

http://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/128...921/O8URma.jpg
ebay

It appears the person who developed the photograph deliberately 'washed' out the lower portion of the snapshot on purpose. :no:

.

I have read that the Blackstone was the most fabulous place to live. The managers always had great trips planned for the tenets. In the summer there were picnics and trips to the beach with BBQ and all the trimmings at no cost to the tenets. At Christmas there were big parties with Santa and a huge prime rib dinner for all. Each person received a wonderful gift. Often it was a gold fountain pen or a sterling silver tea service.

They even had a discreet service for any girl who might have gotten in a bad way. They would call a cab and whisk her away for things to be made right.

Godzilla Jan 28, 2020 1:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Martin Pal (Post 8083243)

Some other 1940's photos I don't recall, but may have been, previously posted:

A 1940 view of the tire shop along the east side of the theatre.
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-JAFQmR5N-...Hayashi-40.jpgMichael Hayashi/Photos of Los Angeles

A 1940's snapshot.
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-gcO6AYNL6...rroll-Ault.jpgSean Ault Collection

A 1945 shot of servicemen visiting the theatre.
http://www.martinturnbull.com/wp-con...arroll-day.jpg
Richard Wojcik/Vintage Los Angeles




https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/...3-jpg.1845213/https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/...943-jpg.184521

sadykadie2 Jan 28, 2020 6:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by oldstuff (Post 8813137)
In the lists of old Ralph's markets with the pictures, I recall the one in Burbank, it was built on a sloping corner and the parking lot in the back was almost a full story higher than the interior of the store, with a ramp going up to the parking. it was the width of the building so the slope was not so bad and my mom would sometimes let me ride on the shopping cart down the slope. This would be considered child endangerment now, but then it was just fun.

How did all of us make it? Yet here we are and I'm glad we were kids then and not now!

Martin Pal Jan 28, 2020 5:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Godzilla (Post 8813227)


Jalopy Journal always has some interesting finds! Thanks Godzilla.


EARL CARROLL THEATRE STATUS:

After months of rumors swirling around this location, one of the former owners of the nearby music venue The Fonda Theater, Thaddeus Smith, announced that he and his business partner, developer Brian Levian, have signed a 10-year lease with options to renew to “take over and revitalize” the landmarked Streamline Moderne theater in Hollywood. The theater is expected to host an array of events, including stage shows, concerts, movie premieres, and special events.

As part of the revamp, the signature sign will be recreated and returned to its spot over the entrance. Many original elements of the theater that still remain—including 6,200 feet of blue and gold neon tubing and 30-foot-tall light columns on either side of the stage—will also be restored as part of the new venue.

Some of the restoration work has already started, a spokesperson for Smith and Levian said. The redone theater is expected to open in late 2020.

--Info from L.A. Curbed

______


Here's a photo I saw very recently c. 1969 taken on the side of the theater when it was the Aquarius and presenting "Hair."

https://cdn2.lamag.com/wp-content/up.../Aquarius6.jpgL.A.Magazine

The caption reads: The Aquarius Theatre’s walls were not primed properly before the psychedelic murals were painted. After just a year and a half, the portion along the building’s west wall began to peel. It had to be completely painted over in 1971.

Godzilla Jan 28, 2020 9:07 PM

Don't believe "Symphony of a City: Los Angeles" has received prior NLA mention. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tB2qGIn90yw


Perhaps someone can improve on these marginal screen captures. :shrug:





https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...5,1000_AL_.jpghttps://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...5,1000_AL_.jpg





https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...98,999_AL_.jpghttps://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...98,999_AL_.jpg



Sidewalk Clock:
https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...4,1000_AL_.jpghttps://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/...4,1000_AL_.jpg

Lwize Jan 28, 2020 10:37 PM

https://laistassets.scprdev.org/i/f5...3d0b-eight.jpg
(Herman J Schultheis Collection/Los Angeles Photographers Collection)

Quote:

Parking lot view of the busy drive-in restaurant, the Rite Spot Cafe, located at 1500 W. Colorado Street in Eagle Rock. A carhop, seen beneath the awning right of center, is serving customers. Harry B. Carpenter founded the Carpenter's chain with his brother Charles and operated many locations in Los Angeles. Charles E. Carpenter struck out on his own and in 1936 opened three Carpenter's Cafes: Carpenter's Village (606 E. Colorado), which combined a Rite Spot Cafe and Carpenter's drive-in; the Rite Spot Cafe in what was then called Pasadena but is now considered Eagle Rock; and the Santa Anitan Cafe at Huntington and Colorado.
Quote:

Originally Posted by LAIST.COM
LA's Vintage Diners, Then And Now

by Virginia Yapp in Food on January 28, 2020 5:00 AM

On a recent visit to San Francisco, as I sat alone at the counter of the most Lynchian diner you could imagine — the Silver Crest Donut Shop in the city's Bayview-Hunter's Point neighborhood — I found myself marveling that a place like this could still exist in a city so marked by change.

Not that Los Angeles has room to talk. Southern California was once dotted with old-school diners. Back then, they weren't old-school. They just were. Built at the height of car culture, designed with Space Age flourishes to symbolize the progress of a new era.

Every time I drive by Johnie's, I lament that I'll never get to stop in for a slice of pie. Whenever I see the Ship's sign towering over the corner of Olympic and La Cienega, I wish modern health codes encouraged more restaurants to have toasters on each table.

We can't resurrect all the Armet & Davis gems we've demolished or abandoned, but we can still find a few vintage gems dotting the landscape.

101 Coffee Shop

THEN: Before it became a Best Western, the hotel that houses the 101 Coffee Shop was called the Hollywood Franklin Hotel. It has been owned by the Adler family since the 1940s. In its earliest days, the hotel's ground-floor restaurant attracted clientele like James Dean and the Keystone Kops. By the 1990s, it needed a revamp. That's where Susan Fine Moore and her husband came in. After renaming it the Hollywood Hills Cafe, they spent $50,000 turning it into the kind of spot A-listers like Nic Cage and Brad Pitt might want to visit. The place got a jolt of fame from Jon Favreau's 1996 movie, Swingers, although the screenplay may actually have been written with a certain diner on Beverly in mind.

NOW: After the Hollywood Hills Coffee Shop closed in 2001, Warner Ebbink and Brandon Boudet (both of whom had previously worked at the aforementioned diner on Beverly) took over. To the delight of vintage fans, not to mention location scouts, they updated the space to its current retro-meets-modern perfection. The decor features quilted brown leather booths, vintage-looking globe light fixtures and intricate brown-and-blue tilework. On the menu, you'll find a mix of comfort food staples like buttermilk waffles and mac 'n' cheese alongside a fried tofu sandwich, mushroom taquitos and a kale Greek salad, making this one of the more vegetarian-friendly diners around.
6145 Franklin Ave., Hollywood. 323-467-1175, 101coffeeshop.com

Cindy's Eagle Rock

THEN: Cindy's has been in the same spot on Colorado Boulevard since the '20s, according to Paul Rosenbluh, who currently owns the diner with his wife, Monique King. It may have been the site of The Rite Spot, a storied burger stand that claims it created the "hamburger with cheese" (the word "cheeseburger" had yet to be invented). In any case, the current building became Cindy's in 1948 along what was then Route 66, which explains its roadhouse vibe. The diner, originally configured as more of an open-air patio-style spot that was later covered over to create the dining room you seen now, according to Rosenbluh, was named after the daughter of the original owners. She lived in a little house behind the place until 1980, when they sold the restaurant. It then changed hands several times without any major updates.

