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The Bradbury House is a historic house in the Pacific Palisades Los Angeles, California, United States. It was designed in the Spanish Revival style by architect John Byers, and completed in 1923. [2] Built for Lewis L Bradbury Jr [3] whose father, Lewis L Bradbury, commissioned the construction of the Bradbury Building in Downtown Los Angeles. [2]
c.1887 – Bradbury Mansion, 147 North Hill Street, Los Angeles, California, was located in the Bunker Hill neighborhood and was demolished in 1929. [13] Built at the cost of $80,000 for Lewis L. Bradbury. The house, a 35-room structure with five chimneys and five turrets, stood at the corner of Hill and Court streets.
One Bunker Hill Building: March 25, 1988: 601 W. 5th St. Bunker Hill: Formerly the Southern California Edison Company Building, a 14-story Art Deco bldg. built 1930–34, designed by Allison & Allison. 348: Fire Station No. 28: 644 S. Figueroa St. Downtown Los Angeles
The Bradbury Building is an architectural landmark in downtown Los Angeles, California, United States. Built in 1893, [ 1 ] the five-story office building is best known for its extraordinary skylit atrium of access walkways, stairs and elevators, and their ornate ironwork.
Initially a residential suburb, Bunker Hill retained its exclusive character through the end of World War I.Around the 1920s and the 1930s, with the advent of the Pacific Electric Railway and the construction of the freeway, and the increased urban growth fed by an extensive streetcar system, its wealthy residents began leaving for enclaves such as Beverly Hills and Pasadena.
"The rest of the breakfast plate – processed meats (sausage, bacon), deep-fried home fries, refined white bread covered in butter and sugary jelly, doughnuts and pastries full of hydrogenated ...
There’s a whole city’s worth of stuff underneath the White House, complete with a lasting oxygen supply and midnight snacks for weeks.
Bradbury had purchased the parcel at the Third and Broadway intersection on November 11, 1890. In the first week of October 1891, the building which housed an Eckstein's Drug Store was picked up, moved around the southern toe of Prospect/Bunker Hill and set on a new foundation at the northwest corner of Third and Flower.