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This is a list of Long Beach historic landmarks. These sites have been designated as historic landmarks in the Long Beach Municipal Code. The city of Long Beach has recognized certain buildings and neighborhoods as having special architectural and historical value. The City Council designates historic landmarks and districts by city ordinance.
The film Freedom Writers, although not shot there, was based on Long Beach Woodrow Wilson High School. Other locations in Long Beach have been used frequently as well. An episode of The Lone Wolf, "The Long Beach Story", [213] features the Wilton Hotel. Shoreline Drive visually approximates a freeway but is a municipal roadway and permits are ...
The tallest tower in Long Beach features 315 luxury apartments on building's upper floors, with about 6,500 square feet of commercial space and a five-level, and even 470-car subterranean parking garage below. Companies including Studio One Eleven, Carrier Johnson + Culture, and Relm have worked on main designment and construction on this project.
Several old barns survive from an earlier time. Carroll Park was built at the turn of the century by John Carroll, [2] and was the first planned housing tract in Long Beach, California. The Park was designated a Historic Landmark District in 1982, just shortly after the City recognized the need to preserve Long Beach’s treasured communities.*
PARIS — In the middle of an unpretentious, working-class neighborhood in Long Beach, California, is a century-old public school with a remarkable claim to fame.
Long Beach Assembly is a former Ford Motor Company assembly plant located at the Cerritos Channel on Terminal Island, at 700 Henry Ford Avenue in Long Beach, Southern California. It operated from 1930 through 1958. The former Henry Ford Bridge, crossing the Cerritos Channel from the mainland to Terminal Island, was located near the former plant ...
The Masonic Temple at 230 Pine Ave. in downtown Long Beach, California was built in 1903. It is listed on the List of City of Long Beach historic landmarks. [2] [3] It is "one of the last remaining examples of eminent local architect Henry F. Starbuck, who designed many of the city's turn-of-the-century buildings." [4]
The Art Theatre is a historic movie theater on Retro Row in Long Beach, California.Opened in 1925 as the Carter Theatre, it is the oldest operating cinema in the city.After sustaining damage from the 1933 Long Beach earthquake, the venue was remodeled and reopened as the Lee Theatre in 1934.