NOW: In the mid-2000s, King and Rosenbluh, who owned and worked as chefs at Pasadena's Firefly Bistro, were approached by the elderly owner's adult daughter. She asked if they might be interested in buying the restaurant, which was serving primarily as a filming location. After modernizing the kitchen, overhauling the menu to feature Southern-style cooking and taking pains to restore the spot's vintage charm (they refurbished the original sign and replaced the awful green carpeting with formica flooring that more closely resembles the original material), Cindy's was back in business. After a brush with a drunk driver in 2016, Rosenbluh and King closed the place for six months to overhaul the place down to the studs, restitching the Cony's signature orange booths and shining up the vintage counter.
1500 Colorado Blvd., Eagle Rock. 323-257-7375, cindyseaglerock.com

Corky's Restaurant

THEN: When a San Francisco millionaire feuding with his business partner decided to open a restaurant in Los Angeles, he enlisted Armet & Davis — the L.A.-based design firm whose Jetsons-style buildings are probably what you imagine when you think of '50s and '60s diners — to turn his space-age dreams into a reality. Stanley Burke's Coffee Shop opened in 1958. It was later renamed Stanley Burke's Corker, which was originally the name of the on-site lounge and bar where Billy Joel reportedly played the piano in the '70s. According to an old menu on eBay, you could get a steak for less than $5 or a spaghetti burger (intriguing!) for $2.75. Those were the days.

NOW: A new owner bought it and in the '80s turned it into The Lamplighter, a family-friendly local chain known for its glasses of red Jell-O and its blue-plate specials. The Lamplighter was extinguished in 2010, but the building remained intact, paving the way for Corky's to make its triumphant return in 2010 under new ownership (aka the same folks who own the equally fantastic Paty's in Toluca Lake). The dining room featured groovy, rainbow-hued glass panels and seafoam-green booths. Sadly, Corky's closed in December 2019.
5043 Van Nuys Blvd., Sherman Oaks.

Mel's Drive-In

THEN: Opened in 1959 as The Penguin, this Googie-style restaurant quickly became a Westside hub, beloved for its iconic sign and the penguins painted on the walls inside. The folks who operated the long-gone Rose City Diner in Pasadena were in charge in 1990, when the diner shut its doors, to the chagrin of students at nearby Santa Monica City College and Santa Monica High School. It became a dentist's office for most of the '90s, although much of the original exterior architecture was left intact.

NOW: When Western Dental left the space a few years back, San Francisco-based restaurant chain Mel's swooped in and got to work peeling back all that drywall. They restored the space to its original glory, maintaining many of the touches that made The Penguin so great. The newest Mel's outpost has been open since June 2018. It offers 24/7 weekend service and a menu that mixes chili fries and sizeable omelettes with more updated fare, including a full complement of smoothies and pressed juices. The sign out front says Mel's, but thankfully the penguin remains perched on top.
1670 Lincoln Blvd., Santa Monica; 310-392-0139; melsdrive-in.com

Naka's Broiler

THEN: Named for its original owners, Nathaniel and Katherine Banks, Naka's Broiler has been in business since 1956, making it the first black-owned business in Compton. Thanks to Katherine (who worked there for years, even after she sold the restaurant), the diner became a refuge for black students attending Centennial High School, across the street. Throughout its storied history, it has attracted famous patrons such as Muhammad Ali, Johnnie Cochran and Sammy Davis Jr.

NOW: Katherine sold Naka's to David Fisher, who grew up eating there, in 2001, and he operates it to this day. The unassuming little brick building the couple built in the '50s endures, and Centennial students still flock there after school. When you open the menu, emblazoned with the words "You tried the rest... Now come in and have the best," make sure to give the Southern-style breakfast dishes your full attention (especially that pork chop and grits). Not your jam? Order a taco or sandwich.
1961 W. El Segundo Blvd., Compton, 323-566-5450

Nick's Cafe

THEN: After serving in the Navy during World War II, the restaurant's namesake, Nick, returned to Los Angeles and built a diner near the charred remains of China City (the precursor to Chinatown). He later sold the establishment to a pair of LAPD homicide detectives, who were still running it when L.A. Times food writer Jonathan Gold swung by in the '90s. Back then, they were still making dishes with Nick's signature ingredient: ham, ham and more ham.

