National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles
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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places in the city of Los Angeles. (For those in the rest of Los Angeles County, refer to National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles County, California.)
Current listings
[edit]
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 29, 2024.[1]
[2] | Name on the Register[3] | Image | Date listed[4] | Location | Neighborhood | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 27th Street Historic District | June 11, 2009 (#09000399) |
Along 27th Street[5] 34°01′06″N 118°15′25″W / 34.0183°N 118.2569°W | South Los Angeles | Historic district adjacent to Central Avenue Corridor in South Los Angeles; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles Multiple Property Submission (MPS) | |
2 | 52nd Place Historic District | June 11, 2009 (#09000398) |
Along E. 52nd Place[6] 33°59′41″N 118°15′46″W / 33.9947°N 118.2628°W | South Los Angeles | Historic district in South Los Angeles consisting of American Craftsman homes; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
3 | Al Malaikah Temple | April 2, 1987 (#87000577) |
655 W. Jefferson Blvd. 34°01′24″N 118°16′49″W / 34.0233°N 118.2803°W | University Park | Landmark large-event venue; headquarters of the Al Malaikah Temple, a division of the Shriners | |
4 | Aloha Apartment Hotel | December 13, 2018 (#100003238) |
6731 Leland Way 34°05′48″N 118°20′16″W / 34.0966°N 118.3378°W | Hollywood | ||
5 | Alvarado Terrace Historic District | May 17, 1984 (#84000783) |
Alvarado Terr., Bonnie Brae and 14th Sts. 34°02′42″N 118°16′50″W / 34.045°N 118.2806°W | Pico-Union | Historic district southwest of downtown with well-preserved mansions built 1902–1907 overlooking park | |
6 | American Trona Corporation Building | August 30, 1984 (#84000785) |
Pacific Ave. 33°43′03″N 118°17′15″W / 33.7176°N 118.2874°W | San Pedro | Industrial building in San Pedro used to process and store salt potash; built ca. 1917; then part of Fort MacArthur. | |
7 | Andalusia | August 21, 2003 (#03000775) |
1471-1475 Havenhurst Dr. 34°05′50″N 118°22′03″W / 34.0972°N 118.3676°W | Hollywood | Courtyard apartment building designed by Arthur and Nina Zwebell in Hollywood | |
8 | Eddie "Rochester" Anderson House | May 26, 2020 (#100005219) |
1932 Rochester Cir. 34°01′16″N 118°18′54″W / 34.0211°N 118.3150°W | Exposition Park | Custom built home of actor Eddie "Rochester" Anderson | |
9 | Angels Flight Railway | October 13, 2000 (#00001168) |
Hill St. 34°03′04″N 118°14′59″W / 34.0511°N 118.2498°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Landmark funicular railway in the Bunker Hill district of Los Angeles | |
10 | Angeles Mesa Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001005) |
2700 W. 52nd 33°59′42″N 118°19′22″W / 33.9950°N 118.3228°W | Crenshaw | Branch library; built in 1929; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System Thematic Resource (TR) | |
11 | Angelus Funeral Home | March 19, 2009 (#09000146) |
1010 E. Jefferson Blvd. 34°00′43″N 118°15′28″W / 34.011964°N 118.257842°W | South Los Angeles | First black-owned business incorporated in California; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
12 | Angelus Temple | April 27, 1992 (#92001875) |
1100 Glendale Blvd. 34°04′34″N 118°15′40″W / 34.0761°N 118.2611°W | Echo Park | Church seating 5,300 used by evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson in 1920s and 1930s; central house of worship for the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel | |
13 | Arroyo Seco Parkway Historic District | February 4, 2011 (#10001198) |
CA 110 from Four Level Interchange in Los Angeles to East Glenarm St. in Pasadena 34°03′45″N 118°14′56″W / 34.0625°N 118.248889°W | Downtown Los Angeles to Pasadena | ||
14 | Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway Steam Locomotive No. 3751 | October 4, 2000 (#00001178) |
2435 E. Washington Blvd. 34°01′07″N 118°13′40″W / 34.0186°N 118.2277°W | Central City East | Restored 4-8-4 steam locomotive; originally owned and operated by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway | |
15 | Avenel Cooperative Housing Project | February 27, 2005 (#05000070) |
2839-2849 Avenel St. 34°06′37″N 118°16′03″W / 34.110278°N 118.2675°W | Silver Lake | Ten-unit experiment in cooperative housing designed by Gregory Ain in Silver Lake; built 1947 | |
16 | Baldwin Hills Village | April 1, 1993 (#93000269) |
5300 Village Green 34°01′12″N 118°21′40″W / 34.02°N 118.361111°W | Baldwin Hills | 627 unit condominium complex; built in the 1930s; one of the first new planned communities | |
17 | Bank of Italy Building | July 19, 2019 (#100004191) |
649 S. Olive St. 34°02′49″N 118°15′19″W / 34.0469°N 118.2553°W | Downtown Los Angeles | 1936 | |
18 | Banning House | May 6, 1971 (#71000160) |
401 E. M St. 33°47′25″N 118°15′26″W / 33.790278°N 118.257222°W | Wilmington | Greek Revival mansion built in 1864 by Phineas Banning, the founder of Wilmington; operated as a museum since 1936 | |
19 | Aline Barnsdall Complex | May 6, 1971 (#71000143) |
4800 Hollywood Blvd. 34°06′01″N 118°17′36″W / 34.1003°N 118.2933°W | Little Armenia | Includes Hollyhock House, a building designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and built in 1919–1921 | |
20 | Battery John Barlow and Saxton | May 4, 1982 (#82002200) |
Fort MacArthur 33°42′58″N 118°17′41″W / 33.7161°N 118.2947°W | San Pedro | United States coastal defense gun emplacement; part of Fort MacArthur | |
21 | Battery Osgood-Farley | October 16, 1974 (#74000526) |
Fort MacArthur Upper Reservation 33°42′42″N 118°17′46″W / 33.7116°N 118.2961°W | San Pedro | United States coastal defense gun emplacement; part of Fort MacArthur | |
22 | Susana Machado Bernard House and Barn | September 4, 1979 (#79000482) |
845 S. Lake St. 34°03′15″N 118°16′48″W / 34.0542°N 118.2799°W | Pico-Union | Gothic Revival mansion in Pico-Union designed by John Parkinson; built 1901 | |
23 | Beverly Fairfax Historic District | October 4, 2018 (#100002993) |
Roughly bounded by N. Gardner & Vista Sts., Beverley Blvd., Rosewood, Melrose & N. Fairfax Aves. 34°04′49″N 118°21′20″W / 34.0802°N 118.3555°W | Fairfax District | ||
24 | Board of Trade Building | January 24, 2008 (#07001439) |
111 W. 7th St. 34°02′39″N 118°15′05″W / 34.0441°N 118.2514°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Beaux-Arts high-rise designed by Claud Beelman used as headquarters for California Stock Exchange starting in 1930 | |
25 | Bolton Hall | November 23, 1971 (#71000159) |
10116 Commerce Ave. 34°15′10″N 118°17′19″W / 34.2528°N 118.2886°W | Tujunga | Built in 1913 as the community center for a Utopian community; later used as Tujunga City Hall, and a local history museum | |
26 | Boulevard Heights Historic District | September 25, 2012 (#12000809) |
