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Bottega Louie is located in the Brockman Building and is credited with creating Downtown Los Angeles's "Restaurant Row." [3] [4] This particular area of Downtown Los Angeles underwent a rapid expansion of bars, restaurants and residences from 2012 to 2014 [2] [5] [6] that some real estate developers are calling a "7th Street Renaissance."
The Victory Clothing Company building was designed by Robert Farquhar Train and Robert Edmund Williams for Mr. & Mrs. J.F. Hosfield and built in 1914. [1] The building was originally built as a City Hall annex, [2] but by 2002 it contained ground-floor retail, second-story mezzanines for storage, and lofts on the third through fifth stories.
The Bottega Louie restaurant has operated on the building's ground floor since 2009. [12] [13] [14] See also. Los Angeles portal;
Louise Trotter is an English fashion designer and soon-to-be creative director of fashion brand Bottega Veneta. She previously worked for numerous clothing stores, retail chains, and fashion brands. She previously worked for numerous clothing stores, retail chains, and fashion brands.
Bottega Louie, a Los Angeles-based Italian restaurant, gourmet market, and French patisserie Bottega University , a distance-learning university headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah The Jeweller's Shop (also known simply as Bottega dell'orefice in Italian), a 1988 Italian-Austrian-Canadian-German drama film
Bullock's complex is a collection of nine historic buildings located at 639-651 south Broadway, the 300-block of 7th Street, and 634-670 south Hill Street in the Jewelry District and Broadway Theater District in the historic core of downtown Los Angeles.
Downtown Los Angeles's Woolworth's building was designed by Weeks and Day and built in 1920. [1] The cost of construction was approximately $100,000 ($1.52 million in 2023) and the building's original tenant was Woolworth's.
Broadway Leasehold Building, built in 1914, was originally designed to house street-level retail with offices for Leasehold Company above. According to the United States Department of the Interior, the architect is unknown, [1] while other sources cite the architect as an employee of Milwaukee Building Company [6] /Meyer and Holler [7] and even more sources cite Meyer and Holler directly.