NOW: The restaurant remains mostly the same. Seating is limited to the original U-shaped counter, and you have to jump into a seat as soon as it's vacant (similar to the Apple Pan). Ham is still very much on the menu. Speaking of which, you can't go wrong with Nick's Famous Ham & Eggs. The neighborhood around the diner, meanwhile, has seen plenty of changes. The old freight yard site is now Los Angeles State Historic Park and rents are rising in Chinatown. Still, Nick's endures and draws crowds on the weekends. Business is so good enough that current owner Rod Davis opened the Rock'n Egg Cafe in Eagle Rock last year.
1300 N. Spring St., downtown L.A. 323-222-1450, nickscafela.net

Norm's

THEN: The diner chain founded by L.A. native and used car salesman Norm Roybark opened its La Cienega location in 1957, where it has been serving affordable omelets, burgers, steaks and stacks of pancakes ever since. Another Armet & Davis design, the layout of this Norm's was designed to look like a car showroom, right down to the upholstered booths. Go-Gos rhythm guitarist Jane Weidlin has written about working at this Norm's in the late '70s (she had to wear a wig to hide her blue hair), and a photo of the restaurant is featured in the liner notes for Scottish power pop group Teenage Fanclub's 1995 album, Grand Prix.

NOW: You'll still see a few Norm's scattered around L.A. but there aren't as many as there used to be (the first one was located on Sunset near Vine). The La Cienega Norm's was threatened by a West Hollywood developer in 2015, but thanks to the efforts of the L.A. Conservancy, the Cultural Heritage Commission voted unanimously to approve the structure's Historical Cultural Monument status. Stop in for a late-night bite next time you find yourself at Largo. Norm's still has low prices and some of the best people-watching. ICYWW, it is the diner featured near the end of Sam Raimi's 2009 film, Drag Me to Hell.
470 N. La Cienega Blvd., West Hollywood. 310-657-8333, normsrestaurants.com

Pann's Restaurant

THEN: Pann's wasn't the first restaurant opened by Greek immigrants George and Rena Panagopoulos but it is the longest lasting. They opened Rena's Cafe in Inglewood in 1948 and Yum Burger on Manchester Boulevard in 1951. By 1958, they enlisted Armet & Davis to construct Pann's, a Space Age-style diner complete with a pointed, gravel-covered roof and interior rock walls. The family also owned a nearby restaurant called Holly's — later called Hawthorne Grill — where Pulp Fiction's iconic diner scene was shot. (That one was razed to make way for an AutoZone.)

NOW: Pann's endures as one of L.A. County's best examples of Googie architecture. The red leather booths, the flecked formica floors, the distinctive neon sign. Longtime Angelenos swear it has barely changed since the '80s. Pann's stopped serving dinner back in 2016 (reportedly due to the rising minimum wage) but it's still home to some of the best fried chicken around. It has to be one of the only diners in L.A. still operated by its original owners and it's an essential stop on your way to or from LAX.
6710 La Tijera Blvd., Los Angeles; 323-776-3770; panns.com

Rae's

THEN: Founded in 1958, Rae's has, for years, been a prime meeting spot on the edge of West L.A. and Santa Monica. Ted Delgado, the restaurant's current owner, started out washing dishes there in 1967 after immigrating from Jalisco, Mexico. He saved up enough money to buy his own place (Ned's Coffee Shop, which closed in 1988) then bought Rae's in 1992. He has been running the place ever since, along with his other restaurant, Teddy's Cafe, located about a half mile east on Pico.