658-899 S. Bronson Ave. 34°03′31″N 118°19′10″W / 34.0587°N 118.3195°W | Wilshire Park | ||
27 | Boyle Hotel – Cummings Block | July 23, 2013 (#13000509) |
101-105 N. Boyle Ave. 34°02′51″N 118°13′12″W / 34.0474°N 118.2201°W | Boyle Heights | ||
28 | Bradbury Building | July 14, 1971 (#71000144) |
304 S. Broadway 34°03′02″N 118°14′50″W / 34.0506°N 118.2472°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Architectural landmark; built in 1893 | |
29 | Bradbury House | March 10, 2010 (#10000110) |
102 Ocean Way 34°01′39″N 118°31′01″W / 34.0274°N 118.5169°W | Pacific Palisades | ||
30 | The Bricker Building | January 7, 2011 (#10001119) |
1671 N. Western Ave. 34°06′04″N 118°18′34″W / 34.1011°N 118.3094°W | Hollywood | ||
31 | Eugene W. Britt House | May 17, 1979 (#79000483) |
2141 W. Adams Blvd. 34°01′59″N 118°18′44″W / 34.0331°N 118.3122°W | West Adams | Colonial Revival mansion built in 1910 in West Adams now headquarters of the LA84 Foundation and the world's premier sports library | |
32 | Broadway Theater and Commercial District | May 9, 1979 (#79000484) |
300-849 S. Broadway; also 242, 248-260, 249-259, 900-911, 908-910, 921-937, and 930-947 S. Broadway 34°02′48″N 118°15′04″W / 34.0467°N 118.2511°W | Downtown Los Angeles | First and largest historic theater district on the National Register; with 12 movie palaces in 6 blocks, the largest concentration of movie palaces in the United States. Second set of addresses represents a boundary increase of April 12, 2002 | |
33 | Brockman Building and New York Cloak and Suit House (annex) | May 21, 2009 (#08001276) |
520 W. 7th St. and 708 S. Grand Ave. 34°02′49″N 118°15′24″W / 34.0469°N 118.2566°W | Downtown Los Angeles | The Brockman Building is a 12-story Classical and Romanesque Revival building located in Downtown Los Angeles. Built in 1912, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2009. It is currently home to an 80 unit condo complex on the top 11 floors, and the restaurant Bottega Louie sits on the 1st floor. | |
34 | Brown Beret Headquarters | October 30, 2020 (#100002654) |
2639-41 East 4th St. 34°02′20″N 118°12′30″W / 34.0390°N 118.2082°W | Boyle Heights | ||
35 | Bryson Apartment Hotel | April 7, 1983 (#83001184) |
2701 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′40″N 118°16′53″W / 34.0611°N 118.2814°W | Mid-City | Built in 1913, its rooftop sign and lions are Wilshire Blvd. landmarks; also closely associated with works of Raymond Chandler and film noir genre | |
36 | Building at 816 South Grand Avenue | December 2, 2004 (#04001075) |
816 S. Grand Ave. 34°02′50″N 118°15′30″W / 34.0472°N 118.2583°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Highrise parking garage designed by Claud Beelman and built in 1924; now known as "South Park Lofts" | |
37 | Bullock's Wilshire Building | May 25, 1978 (#78000685) |
3050 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′40″N 118°17′15″W / 34.0611°N 118.2875°W | Mid-City | Former luxury department store; completed 1929; art deco style; noted for 241-foot (73 m) tower | |
38 | Ralph J. Bunche House | May 22, 1978 (#78000686) |
1221 E. 40th Pl. 34°00′37″N 118°15′09″W / 34.0103°N 118.2525°W | South Los Angeles | Boyhood home of 1950 Nobel Peace Prize winner Ralph Bunche, first African American to receive the award | |
39 | Bungalow Court at 1516 N. Serrano Avenue | September 16, 2010 (#10000761) |
1516–1528½ N. Serrano Ave. 34°05′56″N 118°18′24″W / 34.0989°N 118.3067°W | East Hollywood | ||
40 | Bungalow Court at 1544 N. Serrano Avenue | September 16, 2010 (#10000764) |
1544–1552 N. Serrano Ave. 34°05′58″N 118°18′24″W / 34.0994°N 118.3067°W | East Hollywood | ||
41 | Bungalow Court at 1554 N. Serrano Avenue | September 16, 2010 (#10000762) |
1554–1576 N. Serrano Ave. 34°05′59″N 118°18′24″W / 34.0997°N 118.3067°W | East Hollywood | ||
42 | Bungalow Court at 1721 N. Kingsley Drive | September 16, 2010 (#10000763) |
1721–1729½ N. Kingsley Dr. 34°06′09″N 118°18′14″W / 34.1025°N 118.303889°W | Los Feliz | 1721 N. Kingsley Drive are historic bungalow courts built in the Bungalows, Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival styles between 1921 and 1925. | |
43 | Cahuenga Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001006) |
4591 W. Santa Monica Blvd. 34°05′28″N 118°17′17″W / 34.091111°N 118.288056°W | East Hollywood | Third oldest branch library in city; built in 1916 with grant from Andrew Carnegie; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
44 | The California Club | July 6, 2010 (#10000425) |
538 South Flower St. 34°05′28″N 118°17′17″W / 34.091111°N 118.288056°W | Downtown Los Angeles | A private club built in 1929-30 | |
45 | Campo de Cahuenga | December 19, 2003 (#72001602) |
3919 Lankershim Blvd. 34°08′24″N 118°21′42″W / 34.14°N 118.361667°W | Universal City | Adobe farmhouse; site of signing of the Treaty of Cahuenga | |
46 | The Canterbury Apartment Hotel | September 14, 2018 (#100002958) |
1746 N Cherokee Ave. 34°06′11″N 118°20′05″W / 34.1031°N 118.3348°W | Hollywood | ||
47 | Capitol Tower | September 26, 2024 (#100010883) |
1750 N. Vine Street 34°06′11″N 118°19′34″W / 34.1031°N 118.3262°W | Hollywood | ||
48 | Foster Carling House | April 19, 2016 (#16000168) |
7144 West Hockey Trail 34°07′17″N 118°20′51″W / 34.121443°N 118.347584°W | Hollywood Hills | John Lautner design built 1947-1950[7] | |
49 | Carroll Avenue, 1300 Block | April 22, 1976 (#76000488) |
Carroll Ave. from Edgeware to Douglas St. 34°04′01″N 118°28′11″W / 34.066944°N 118.469722°W | Angelino Heights | Street of Victorian-era houses; often used in movies and TV; includes house used in TV show Charmed | |
50 | Carthay Neighborhoods Historic District | March 1, 2022 (#100007486) |
Roughly bounded by South Fairfax Ave., Wilshire, West Pico, and La Cienega Blvds. 34°03′32″N 118°22′10″W / 34.0588°N 118.3694°W | |||
51 | Casa de Rosas | July 14, 2004 (#04000679) |
2600 S. Hoover 34°01′48″N 118°16′55″W / 34.03°N 118.281944°W | West Adams | Built in 1893, it has housed an experimental kindergarten, a prep school for girls, the headquarters of the Dianetics Foundation, and the Sunshine Shelter for homeless women | |
52 | La Casa Del Rey | December 13, 2018 (#100003239) |
1516 N Hobart Blvd. 34°05′55″N 118°18′20″W / 34.0987°N 118.3056°W | East Hollywood | ||
53 | Case Study House No. 1 | July 24, 2013 (#13000512) |
10152 Toluca Lake Ave. 34°08′55″N 118°21′05″W / 34.148732°N 118.351316°W | North Hollywood | One of the Case Study Houses | |
54 | Case Study House No. 9 | July 24, 2013 (#13000513) |
205 Chautauqua Blvd. 34°01′48″N 118°31′08″W / 34.029936°N 118.518772°W | Pacific Palisades | One of the Case Study Houses | |
55 | Case Study House No. 16 | July 24, 2013 (#13000515) |
1811 Bel Air Rd. 34°06′09″N 118°26′59″W / 34.102477°N 118.449817°W | Bel Air | One of the Case Study Houses | |
56 | Case Study House No. 18 | July 24, 2013 (#13000516) |
199 Chautauqua Blvd. 34°01′48″N 118°31′06″W / 34.030043°N 118.51831°W | Pacific Palisades | One of the Case Study Houses | |
