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Roadside Architecture.com. Retrieved 2019-01-03. "Art Deco Society of Los Angeles". Archived from the original on 2015-05-17. Cinema Treasures. Retrieved 2022-09-06 "Court House Lover". Flickr. Retrieved 2022-09-06 "New Deal Map". The Living New Deal. Retrieved 2020-12-25. "Points of Interest Map". Art Deco Society of California. Archived from ...
Streamline Moderne architecture in California (49 P) Pages in category "Art Deco architecture in California" The following 133 pages are in this category, out of 133 total.
Like most S. H. Kress and Co. locations, this building features an Art Deco design, with this specific location being "a prime example of the Art Deco style." [3] In 1947, Fredericks of Hollywood moved into the building, the location serving as the company's flagship store. [1]
The Pellissier Building and adjoining Wiltern Theatre is a 12-story, 155-foot (47 m) Art Deco landmark at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Western Avenue in Los Angeles, California. The entire complex is commonly referred to as the Wiltern Center.
The building has been characterized as the "benchmark of deco buildings in Los Angeles" [40] [41] and as one of the "grand dames of Art Deco Streamline Moderne in Los Angeles". [42] Historian Robert Winter called the building "a shining example of Southern California's golden age of architecture". [11]
California. Colorado. Connecticut. Garde Arts Center, New London, Connecticut ... Art Deco Architecture, Art Deco Information". Retrieved 2019-01-03. Cinema Treasures ...
The art deco Sunset Tower is considered one of the finest examples of the Streamline Moderne form of Art Deco architecture in Southern California. In their guide to Los Angeles architecture, David Gebhard and Robert Winter wrote that "this tower is a first class monument of the Zig Zag Moderne and as much an emblem of Hollywood as the Hollywood ...
450 Sutter Street, also called the Four Fifty Sutter Building, is a twenty-six-floor, 105-meter (344-foot) skyscraper in San Francisco, California, completed in 1929.The tower is known for its "Neo-Mayan" Art Deco design by architect Timothy L. Pflueger. [4]