NOW: Rae's has been excellently preserved, making it another prime filming location. You can see it in Lords of Dogtown, True Romance, Bowfinger... the list goes on. "We try not to change very much," Delgado told us back in 2011, and indeed, the blue-and-white color scheme remains the same. You'll never leave hungry, as Jerry Seinfeld and Brian Regan found out when they hopped out of their 1970 Dodge Challenger during a 2016 episode of Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. Make room for a plate of biscuits and gravy. You'll thank us later.
2901 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica. 310-828-7937

Shakers

THEN: The Armet & Davis-designed building on Fair Oaks in Pasadena has been home to two storied local coffee shop chains. Built in 1964 for Richard S. Preble, who cut his teeth at the International House of Pancakes, Preble's offered an affordable menu and specialized in homemade pies and hamburgers. Described by a contemporaneous Pasadena Independent reporter as a "young, dynamic, and often controversial" character who looked like James Dean, Preble had big plans. Less than a decade later, the building had changed hands and become the first location of Henry Yost's Salt Shaker chain. (In a weird reversal of fate, one of Preble's other diners — the one on Figueroa in Lincoln Heights — is now an IHOP.)

NOW: This particular Salt Shaker is still standing although it goes by the shortened moniker Shakers. (One internet-fueled legend states that they dropped the "salt" when people started worrying about sodium being bad for their health.) Still owned and operated by the Yosts, the restaurant retains much of its vintage charm and is a popular filming location. You won't find the 95-cent fish-and-chips special we saw in a 1968 ad but classic breakfast dishes are still on the menu along with fun twists like Hawaiian bread French toast (highly recommended).
601 Fair Oaks, South Pasadena. 626-799-9168, shakersrestaurant.net


https://laist.com/2020/01/28/los-ang...en-and-now.php

Noir_Noir Jan 29, 2020 2:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Godzilla (Post 8814001)
Don't believe "Symphony of a City: Los Angeles" has received prior NLA mention. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tB2qGIn90yw


Perhaps someone can improve on these marginal screen captures. :shrug:


https://i.imgur.com/Ya1rjWL.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/apAhM5k.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/t8wB3Bp.jpg

Mstimc Jan 29, 2020 10:45 AM

St. Athanasius Church
 
Hi All

Just curious. My grandmother had an apartment on Laguna across from Echo Park. My sisters and I would walk across the street to the boat house while my mom and grandmother jib-jabbed. Where the offices of the Episcopal Diocese of LA are now, there was a small Episcopal church, St. Athanasius, where both my sisters were baptized. It was knocked down sometime in the 1970's (?) to make room for the new diocese offices and chapel. Does anyone have a photo of the old church? I thought it was pretty cool when I was a kid...

CaliNative Jan 29, 2020 11:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Beaudry (Post 8812148)
As long as we're on the subject of the Richfield Building...

Shameless plug for this upcoming event (which I don't feel bad about promoting, since there's no profit involved): the weekend after next, Saturday Feb. 8th, if anyone can sit for ninety interminable minutes on the Richfield, it's y'all. So come on out! (Heck, come on out for no other reason than to see Bolton Hall if you've never been.)

https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...94b8087c_b.jpg

^^^
Would be great if you could video record the lecture and make it available online (youtube?). I now live in San Diego area, and can't make it up to Bolton Hall. This lecture should be preserved. Lot of fans of art deco L.A., old Bunker Hill L.A., and especially the sadly departed Richfield tower. Thanks. Let us know if the tape will be available online, and where.

HossC Jan 29, 2020 2:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mstimc (Post 8814537)

Hi All

Just curious. My grandmother had an apartment on Laguna across from Echo Park. My sisters and I would walk across the street to the boat house while my mom and grandmother jib-jabbed. Where the offices of the Episcopal Diocese of LA are now, there was a small Episcopal church, St. Athanasius, where both my sisters were baptized. It was knocked down sometime in the 1970's (?) to make room for the new diocese offices and chapel. Does anyone have a photo of the old church? I thought it was pretty cool when I was a kid...