57 | Case Study House No. 21 | July 24, 2013 (#13000518) |
9038 Wonderland Park Ave. 34°07′00″N 118°23′30″W / 34.116634°N 118.391623°W | Beverly Crest | One of the Case Study Houses | |
58 | Case Study House No. 22 | July 24, 2013 (#13000519) |
1635 Woods Dr. 34°06′02″N 118°22′13″W / 34.100417°N 118.370139°W | Hollywood Hills | One of the Case Study Houses | |
59 | S.S. Catalina | September 1, 1976 (#76000495) |
Berth 96, Los Angeles Harbor 33°44′58″N 118°16′23″W / 33.749444°N 118.273056°W | San Pedro | Steamship that transported 25 million people to Santa Catalina Island from 1924 to 1975; foundered in Ensenada in Mexico, 1997; destroyed for scrap, 2009. | |
60 | Catholic-Protestant Chapels, Veterans Administration Center | February 11, 1972 (#72000229) |
Eisenhower Ave. 34°03′18″N 118°27′19″W / 34.055°N 118.455278°W | West Los Angeles | Separate Catholic and Protestant chapels built for residents of the soldiers' home; oldest building on Wilshire Blvd | |
61 | Centinela Adobe | May 2, 1974 (#74000522) |
7634 Midfield Ave. 33°58′03″N 118°22′16″W / 33.9675°N 118.371111°W | Westchester | Adobe structure; completed in 1834; "Birthplace of Inglewood"; currently a museum dedicated to Daniel Freeman (Los Angeles County), founder of Inglewood | |
62 | Chateau Colline | May 22, 2003 (#03000426) |
10335 Wilshire Blvd. 34°04′11″N 118°25′36″W / 34.069722°N 118.426667°W | Westwood | Apartment building dating to 1935 known for its leaded-glass windows, turrets, and climbing vines giving it the appearance of a castle | |
63 | Church of the Epiphany | January 6, 2020 (#100004857) |
2808 Altura St. 34°04′31″N 118°12′46″W / 34.0754°N 118.2129°W | Lincoln Heights | Oldest operating Episcopal church in Los Angeles; Cesar Chavez gave speeches in the church hall and La Raza was printed in the church basement. | |
64 | Citrus Square Historic District | October 2, 2024 (#100010884) |
Parts of both sides of Sycamore Avenue, Orange Drive, Mansfield Avenue, and Citrus Avenue, from 3rd Street to Clinton Street 34°04′34″N 118°20′30″W / 34.0761°N 118.3418°W | |||
65 | Mary Andrews Clark Memorial Home | October 5, 1995 (#95001152) |
306-336 S. Loma Dr. 34°03′36″N 118°15′51″W / 34.06°N 118.2642°W | Westlake | Large French colonial chateauesque structure built in 1913 as a YWCA home for young working women; donated by William A. Clark as a tribute to his mother | |
66 | Commercial Club | December 28, 2021 (#100007286) |
1100 South Broadway 34°02′22″N 118°15′33″W / 34.0395°N 118.2591°W | |||
67 | Commercial Exchange Building | June 26, 2019 (#100004117) |
416-436 W. 8th St. 34°02′42″N 118°15′24″W / 34.0449°N 118.2566°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
68 | Congregation B'nai B'rith | December 21, 1981 (#81000154) |
3663 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′45″N 118°18′11″W / 34.0625°N 118.3031°W | Mid-City | Oldest Jewish synagogue in the Los Angeles area; Byzantine dome has been a Los Angeles landmark since 1929 | |
69 | Congregation Talmud Torah of Los Angeles | November 4, 2001 (#01001192) |
247 N. Breed St. 34°02′48″N 118°12′31″W / 34.0467°N 118.2086°W | Boyle Heights | Largest Orthodox synagogue in the western United States from 1915 to 1951 | |
70 | Crossroads of the World | September 8, 1980 (#80000805) |
6671 Sunset Blvd. 34°05′55″N 118°20′05″W / 34.0986°N 118.3347°W | Hollywood | Called America's first modern shopping mall; now hosts private offices; used for location shooting in many films | |
71 | Richard Henry Dana Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001007) |
3320 Pepper Ave. 34°05′27″N 118°13′18″W / 34.0908°N 118.2217°W | Cypress Park | Former branch library of the Los Angeles Public Library; the building was turned into a community center; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
72 | Felipe De Neve Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001008) |
2820 W. Sixth St. 34°03′46″N 118°16′14″W / 34.0628°N 118.2706°W | Mid-City | Branch library; built in 1929; named after the Spanish governor of California who oversaw the founding of Los Angeles; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
73 | Drum Barracks | February 12, 1971 (#71000161) |
1053 Carey St. 33°47′05″N 118°15′24″W / 33.7847°N 118.2567°W | Wilmington | Headquarters for the Union Army in the Southern California and the Arizona territory during the Civil War and after; now operated as a Civil War museum | |
74 | Eagle Rock Branch Library | May 19, 1987 (#87001004) |
2224 Colorado Blvd. 34°08′55″N 118°12′51″W / 34.1486°N 118.2142°W | Eagle Rock | Originally a branch library; built in 1915; former Carnegie Library; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
75 | Eames House | September 20, 2006 (#06000978) |
203 N Chautauqua Blvd. 34°01′39″N 118°31′08″W / 34.0275°N 118.5189°W | Pacific Palisades | Built in 1949 by husband-and-wife design pioneers Charles and Ray Eames; also known as Case Study House No. 8 | |
76 | Eastern Star Home | October 9, 2020 (#100004858) |
11725 Sunset Blvd. 34°03′53″N 118°28′15″W / 34.0646°N 118.4709°W | West Los Angeles | ||
77 | Ebell of Los Angeles | May 6, 1994 (#94000401) |
743 S. Lucerne Blvd. 34°03′42″N 118°19′27″W / 34.0617°N 118.3242°W | Mid-City | Women's club on Wilshire built in 1927; includes 1,270-seat theater where Judy Garland was discovered and where Amelia Earhart made her last public appearance | |
78 | El Cabrillo | March 30, 2005 (#05000211) |
1832-1850 N. Grace Ave. 34°06′17″N 118°19′52″W / 34.1047°N 118.3311°W | Hollywood | Richly detailed courtyard apartment house designed in Spanish style by Arthur and Nina Zwebell; built in 1928 by Cecil B. DeMille and home of Hollywood celebrities | |
79 | El Greco Apartments | November 3, 1988 (#88002017) |
817 N. Hayworth Ave. 34°05′11″N 118°21′44″W / 34.0864°N 118.3622°W | Fairfax District | Spanish Revival apartments built in 1929 in Westwood Village and relocated in 1980s to Fairfax District; former home of Erich von Stroheim, Michael Curtiz and Joel McCrea | |
80 | The Ellison | December 21, 2017 (#100001905) |
15 Paloma Ave. 33°59′37″N 118°28′43″W / 33.9936°N 118.4787°W | Venice | ||
81 | Engine Co. No. 27 | September 24, 1985 (#85002559) |
1355 N. Cahuenga Blvd. 34°05′45″N 118°19′44″W / 34.0958°N 118.3289°W | Hollywood | Former Hollywood fire station now houses the Los Angeles Fire Department Museum and the Fallen Firefighters Memorial | |
82 | Engine Company No. 28 | November 16, 1979 (#79000485) |
644 S. Figueroa St 34°02′59″N 118°15′30″W / 34.0497°N 118.2583°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Former fire station converted into a restaurant serving cuisine based on fire station recipes | |
83 | Engine House No. 18 | October 29, 1982 (#82000968) |
2616 S. Hobart Blvd. 34°01′56″N 118°18′24″W / 34.0322°N 118.3067°W | West Adams | Former firehouse built in 1904; designed in Mission Revival style by John Parkinson | |
