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http://lileks.com/bleats/archive/07/...art/noir/3.jpghttp://lileks.com/bleats/archive/07/0907/091107.html |
Six Feet Under house. 2302 W 25th St, Los Angeles, CA 90018
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8177/8...2e7b2c92_b.jpgGE |
Happy Days house. 565 N Cahuenga Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90004
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8315/8...022235fc_b.jpgGE |
Brady Bunch House. 11222 Dilling St, North Hollywood, CA 91602
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8320/8...03910f2a_b.jpgGE |
Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet. 1822 Camino Palmero St., Los Angeles, CA 90046
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8032/8...713a8a55_b.jpgGE |
Beverly Hillbillies House. 750 Bel Air Rd, Los Angeles, CA 90077
http://photos1.zillow.com/p_d/ISz2ebizyrx3fn.jpg http://photos3.zillow.com/p_d/ISz0aoxlza119f.jpg http://photos1.zillow.com/p_d/ISyrhjisw4m46b.jpg http://photos3.zillow.com/p_d/ISyrhjh1r50cyr.jpg http://photos2.zillow.com/p_d/ISzb7h13fs3b1f.jpg http://photos2.zillow.com/p_d/ISz2ebiw0pozhf.jpg All from Zillow This 21523 square foot single family home has 10 bedrooms and 12.0 bathrooms. Lynn Atkinson was an engineer and public works contractor who retired in his thirties and built Bel Air's most expensive Depression-era house, at 750 Bel Air Rd. It had a ballroom with an orchestra stage, a pipe organ, six bedroom suites, a 150 foot manmade waterfall, a landing pad for autogyros, gold-plated doorknobs and hinges, and an elevator that ran seventy-five feet below the house to tunnels leading to the pool and landing pad. But he never moved in and his family only ever used the house for parties. In 1945, the house was acquired "for a mere $250,000" by Arnold S. Kirkeby, a bond dealer, developer, and hotelier with rumored mob ties who had just bought the Beverly Wilshire. Here's Gross: It's unclear, even to his family, how [Kirkeby] came to own it. A local gossip column once claimed that Atkinson gave the house to Kirkeby in repayment of a gambling debt. Carla Kirkeby, Arnold's younger child, says her parents told her that Atkinson had run out of money to finish the house, borrowed it from Kirkeby, and, unable to pay it back, lost the house, his collateral. Her father "didn't want to take the house," she says. "He said he'd never make another loan like that." Kirkeby's son Arnold, known as Buzz, believes that the kooky Atkinson took the loan for an ill-fated wartime engineering brainstorm--floating islands he proposed to sell to the US Navy. But the war ended, the navy was no longer interested--if it ever had been--and Atkinson "handed over the keys to the house." Understandably, he did so with a heavy heart--his daughter Doris once told Carla Kirkeby that her father moved into an apartment on Wilshire Boulevard with a view of the house and sat staring at it for hours on end through binoculars. In summer 1961, having moved again, he leapt from his twelfth-floor apartment in the Le Corbusier-inspired Park La Brea complex east of Beverly Hills. A note found near his body blamed the infamous Los Angeles smog that had exacerbated his pulmonary emphysema. "I have lived here for almost fifty years in perfect physical condition except for smog-affected lungs that make life too miserable, but if my passing shall accent a need for a change, it will have served a good purpose," wrote the sixty-six-year-old. Meanwhile, right before Kirkeby died in 1962, he agreed to let a producer use 750 Bel Air's exterior for the Clampett house in The Beverly Hillbillies, thinking the show wouldn't last. The fans tormented his widow Carlotta for years. And one last bit about the house: Betsy Bloomingdale supposedly walked into the White House in 1975 and said "This looks just like Carlotta Kirkeby's house in Bel Air." Unreal Real Estate "The Kirkeby Estate, Bel-Air Road, Bel-Air. Also known as home to "The Beverly Hillbillies." Jerry Perenchio, movie producer and former partner of Norman Lear, bought the Kirkeby Estate for $13.6 million in 1986, then bought three adjacent lots for about $9 million, expanding the grounds to 11.5 acres. (The comparatively modest ranch house of former President Ronald Reagan and Nancy Reagan is his only remaining neighbor.) Perenchio also reportedly invested another $9 million refurbishing the 18th-century French neoclassical mansion he purchased from the estate of widow Carlotta Kirkeby. Built over five years during the 1930s by millionaire bridge contractor Lynn Atkinson, the house with the copper roof, limestone walls, marble staircase, ballroom and two-story reception hall cost $2 million. An oft-told but disputed story goes: Atkinson had planned to surprise his wife, Berenice, by throwing a massive housewarming party. But, as he expectantly walked her through the house and a band played under the Baccarat crystal chandelier, she sniffed: "Who would ever live in a house like this? It's so grandiose." Atkinson was crushed. They left, and the grand mansion stood empty for years as Berenice Atkinson refused to move there. It sold in 1945 to Arnold Kirkeby for $200,000, though some versions of the story say it really was collateral on an uncollected loan. The estate's facade and gardens are familiar to millions of television viewers as the home of "The Beverly Hillbillies." Later, Carlotta Kirkeby would rue the day she allowed the house to be filmed, as tour buses and looky-loos clogged Nimes and Bel-Air roads." LATimes Video tour of Bel Air Road. Sounds like Nancy Reagon is Jed's neighbor. |
Charlies Angels. 189 N. Robertson Blvd., Beverly Hills.
