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The building was created to house the then-separate Eastern (furniture and homeware) and Columbia (apparel) department stores both owned and managed by Adolph Sieroty, who had founded his Los Angeles retail concern as a clock shop at 556 S. Spring St. in 1892.
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AT&T Center, Los Angeles (previously headquarters for the Transamerica Corporation) Avalon Townhouses, Santa Catalina Island, California; Bank of California, Orange, California; Civic Center, San Dimas, California; Communications Building, Los Angeles City College; Community Building, Santa Fe Springs, California; Cord Residence, Reno, Nevada
F. F. and W. Grand Silver Store Building; Farmers and Merchants Bank of Los Angeles; Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising Museum; Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Los Angeles Branch
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Los Angeles Branch, Los Angeles, 1929; Film Exchange Building, Los Angeles, 1937; Firestone Tire Company Building, Los Angeles, 1937; Fox Bruin Theater, Los Angeles, 1937; Garfield Building, Los Angeles, 1929; Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building, South Los Angeles, Los Angeles, 1949
Hoffman Building, built in 1906, was originally four-stories and currently is one. [2] [3] It was originally home to Yamato Inc., a Japanese bazaar that also served tea and cake, and then a Harry Fink & Co. women's clothing store in 1917.
A Chinese company bought the block across from what was then Staples Center in 2014, but it ran out of money in 2019. With construction halted, the site became a seemingly irresistible draw for ...
580 California Street is a high rise office building completed in 1987 in the Financial District of San Francisco, California.The postmodern, 107 m (351 ft), 23 story tower is bordered by Kearny Street and California Street, and is topped with three faceless, 12-foot (3.7 m)-tall statues, on each side of the building on the twenty-third floor.