84 | Ennis House | October 14, 1971 (#71000145) |
2607 Glendower Ave. 34°06′58″N 118°17′30″W / 34.1161°N 118.2917°W | Los Feliz | Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright; built in 1924 | |
85 | Executive Office Building, Old Warner Brothers Studio | November 1, 2002 (#02001257) |
5800 Sunset Blvd. 34°05′52″N 118°18′59″W / 34.0978°N 118.3164°W | Hollywood | Original studio of Warner Brothers and its executive offices during the 1920s; the location where the first talking motion picture, The Jazz Singer, was filmed | |
86 | Exposition Park Rose Garden | March 28, 1991 (#91000285) |
Exposition Blvd. at Vermont Ave. 34°01′01″N 118°17′06″W / 34.0169°N 118.285°W | Exposition Park | Sunken rose garden created in the 1920s, featuring more than 20,000 rose bushes and 200 varieties of roses | |
87 | Federal Building | March 9, 2021 (#100006288) |
300 North Los Angeles St. 34°03′15″N 118°14′24″W / 34.0541°N 118.2400°W | Civic Center | 1965 Welton Becket design; hosts glass mosaics by Richard Haines; site of a 1971 bombing | |
88 | Federal Building | August 17, 2020 (#100005446) |
11000 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′23″N 118°26′54″W / 34.0563°N 118.4483°W | West Los Angeles | ||
89 | Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco | September 20, 1984 (#84000843) |
409 W. Olympic Blvd. 34°02′34″N 118°15′31″W / 34.0428°N 118.2586°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Los Angeles branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco built in 1929; designed by The Parkinsons in a Moderne style | |
90 | Filipino Christian Church | January 4, 2019 (#100003291) |
301 N. Union Ave. 34°04′04″N 118°15′52″W / 34.0677°N 118.2644°W | Westlake | Part of Asian Americans in Los Angeles, 1850-1980 MPS | |
91 | Fire Station No. 14 | March 17, 2009 (#09000147) |
3401 S. Central Ave. 34°00′46″N 118°15′23″W / 34.0127°N 118.2565°W | South Los Angeles | Second of two historically all-black segregated fire stations in Los Angeles; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
92 | Fire Station No. 23 | June 9, 1980 (#80000809) |
225 E. 5th St. 34°02′45″N 118°14′48″W / 34.0457°N 118.2467°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Former firehouse built in 1910 with ornate interior; also served as department headquarters and chief's home; used as location in Ghostbusters movies, The Mask, Flatliners and others | |
93 | Fire Station No. 30-Engine Company No. 30 | March 17, 2009 (#09000148) |
1401 S. Central Ave. 34°01′41″N 118°14′50″W / 34.0281°N 118.2472°W | Downtown Los Angeles | First of two historically all-black segregated fire stations in Los Angeles; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
94 | Samuel Freeman House | October 14, 1971 (#71000146) |
1962 Glencoe Way 34°06′21″N 118°20′14″W / 34.1058°N 118.3372°W | Hollywood | Built in 1922; one of the four textile block houses built by Frank Lloyd Wright in the Los Angeles area | |
95 | Forsythe Memorial School for Girls | June 24, 2015 (#15000359) |
506 N. Evergreen Ave. 34°02′42″N 118°11′58″W / 34.0451°N 118.1995°W | Boyle Heights | 1914 Spanish Colonial Revival building, also known as Presbyterian School for Mexican Girls | |
96 | 500 Varas Square-Government Reserve | March 12, 1986 (#86000326) |
Address Restricted 33°42′43″N 118°17′46″W / 33.7119°N 118.2961°W | San Pedro | Land near the Port of Los Angeles reserved to the federal government in the 19th Century; later became Fort MacArthur. | |
97 | Founder's Church of Religious Science | February 3, 2020 (#100004936) |
3281 West Sixth St. 34°03′49″N 118°17′38″W / 34.0637°N 118.2938°W | Koreatown | ||
98 | John C. Fremont Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001009) |
6121 Melrose Ave. 34°05′01″N 118°19′59″W / 34.0836°N 118.3331°W | Hollywood | Branch library; built in 1927; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
99 | Friday Morning Club | May 17, 1984 (#84000865) |
938-940 S. Figueroa St. 34°02′44″N 118°15′43″W / 34.0456°N 118.2619°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Home for women's club of the same name starting in 1923 | |
100 | Eva K. Fudger House | February 24, 2023 (#100008690) |
211 South Muirfield Rd. 34°04′16″N 118°19′44″W / 34.0711°N 118.3289°W | |||
101 | Garbutt House | July 22, 1987 (#87001174) |
1809 Apex Ave. 34°05′23″N 118°15′45″W / 34.0897°N 118.2625°W | Silver Lake | 20-room mansion with roof and walls built of concrete, steel-reinforced doors and no fireplaces due to the owner's fear of fire | |
102 | Garment Capitol Building | March 8, 2010 (#10000053) |
217 E. 8th St. 34°02′30″N 118°15′06″W / 34.0416°N 118.2516°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
103 | Garfield Building | June 25, 1982 (#82002191) |
403 W. 8th St. 34°02′42″N 118°15′18″W / 34.045°N 118.255°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Thirteen story Art Deco style historic structure; designed by American architect Claud Beelman; construction lasted from 1928 to 1930 | |
104 | General Petroleum Building | June 22, 2004 (#04000621) |
612 S. Flower St. 34°02′58″N 118°15′24″W / 34.0494°N 118.2567°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Highrise built in 1949 as offices for oil company; later converted into the Pegasus Apartments | |
105 | Gerry Building | July 5, 2003 (#03000583) |
910 S. Los Angeles St. 34°02′27″N 118°15′11″W / 34.0408°N 118.2531°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Streamline Modern building in Fashion District originally used for garment manufacture | |
106 | Glassell Park Elementary School | April 13, 2007 (#07000309) |
2211 West Avenue 30 34°06′16″N 118°14′01″W / 34.1044°N 118.2336°W | Glassell Park | An active school located at 2211 W. Avenue 30 | |
107 | Golden Gate Theater | February 23, 1982 (#82002192) |
5170-5188 E. Whittier Blvd. 34°01′12″N 118°09′24″W / 34.02°N 118.1567°W | East Los Angeles | A Spanish Churrigueresque-style movie palace built in 1927; subject of preservation battles | |
108 | Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building | June 26, 1998 (#98000712) |
4261 S. Central Ave. 34°00′23″N 118°15′21″W / 34.006389°N 118.255833°W | South Los Angeles | Headquarters of one of the city's most successful African American-owned businesses starting in 1927; now a child development center | |
109 | Granada Shoppes and Studios | November 20, 1986 (#86003320) |
672 S. Lafayette Park Pl. 34°03′38″N 118°16′57″W / 34.0606°N 118.2825°W | Mid-City | Complex of courtyard-connected structures built in 1927 combining office, studio, and living space under one roof | |
110 | The Great Wall of Los Angeles | September 18, 2017 (#100001602) |
Section of Tujunga Flood Control Channel bounded by Oxnard St., Coldwater Canyon & Burbank Blvds. & Coldwater Canyon Rd 34°10′44″N 118°24′51″W / 34.178787°N 118.414100°W | Valley Glen | ||
111 | Grether and Grether Building | March 27, 2017 (#100000781) |
