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Sportsmen's Lodge, Studio City, CA. The Sportsmen's Lodge is a hotel located on Ventura Boulevard in Studio City, Los Angeles, California.Operating under various names (including "Hollywood Trout Farms") since the 1880s, the Sportsmen's Lodge is a San Fernando Valley landmark and remains a popular spot for celebrations, dinners and public events.
Fire chief Huttner initially though the fire was caused by a boiler that had exploded in the furnace room, [19] but it was later concluded that it was a "heat explosion" caused by a burning cigarette thrown into the garbage chute that had set fire to the thin wooden walls of the hotel. The garbage caught fire and became a ball of fire that ...
The area around the studio was named Studio City. [4] In 1955, Studio City's Station 78 became the first racially integrated station in the Los Angeles City Fire Department. [5] [6] A house fire that soon spread to surrounding homes broke out in Studio City on January 8, 2025 as part of the January 2025 Southern California wildfires. [7]
A 25-year-old man is facing murder charges after deputies alleged he beat a 55-year-old man to death using a fire extinguisher after hotel staff asked him to leave for destroying property
A downtown Los Angeles building made famous as the setting of an album cover photo for the legendary rock band the Doors was heavily damaged after fire broke out Thursday morning. The building ...
The Coyote fire burned about 1 acre of "medium to heavy brush" above a dog park near the AVA Toluca Hills apartment complex off Barham Boulevard, the Los Angeles Fire Department said around 11 p.m.
The Dorothy Mae Apartment-Hotel fire was a September 4, 1982, arson that killed 25 people in Los Angeles, California, in the United States. [1] An additional 30 people were injured. [2] In 1985, Humberto Diaz de la Torre was convicted of starting the fire and sentenced to 625 years in prison.
Despite the fire department's opposition, Fire Station No. 27 was disengaged as the city's Cultural-Historical Monument #165 in October 1976. [1] The historic designation saved Engine Co. No. 27 when the Los Angeles Fire Department announced plans in 1984 to demolish 16 old fire stations as part of the largest building program ever undertaken ...