"St. Athanasius Episcopal Church, by Angeleno Heights resident Arthur Benton, once stood at Echo Park and Laguna avenues, across from Echo Park Lake in east Los Angeles. It was demolished in the 1990s".

https://i809.photobucket.com/albums/...thanasius1.jpg
goodchurchdesign.blogspot.com

Historic Aerials seems to back up the 1990s date.

ethereal_reality Jan 29, 2020 3:48 PM

Here's an apartment name we haven't come across on NLA. (I double checked)

ENGADINE........................................................

https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...924/sdqcrz.jpg
eBay


https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...922/37UscE.jpg

Corner 10th and Westlake Ave. Wilshire 3100, Home 556956


.

ethereal_reality Jan 29, 2020 3:57 PM

And here's another name new to NLA.


........................................................................DICKSHIRE

https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/QXbtmr.jpg
eBay

The "U" Car Line. (?)







Here's the reverse showing 1938 postmark.

https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/ScZGED.jpg

Here's the rub. The postmark has obscured the word before "Place".



.

Lwize Jan 29, 2020 4:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ethereal_reality (Post 8814688)
And here's another name new to NLA.


........................................................................DICKSHIRE

https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...923/QXbtmr.jpg
eBay

The "U" Car Line. (?)







Here's the reverse showing 1938 postmark.

https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/ScZGED.jpg

Here's the rub. The postmark has obscured the word before "Place".



.

687 Shatto Place, LA 90005

The building is still there.

The U car line was Uber in 1938.

Mstimc Jan 29, 2020 4:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HossC (Post 8814604)
"St. Athanasius Episcopal Church, by Angeleno Heights resident Arthur Benton, once stood at Echo Park and Laguna avenues, across from Echo Park Lake in east Los Angeles. It was demolished in the 1990s".

https://i809.photobucket.com/albums/...thanasius1.jpg
goodchurchdesign.blogspot.com

Historic Aerials seems to back up the 1990s date.

Thank you sir! I assumed it was the 1970's because of the look of the office center. My grandmother moved out of her 1920's apartment building in 1972. Her building is still there--I remember playing on the hillside behind her apartment.

CityBoyDoug Jan 29, 2020 5:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ethereal_reality (Post 8814688)
And here's another name new to NLA.


........................................................................DICKSHIRE



Here's the reverse showing 1938 postmark.

https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/ScZGED.jpg

Here's the rub. The postmark has obscured the word before "Place".



.

Joe is sending some soiled laundry home C.O.D. for his mom to wash....he'll give her some money for the postage when he gets home in a week.
Sending dirty laundry in the mail was common in those days. Moms were expected to wash their son's dirty laundry until he was married or had a housekeeper.

nadeau Jan 29, 2020 7:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mstimc (Post 8814537)
Hi All

Just curious. My grandmother had an apartment on Laguna across from Echo Park. My sisters and I would walk across the street to the boat house while my mom and grandmother jib-jabbed. Where the offices of the Episcopal Diocese of LA are now, there was a small Episcopal church, St. Athanasius, where both my sisters were baptized. It was knocked down sometime in the 1970's (?) to make room for the new diocese offices and chapel. Does anyone have a photo of the old church? I thought it was pretty cool when I was a kid...

It was a very cool building that stretched along the block with connected additions. It actually survived until the 90s and it’s a real tragedy that it’s gone. It was kind of Craftsman, wooden, beautiful scale, and replaced with something that looks like it belongs in Santa Clarita.

I wish I had a photo, but it was unceremoniously destroyed. Hopefully someone will have some.

HossC Jan 29, 2020 7:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ethereal_reality (Post 8814688)

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lwize (Post 8814733)

687 Shatto Place, LA 90005

The building is still there.

Here it is, although I can't say I'm a fan of the modifications. The locations of the cartouches could still be seen across the top until the building got its dark gray makeover in 2014.

https://i809.photobucket.com/albums/...Dickshire1.jpg
GSV

ethereal_reality Jan 29, 2020 8:00 PM

It appears the owners chose the cheapest aluminum windows on the market. ugh

Compare them with the paned wood frame windows in the vintage postcard.


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