730-732 S. Los Angeles St. 34°02′33″N 118°15′05″W / 34.042579°N 118.251328°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
112 | Guaranty Building | September 4, 1979 (#79000481) |
6331 Hollywood Blvd 34°05′54″N 118°19′36″W / 34.098333°N 118.326667°W | Hollywood | Beaux-Arts office building on Hollywood Boulevard designed by John C. Austin and completed 1923 | |
113 | Edward Alexander Kelley Hackett House | May 22, 2003 (#03000428) |
1317 S. Westlake Ave. 34°02′43″N 118°16′51″W / 34.045278°N 118.280833°W | Pico-Union | Craftsman-style house built in 1923 | |
114 | Hale House | September 22, 1972 (#72000230) |
Heritage Sq., 3800 N. Homer St., Highland Park 34°05′18″N 118°12′25″W / 34.088333°N 118.206944°W | Highland Park | Colorful Victorian house, built in 1885, was moved to the Heritage Square Museum in 1972; it has been called "the most photographed house" in Los Angeles | |
115 | Halifax Apartments | October 14, 1998 (#98001242) |
6376 Yucca St. 34°06′13″N 118°19′42″W / 34.103611°N 118.328333°W | Hollywood | Apartment building considered "one of the largest and most beautiful" in Hollywood when built in 1923 | |
116 | Hangar One | July 30, 1992 (#92000959) |
5701 W. Imperial Hwy. 33°56′01″N 118°23′01″W / 33.933611°N 118.383611°W | Westchester | ||
117 | Willis Harpel House | April 19, 2016 (#16000170) |
7764 West Torreyson Dr. 34°07′42″N 118°22′00″W / 34.128209°N 118.366734°W | Hollywood Hills West | ||
118 | Leo M. Harvey House | April 19, 2016 (#16000171) |
2180 West Live Oak Dr. 34°06′34″N 118°18′42″W / 34.109358°N 118.311651°W | Hollywood Hills | ||
119 | Heinsbergen Decorating Company Building | September 20, 1984 (#84000873) |
7415 Beverly Blvd. 34°04′35″N 118°21′03″W / 34.076389°N 118.350833°W | Mid-Wilshire | Castle-like building occupied by mural-painting business of Anthony Heinsbergen for more than 50 years; built with bricks from the old Los Angeles City Hall | |
120 | Higgins Building | September 19, 2023 (#100009358) |
108 West 2nd St. 34°03′04″N 118°14′42″W / 34.0511°N 118.2449°W | |||
121 | Highland Park Masonic Temple | January 18, 1990 (#89002268) |
104 N. Avenue 56 34°06′32″N 118°11′37″W / 34.108889°N 118.193611°W | Highland Park | Well-preserved Masonic Temple built in 1923; original Lodge Room with original cherry wood paneling and artwork now used as a banquet facility | |
122 | Highland Park Police Station | March 22, 1984 (#84000874) |
6045 York Blvd. 34°07′08″N 118°11′12″W / 34.118889°N 118.186667°W | Highland Park | Former police station built in 1926; now used as the Los Angeles Police Museum | |
123 | Highland-Camrose Bungalow Village | March 16, 1989 (#89000198) |
Jct. Highland and Camrose Ave. 34°06′30″N 118°20′51″W / 34.108333°N 118.3475°W | Hollywood | Grouping of Craftsman style residential bungalows in Hollywood; later converted to offices for organizations affiliated with the nearby Hollywood Bowl | |
124 | Hogan House | June 3, 2022 (#100007803) |
8527 Brier Drive 34°06′15″N 118°22′38″W / 34.10422°N 118.3772°W | |||
125 | Hollywood Argyle Apartments | December 13, 2018 (#100003240) |
2017 N Argyle Ave. 34°06′27″N 118°19′31″W / 34.1076°N 118.3253°W | Hollywood Hills | ||
126 | Hollywood Boulevard Commercial and Entertainment District | April 4, 1985 (#85000704) |
6200-7000 Hollywood Blvd., N. Vine St., N. Highland Ave. and N. Ivar St. 34°06′05″N 118°20′02″W / 34.101389°N 118.333889°W | Hollywood | Landmarks include: Chinese, Egyptian, El Capitan, Warner, and Pantages theaters; Taft, Equitable, Dyas, Guaranty, and First National Bank buildings; Hollywood Masonic Temple; Janes House; Security Trust and Savings | |
127 | Hollywood Bowl | December 22, 2023 (#100009637) |
2301 N. Highland Avenue 34°06′46″N 118°20′20″W / 34.1128°N 118.3389°W | Hollywood Hills | ||
128 | Hollywood Cemetery | May 14, 1999 (#99000550) |
6000 Santa Monica Blvd 34°05′21″N 118°19′05″W / 34.089167°N 118.318056°W | Hollywood | Gravesites include: Don Adams, Mel Blanc (epitaph reads "That's All Folks"), Cecil B. DeMille, Woody Herman, Peter Lorre, Tyrone Power, Bugsy Siegel, Rudolph Valentino and Fay Wray | |
129 | Hollywood High School Historic District | January 4, 2012 (#11000989) |
1521 N. Highland Ave. 34°05′57″N 118°20′24″W / 34.0992°N 118.34°W | Hollywood | ||
130 | Hollywood Masonic Temple | February 28, 1985 (#85000355) |
6840 Hollywood Blvd. 34°06′06″N 118°20′27″W / 34.1017°N 118.3408°W | Hollywood | Built in 1921 for the Hollywood lodge of the Masons; Included billiard room, parlor, ballroom and lodge rooms | |
131 | Hollywood Melrose Hotel | July 8, 1992 (#92000834) |
5150-70 Melrose Ave. 34°05′00″N 118°18′47″W / 34.0833°N 118.3131°W | Hollywood | ||
132 | Hollywood Palladium | September 26, 2016 (#16000662) |
6215 Sunset Blvd. 34°05′53″N 118°19′26″W / 34.0980°N 118.324°W | Hollywood | ||
133 | Hollywood Studio Club | November 25, 1980 (#80000806) |
1215 Lodi Pl. 34°05′35″N 118°19′22″W / 34.0931°N 118.3228°W | Hollywood | YWCA-run boarding house until 1975; occupied at various times by Marilyn Monroe, Ayn Rand, Donna Reed, Kim Novak, Shelley Winters, Rita Moreno, Barbara Eden, and Sharon Tate | |
134 | The Hollywood Western Building | July 7, 2015 (#15000378) |
5500 Hollywood Blvd. 34°06′04″N 118°18′35″W / 34.1012°N 118.3098°W | Hollywood | ||
135 | Holmes-Shannon House | March 26, 2008 (#08000202) |
4311 Victoria Park Dr. 34°02′48″N 118°19′42″W / 34.0467°N 118.3283°W | Victoria Park | ||
136 | Hotel Chancellor | January 3, 2006 (#05001496) |
3191 W. Seventh St. 34°03′36″N 118°17′37″W / 34.06°N 118.2936°W | Mid-City | ||
137 | Hotel Mayfair | March 18, 2021 (#100006295) |
1256 West 7th St. 34°03′08″N 118°16′03″W / 34.0522°N 118.2675°W | Westlake | ||
138 | Hotel Rosslyn Annex | August 13, 2013 (#13000589) |
112 W. 5th St. 34°02′48″N 118°14′56″W / 34.0467°N 118.2489°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
139 | Washington Irving Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001010) |
1803 S. Arlington Ave. 34°02′22″N 118°19′01″W / 34.0394°N 118.3169°W | Arlington Heights | Former branch library; built in 1926; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
140 | Helen Hunt Jackson Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001011) |
2330 Naomi St. 34°01′07″N 118°15′06″W / 34.0187°N 118.2516°W | South Los Angeles | Former branch library; built in 1926; currently a church; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
141 | Jardinette Apartments | December 29, 1986 (#86003524) |
5128 Marathon St. 34°05′05″N 118°18′36″W / 34.0847°N 118.3100°W | Hollywood | One of the first modernist buildings in the U.S.; designed by Richard Neutra, built 1928 | |
142 | Jefferson Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001012) |
2211 W. Jefferson Blvd. 34°01′20″N 118°18′59″W / 34.0222°N 118.3164°W | Jefferson Park | Former branch library; built in 1923 | |
143 | A. Quincy Jones Barn | December 26, 2023 (#100009646) |
10300 W. Santa Monica Boulevard 34°03′31″N 118°25′18″W / 34.0585°N 118.4218°W | |||