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8029/8...5d0353ca_b.jpgGE |
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The left circle indicates the former entrance @ 750 Bel-Air Rd; the top circle indicates the new one @ 875 Nimes Rd. https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-i...2520AM.bmp.jpgGSV The new entrance at 875 Nimes Rd, with the Frontgate-catalog-style bollards and mailbox/address marker. https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-H...2520AM.bmp.jpgGSV Closer aerial view from the southeast. Some sources say the whole house has been replaced or so extensively remodeled--or at least the facade has--that it's unrecognizable as the Hillbillies house. I guess you'd have to hire a helicopter to check that out. Also: http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...postcount=6576 |
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http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-mfwhzM79ER...00/PDVD002.jpg [source: truthwithoutexcuse.blogspot.com] Of course, it only existed on the Beverly Hillbillies set at General Services Studios on Las Palmas in Hollywood. |
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https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-W...118%2520PM.jpg Looks pretty much the same to me. |
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A number of notable people lost their lives in the crash. It was the sixth fatal Boeing 707 crash, and, at the time, the deadliest. John Dieckman, international champion flyfisher and caster. Admiral Richard Lansing Conolly, USN (retired), president of Long Island University and two-time Deputy Chief of Naval Operations. W. Alton Jones, multi-millionaire former president and chairman of Cities Service Company and close personal friend of Dwight D. Eisenhower. Arnold Kirkeby, millionaire realtor and former head of the Kirkeby chain of luxury hotels. Louise Lindner Eastman, whose daughter Linda Eastman would later marry the Beatle Paul McCartney. Irving Rubine, TV writer. Emelyn Whiton, 1952 Olympic sailing gold medalist (6-metre keelboat). Bob Paschall, Broadway stage manager. Joe Harwell, Broadway actor. In addition, 15 abstract paintings by the artist Arshile Gorky were en route to Los Angeles for an exhibition and were destroyed. W. Alton Jones was found to be carrying $55,690 in cash, including a $10,000 bill. TV fans will note that Kirkeby owned the stately mansion used for the hit CBS sitcom "The Beverly Hillbillies" exterior shots, located at 750 Bel Air Road, Bel Air, California. Series producer Paul Henning paid the family (Mr. Kirkeby was killed in a plane crash prior to the series debut) $500 per day for filming on the mansion's grounds. The mansion's interior and rear were duplicated on Stage 4 at General Service Studios. Contractual provisions at the time prevented disclosure of the mansion's address in press releases and required restoration of the grounds after each shoot. The mansion had been previously used by Jerry Lewis for 1960's "Cinderfella." Looks like there was a tunnel to get to the cement pond in the real mansion. |
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Prophet--Thanks for the tip on Bing-- Looks like Google Maps is behind the curve, or maybe it's my own ability to use it--anyway--I agree, now I see that the house looks the same. I know I've read before that it was altered, even torn down and replaced, but such reports may well have been a red herring by the current owners to throw Hillbillies fans off the scent. The Clampett house lives... |
Can somebody re-identify this club? I'm sure I found it here somewhere but lost the name.....
http://i64.photobucket.com/albums/h1...scanlr0061.jpg I will credit the photo as soon as I know where it came from! Thanks in advance, fellow Noiri. |
:previous: thenicerguy, I'm not sure what bar that is. I'll try to find out. :)
__ http://imageshack.us/a/img42/7971/aafireproofpc.jpg ebay It still stands today. http://imageshack.us/a/img845/8501/a...ofpc1today.jpg google street view __ |
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Looks like there was an addition to the original building. http://i.ebayimg.com/t/Vintage-190-W...+o!~~60_57.JPG ebay 1924 http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...0528C24FC?v=hrhttp://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets.../CHS-9038?v=hrUSC Digital 1923 Looking North on Western from First Street. I suspect that this photo was taken from the Storage Building. Interestingly, at 112 N Western, just a few doors away from the Storage Building was Wilshire Cadillac - on Western. http://rescarta.lapl.org:8080/ResCar...ce&submit=Find http://digitallibrary.usc.edu/assets...CHS-47872?v=hrUSC Digital |
:previous: I am rather intrigued by this small 'tower' that I've circled in red. Is it a lookout/bell tower atop an old fire station?*
originally posted by Godzilla http://imageshack.us/a/img32/7941/aabenowssp.jpg usc *Ok, I just looked again at the other photograph Godzilla posted (see below), and it looks like there is a fire station.... but the station seems to be a lot closer to the Wilshire Storage Bldg. than the 'tower'. What do you guys think? http://imageshack.us/a/img109/5199/aabefs.jpg usc __ |
The Las Flores Inn in the late 1940s or early 1950s. pan right---> to see the swordfish. :)
http://imageshack.us/a/img140/4844/a...nhugemalib.jpg ebay Today, the old Las Flores Inn is now Duke's Malibu. http://imageshack.us/a/img87/4531/aa...esinndukes.jpg google street view __ |
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1929 http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...HVUDQGGS8P.jpg http://catalog.library.ca.gov/exlibr...BHBGN4YXXM.jpgC.St.Lib |
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Both the tower and the station appear to be on the same lot. The depth of the station or its property line is not clear from the photos. Nor is it clear that the tower is even attached to the station. It looks as though the tower is possibly set back east of the station, but this is just a guess. |
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