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Pasadena Ave. and California Blvd. Demolished July 27, 1974 for construction of Interstate 710. [8] 2: Pasadena Athletic and Country Club: November 11, 1977 (#77001545) 1978: SE corner of E. Green St. and S. Los Robles Ave. Demolished in 1977 for construction of the Plaza Pasadena shopping mall, which was demolished in 2000. [9]
The dome is visible through the window of the main characters' apartment building in the television show The Big Bang Theory, set in Pasadena. The building featured in the last episode of Jericho; it was used as the City Hall of Cheyenne, Wyoming. The building also appeared in the opening shots of The Amazing Race 21 premiere. [4]
Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Pasadena, California" The following 41 pages are in this category, out of 41 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The building resembles three of Palladio's domed structures—the church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice, the Hotel des Invalides in Paris and St Paul's Cathedral in London. Without being a direct imitation, Pasadena City Hall is related to them all. [2] The Pasadena Central Library was designed by Myron Hunt in 1924. The Central Library ...
In 1981 the Vista del Arroyo was placed in the National Register of Historic Places and GSA began design work to restore the building as the southern seat of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. In 1995, the building was renamed to honor Judge Richard Harvey Chambers, whose concept it was to bring a Federal courthouse to Pasadena. [2]
Rank Building Name Height Floors Year Built 1: Pasadena City Hall: 206 ft (63 m) 6: 1927 2: Parsons Corporate Headquarters: 200 ft (61 m) 12: 1971 3: AT&T Building: 197 ft (60 m)
The Exhibition Building, adjacent to the west side of the Auditorium, features 31,200 sq ft (2,900 m 2) of exhibit space and can seat up to 4,400 for various events. Adjacent to the Exhibition Building is a 15,000 sq ft (1,400 m 2) annex seating up to 600 patrons.
Works include (with attribution): Fenyes Estate (1911 addition), 470 W. Walnut St. & 160 N. Orange Grove Blvd., Pasadena, CA (Marston & Van Pelt), NRHP-listed [4]; Arden Villa (1913), Pasadena, a Palladian-style estate designed for William Kennon Jewett