144 | Judson Studios | March 25, 1999 (#99000370) |
200 S. Avenue Sixty-Six 34°06′49″N 118°10′43″W / 34.1136°N 118.1786°W | Garvanza | Fine arts studio specializing in stained glass; founded mid 1890s, still operating in 2013 | |
145 | Kelton Apartments | January 3, 2020 (#100004856) |
644-648 Kelton Ave. 34°03′55″N 118°27′10″W / 34.0654°N 118.4529°W | Westwood | ||
146 | Kerckoff Building and Annex | August 3, 2005 (#05000774) |
558-64 S. Main St. 34°01′05″N 118°14′52″W / 34.0181°N 118.2478°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
147 | Morris Kight House | August 29, 2022 (#100007487) |
1822 West 4th St. 34°03′39″N 118°16′13″W / 34.0608°N 118.2703°W | Westlake | ||
148 | King Edward Hotel | February 1, 2021 (#100006086) |
117-131 East 5th St., 455 South Los Angeles St. 34°02′46″N 118°14′52″W / 34.0462°N 118.2477°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
149 | George R. Kress House | September 25, 1998 (#98001196) |
2337 Benedict Canyon Dr. 34°06′48″N 118°26′05″W / 34.1133°N 118.4347°W | Benedict Canyon | ||
150 | La Belle Tour | January 22, 1988 (#87002291) |
6200 Franklin Ave. 34°06′19″N 118°19′24″W / 34.1053°N 118.3233°W | Hollywood | Apartment building in Hollywood; known for many years as "Hollywood Tower" | |
151 | Lane Victory | December 14, 1990 (#90002222) |
Berth 46, Port of San Pedro 33°42′52″N 118°16′29″W / 33.7144°N 118.2747°W | San Pedro | Second World War Victory ship; preserved as a museum ship | |
152 | Lasky-DeMille Barn | March 4, 2014 (#14000034) |
2100 N. Highland Ave. 34°06′31″N 118°20′10″W / 34.1085°N 118.3361°W | Hollywood | ||
153 | John and Mary Lautner House | April 19, 2016 (#16000172) |
2007 Micheltorena St. 34°05′50″N 118°16′13″W / 34.0971°N 118.2704°W | Silver Lake | ||
154 | Lincoln Heights Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001013) |
2530 Workman St. 34°04′34″N 118°12′50″W / 34.0762°N 118.2140°W | Lincoln Heights | Second oldest branch library in Los Angeles; built in 1916 with a grant from Andrew Carnegie; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
155 | Lincoln Place Apartments | December 22, 2015 (#15000911) |
Lake & Penmar Aves., Frederick St. & alley to S. 34°00′05″N 118°27′34″W / 34.0014°N 118.4595°W | Venice, Los Angeles | Garden city movement housing built for returning World War II veterans. | |
156 | Lincoln Theater | March 17, 2009 (#09000149) |
2300 S. Central Ave. 34°04′34″N 118°12′47″W / 34.0761°N 118.2131°W | South Los Angeles | Large theater built in 1926 catering to LA's African-American community; known as the "West Coast Apollo"; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
157 | Little Tokyo Historic District | August 22, 1986 (#86001479) |
301-369 First and 106-120 San Pedro Sts. 34°03′02″N 118°14′22″W / 34.0506°N 118.2394°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Cultural center for Japanese Americans in Southern California | |
158 | Los Altos Apartments | July 1, 1999 (#99000765) |
4121 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′44″N 118°19′00″W / 34.0622°N 118.3167°W | Mid-City | ||
159 | Los Angeles Central Library | December 18, 1970 (#70000136) |
630 W. 5th St. 34°03′01″N 118°15′15″W / 34.0503°N 118.2542°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Constructed in 1926; third largest public library in the U.S.; designed to mimic the architecture of ancient Egypt | |
160 | Los Angeles Harbor Light Station | October 14, 1980 (#80000810) |
Los Angeles Harbor (San Pedro Breakwater) 33°42′23″N 118°14′53″W / 33.7064°N 118.2481°W | San Pedro | Lighthouse firmly anchored to the concrete block and built of steel reinforced concrete; only lighthouse ever built to this design | |
161 | Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum | July 27, 1984 (#84003866) |
3911 S. Figueroa St. 34°00′51″N 118°17′14″W / 34.0142°N 118.2872°W | Exposition Park | Large outdoor sports stadium; hosted two Olympics; home to the U.S.C. Trojans football team; only stadium to host the Olympic games, World Series and the Super Bowl | |
162 | Los Angeles Nurses' Club | May 11, 1995 (#95000581) |
245 S. Lucas Ave. 34°03′37″N 118°12′21″W / 34.0603°N 118.2058°W | Westlake | Clubhouse and apartment building for nurses built in 1924 by nurses' club | |
163 | Los Angeles Pacific Company Ivy Park Substation | March 25, 1981 (#81000155) |
9015 Venice Blvd. 34°01′34″N 118°23′32″W / 34.0261°N 118.3922°W | Palms | ||
164 | Los Angeles Plaza Historic District | November 3, 1972 (#72000231) |
Roughly bounded by Spring, Macy, Alameda and Arcadia Sts., and Old Sunset Blvd. 34°03′25″N 118°14′16″W / 34.056944°N 118.237778°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Historic district at site of the city's original settlement; includes many of the city's oldest and most historic buildings | |
165 | Los Angeles Union Passenger Terminal | November 13, 1980 (#80000811) |
800 N. Alameda St. 34°03′22″N 118°14′03″W / 34.056111°N 118.234167°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Opened in 1939; combines Dutch Colonial Revival Style architecture, Mission Revival, and Streamline Moderne style; backdrop for several movies | |
166 | Los Feliz Boulevard Courtyard Apartments Historic District | March 25, 2024 (#100010099) |
Parts of both sides of W. Los Feliz Blvd, from Vermont to Hillhurst Aves 34°06′40″N 118°17′23″W / 34.111°N 118.2898°W | Los Feliz | ||
167 | Los Feliz Village Multi-Family Residential Historic District | July 2, 2024 (#100010500) |
Both sides of Vermont Ave, from Franklin Ave to Los Feliz Boulevard 34°06′28″N 118°17′30″W / 34.1077°N 118.2918°W | Los Feliz | ||
168 | Lovell House | October 14, 1971 (#71000147) |
4616 Dundee Dr. 34°07′05″N 118°17′13″W / 34.118056°N 118.286944°W | Los Feliz | International style; designed and built by Richard Neutra between 1927–29 | |
169 | Lummis House | May 6, 1971 (#71000148) |
200 E. Ave. 43 34°05′35″N 118°12′25″W / 34.0931°N 118.2070°W | Highland Park | Also known as El Alisal, a fanciful rock house built by Charles Lummis in late 19th Century; now operated as a museum. | |
170 | Machell-Seaman House | June 23, 1988 (#88000922) |
2341 Scarff St. 34°01′55″N 118°16′46″W / 34.031944°N 118.279444°W | West Adams | ||
171 | Malabar Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001014) |
2801 Wabash Ave. 34°03′02″N 118°11′47″W / 34.050556°N 118.196389°W | Boyle Heights | Branch library; built in 1926; ornamental frieze above entrance; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
172 | Mar Vista Gardens | December 31, 2018 (#100003283) |
11965 Allin St. 33°59′29″N 118°24′47″W / 33.9915°N 118.4131°W | Del Rey | ||
173 | Maxfield Building | September 18, 2017 (#100001603) |
819 S. Santee St. 34°02′28″N 118°15′08″W / 34.040996°N 118.25212°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
174 | McCarty Memorial Christian Church | January 17, 2002 (#01001456) |
4101 W. Adams Blvd. 34°02′06″N 118°19′44″W / 34.035°N 118.328889°W | West Adams | Gothic Revival church of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ); founded in 1932 as a white congregation; integrated and became a multi-racial congregation in the mid-1950s | |
175 | Memorial Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001015) |
4645 W. Olympic Blvd. 34°03′22″N 118°23′07″W / 34.056111°N 118.385278°W | Mid-Wilshire | Branch library; built in 1930; includes heraldic work of Judson Studios stained glass; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
176 | Menlo Avenue-West Twenty-ninth Street Historic District | February 12, 1987 (#87000139) |
Bounded by Adams Blvd., Ellendale, Thirtieth Ave., and Vermont 34°01′48″N 118°17′20″W / 34.03°N 118.288889°W | West Adams | ||
177 | Miller and Herriott House | November 16, 1979 (#79000486) |
1163 W. 27th St. 34°01′50″N 118°17′07″W / 34.030556°N 118.285278°W | University Park | Victorian house built 1890 in North University Park Historic District | |
178 | Million Dollar Theater | July 20, 1978 (#78000687) |
307 S. Broadway 34°03′03″N 118°14′53″W / 34.050833°N 118.248056°W | Downtown Los Angeles | One of the first movie palaces built in the United States | |
179 | Miracle Mile Apartments Historic District | December 8, 2022 (#100008438) |
Roughly bounded by West 3rd St. (alley to south), South La Brea Ave., Wilshire and Hauser Blvds., and West 6th St. 34°04′00″N 118°20′47″W / 34.0666°N 118.3464°W | |||
180 | Mission San Fernando Rey de Convento Building | October 27, 1988 (#88002147) |
15151 San Fernando Mission Blvd. 34°16′23″N 118°27′40″W / 34.273056°N 118.461111°W | Mission Hills | Built 1808–1822, the largest adobe building in California and the largest original building at any of the California missions. | |
181 | Moneta Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001016) |
4255 S. Olive 34°00′21″N 118°16′44″W / 34.005833°N 118.278889°W | South Los Angeles | Former branch library; built in 1923; also known as Junipero Serra Branch; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
182 | Montecito Apartments | July 18, 1985 (#85001592) |
6650 Franklin Ave. 34°06′18″N 118°20′03″W / 34.105°N 118.334167°W | Hollywood | Art Deco apartment building home to Hollywood celebrities, including James Cagney, Mickey Rooney, Montgomery Clift and Ronald Reagan; later converted to low-income housing for senior citizens | |
183 | Frederick Mitchell Mooers House | June 3, 1976 (#76000489) |
818 S. Bonnie Brae St. 34°03′12″N 118°16′29″W / 34.053333°N 118.274722°W | Westlake | Often been used to illustrate West Coast Victorian architecture; named for owner who discovered Yellow Aster gold mine after years of prospecting in the Mojave Desert | |
184 | Mount Pleasant House | December 12, 1976 (#76000490) |
Heritage Sq., 3800 Homer St. 34°05′17″N 118°12′25″W / 34.088056°N 118.206944°W | Highland Park | ||
185 | John Muir Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001017) |
1005 W. 64th 33°58′53″N 118°17′24″W / 33.981389°N 118.29°W | South Los Angeles | Branch library; built in 1920; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
186 | Municipal Warehouse No. 1 | April 21, 2000 (#00000386) |
2500 Signal St. 33°43′15″N 118°16′17″W / 33.720833°N 118.271389°W | San Pedro | Large landmark warehouse structure built in early 1910s at the Port of Los Angeles; | |
187 | Natural History Museum | March 4, 1975 (#75000434) |
900 Exposition Blvd. 34°01′01″N 118°17′16″W / 34.016944°N 118.287778°W | Exposition Park | Opened in 1913; fitted marble walls and domed and colonnaded rotunda; often used as filming location | |
188 | Neutra Office Building | March 8, 2004 (#01000075) |
2379 Glendale Boulevard 34°05′59″N 118°15′34″W / 34.09960°N 118.25938°W | Silver Lake | Office building designed by Richard Neutra and used as his studio, 1950–1970; one of the few Neutra commercial buildings (along with Mariners' Medical Arts Complex in Newport Beach)[8] with his original design intact | |
189 | Richard and Dion Neutra VDL Research House II | May 8, 2009 (#03000774) |
2300 Silver Lake Blvd. 34°05′54″N 118°15′38″W / 34.098444°N 118.260642°W | Silver Lake | ||
190 | North Hollywood Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001018) |
5211 N. Tujunga Ave. 34°09′57″N 118°22′46″W / 34.1657°N 118.3794°W | North Hollywood | Branch library; built in 1930; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
191 | North University Park Historic District | February 11, 2004 (#04000016) |
Bounded by Hoover, Adams Blvd, 28th and Magnolia Ave. 34°01′49″N 118°17′04″W / 34.030278°N 118.284444°W | University Park | ||
192 | Old Farmdale School | June 3, 2022 (#100007804) |
2839 North Eastern Ave. 34°04′48″N 118°10′41″W / 34.0801°N 118.1781°W | |||
193 | Old Santa Susana Stage Road | January 10, 1974 (#74000517) |
Address Restricted | Chatsworth | Route taken by early travelers through the Santa Susana Mountains between the San Fernando Valley and inland Ventura County | |
194 | James Oviatt Building | August 11, 1983 (#83004529) |
617 S. Olive 34°02′51″N 118°15′14″W / 34.0475°N 118.253889°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
195 | Pacific Electric Building | April 9, 2009 (#09000180) |
610 S. Main 34°02′42″N 118°15′09″W / 34.045°N 118.2525°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
196 | Minnie Hill Palmer House | September 4, 1979 (#79000480) |
Chatsworth Park South 34°15′40″N 118°36′53″W / 34.261111°N 118.614722°W | Chatsworth | Only remaining Homestead Act cottage in San Fernando Valley; Minnie Hill Palmer born there in 1868 and lived there until 1976 | |
197 | Pellissier Building | February 23, 1979 (#79000488) |
3780 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′40″N 118°18′28″W / 34.061111°N 118.307778°W | Mid-City | 12-story steel-reinforced concrete office tower; on a two story pedestal that contains ground floor retail and the Wiltern theater entrance; blue-green, terra cotta-covered tower; French Zig-Zag Moderne styling | |
198 | Petitfils-Boos House | February 15, 2005 (#05000049) |
545 Plymouth Blvd. 34°03′51″N 118°19′19″W / 34.064167°N 118.321944°W | Mid-City | ||
199 | Romulo Pico Adobe | November 13, 1966 (#66000211) |
10940 Sepulveda Blvd. 34°16′08″N 118°28′03″W / 34.268889°N 118.4675°W | Mission Hills | Built in 1853; oldest residence in the San Fernando Valley; second oldest residence in the City of Los Angeles | |
200 | Pisgah Home Historic District | December 19, 2007 (#07001304) |
6026-6044 Echo St. & 6051 A-D Hayes St. 34°06′38″N 118°11′12″W / 34.110556°N 118.186667°W | Highland Park | Site of the Pisgah Home movement begun by faith healer and social reformer; closely aligned with the founding of the modern Pentecostal church | |
201 | Plaza Substation | September 13, 1978 (#78000689) |
10 Olvera St. 34°03′25″N 118°14′13″W / 34.056944°N 118.236944°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Electrical substation that was part of the "Yellow Car" streetcar system operated by the Los Angeles Railway from 1904 to 1963
Point Fermin Historic District, 807 West Paseo Del Mar, 3601 Gaffey St., San Pedro, MP100006727, LISTED, 7/16/2021 | |
202 | Point Fermin Historic District | July 16, 2021 (#100006727) |
807 West Paseo Del Mar, 3601 Gaffey St. 33°42′19″N 118°17′34″W / 33.7053°N 118.2928°W | San Pedro | ||
203 | Point Fermin Lighthouse | June 13, 1972 (#72000234) |
805 Paseo Del Mar 33°42′19″N 118°17′34″W / 33.705278°N 118.292778°W | San Pedro | Lighthouse built in 1872 at Point Fermin; now operated as a museum open to the public | |
204 | Portal of the Folded Wings Shrine to Aviation and Museum | March 18, 1998 (#98000246) |
10621 Victory Blvd. 34°11′25″N 118°21′38″W / 34.190278°N 118.360556°W | North Hollywood | Ornate 75-foot (23 m)-high marble arch with mosaic; memorial and burial places of pioneers of aviation | |
205 | Prince Hall Masonic Temple | March 17, 2009 (#09000150) |
1050 E. 50th St. 33°59′51″N 118°15′26″W / 33.997369°N 118.257222°W | South Los Angeles | Local branch of Prince Hall Masonry; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
206 | Ralph J. Scott | June 30, 1989 (#89001430) |
Berth 85 33°43′56″N 118°16′30″W / 33.732222°N 118.275°W | San Pedro | Fireboat attached to the Los Angeles Fire Department; retired in 2003 after 78 years; on display near the Los Angeles Maritime Museum in San Pedro | |
207 | Ralphs Grocery Store | July 30, 1992 (#92000969) |
1142-54 Westwood Blvd. 34°03′36″N 118°26′37″W / 34.06°N 118.443611°W | Westwood | One of the original buildings in Westwood Village in 1929; noted for its cylindrical rotunda; photographed by Ansel Adams | |
208 | Ramsay-Durfee Estate | July 24, 1989 (#89000821) |
2425 S. Western Ave. 34°02′00″N 118°18′34″W / 34.033333°N 118.309444°W | Adams-Normandie | Tudor Revival mansion designed by Frederick Louis Roehrig and built in 1908; bought by Brothers of St. John of God in 1978 | |
209 | Rancho El Encino | February 24, 1971 (#71000142) |
16756 Moorpark St. 34°09′36″N 118°28′22″W / 34.16°N 118.472778°W | Encino | Former Spanish grazing concession, ranch, and stagecoach stop; 19th century adobe and limestone farmhouses still stand near a perennial warm spring | |
210 | Ridgewood Place Historic District | December 29, 2023 (#100009647) |
Both sides North Ridgewood Place, from Beverly Boulevard to 1st Street 34°04′29″N 118°18′53″W / 34.0746°N 118.3146°W | |||
211 | Frederick Hastings Rindge House | January 23, 1986 (#86000105) |
2263 Harvard Blvd. 34°02′03″N 118°18′22″W / 34.034167°N 118.306111°W | Adams-Normandie | ||
212 | Will Rogers House | February 24, 1971 (#71000149) |
14253 Sunset Blvd. 34°03′17″N 118°30′43″W / 34.054722°N 118.511944°W | Pacific Palisades | 31-room ranch house; 11 baths; seven fireplaces; surrounded by a stable, corrals, riding ring, roping arena, golf course, polo field; became a State Park in 1944 | |
213 | Roosevelt Building | July 3, 2007 (#07000636) |
727 W. Seventh St. 34°01′03″N 118°15′23″W / 34.0175°N 118.256389°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
214 | Edward Roybal House | July 10, 2017 (#100001282) |
628 S. Evergreen St. 33°58′29″N 118°22′12″W / 33.974638°N 118.369874°W | Boyle Heights | ||
215 | St. Andrews Bungalow Court | March 19, 1998 (#98000244) |
1514-1544 N. St. Andrews Pl. 34°05′53″N 118°19′16″W / 34.098056°N 118.321111°W | Hollywood | ||
216 | St. Andrews Square Historic District | December 26, 2023 (#100009648) |
Parts of both sides of St. Andrews Place, Gramercy Place, and Manhattan Place from Beverly Boulevard to 3rd Street 34°04′16″N 118°18′45″W / 34.07118°N 118.3125°W | Hollywood | ||
217 | St. James Park Historic District | September 27, 1991 (#91001387) |
Bounded by 21st and 23rd, Mount St. Mary's College, W.Adams Blvd. and Union Ave. 34°02′00″N 118°16′48″W / 34.033333°N 118.28°W | University Park | ||
218 | St. John's Episcopal Church | May 5, 2000 (#00000425) |
514 W. Adams Blvd. 34°01′38″N 118°16′29″W / 34.027222°N 118.274722°W | University Park | Romanesque Episcopal church; built in 1925 | |
219 | The San Fernando Building | July 31, 1986 (#86002098) |
400-410 S. Main St. 34°02′52″N 118°15′11″W / 34.047778°N 118.253056°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Renaissance Revival style office building dating to 1906; part of the Old Bank District loft project | |
220 | San Pedro Municipal Ferry Building | April 12, 1996 (#96000392) |
Berth 84-foot (26 m) of 6th St. 33°44′18″N 118°16′40″W / 33.738333°N 118.277778°W | San Pedro | Built in 1941 as a Works Project Administration project; working ferry terminal from 1941 to 1963 for ferry to Terminal Island; Vincent Thomas Bridge was completed connecting the mainland to Terminal Island in 1963; ferry service terminated | |
221 | Santa Fe Coast Lines Hospital | January 3, 2006 (#05001499) |
610-30 S. Louis St. 34°02′16″N 118°12′31″W / 34.037778°N 118.208611°W | Boyle Heights | Hospital built for employees of Santa Fe Railroad; later known as Linda Vista Hospital | |
222 | Santa Fe Freight Depot | January 3, 2006 (#05001498) |
970 E. 3rd St. 34°02′42″N 118°13′54″W / 34.045°N 118.231667°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Former freight depot built in 1922, converted in 2000 into campus for architectural school; the quarter-mile long building stretches further than the height of the Empire State Building | |
223 | Sears, Roebuck & Company Mail Order Building | April 21, 2006 (#05001407) |
2650 E. Olympic Blvd. 34°01′24″N 118°13′15″W / 34.023333°N 118.220833°W | Boyle Heights | Built in 1927, it was a distribution center for Sears mail order business until 1992; the 1,800,000-square-foot (170,000 m2) complex is considered an iconic landmark of the Eastside | |
224 | Second Baptist Church | March 17, 2009 (#09000151) |
1100 E. 24th St. 34°01′16″N 118°15′22″W / 34.021175°N 118.256206°W | South Los Angeles | Largest African-American gathering place in the western United States prior to World War II; hosted Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
225 | Second Church of Christ, Scientist | April 2, 1987 (#87000576) |
946 W. Adams Blvd. 34°02′08″N 118°17′17″W / 34.035556°N 118.288056°W | University Park | Built in 1910; currently owned by the non-profit Art of Living Foundation. Renovations are underway, and the facility is already being used as a community center and center for the organization's operations and outreach. | |
226 | Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles | March 30, 2005 (#05000213) |
5209 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′45″N 118°20′33″W / 34.0625°N 118.3425°W | Mid-City | Former Art Deco-style bank branch; now occupied by LA City Beat | |
227 | Security Trust and Savings | August 18, 1983 (#83001204) |
6381-85 Hollywood Blvd. 34°06′09″N 118°19′42″W / 34.1025°N 118.328333°W | Hollywood | ||
228 | Smith Estate | October 29, 1982 (#82000971) |
5905 El Mio Dr. 34°06′53″N 118°11′31″W / 34.114722°N 118.191944°W | Highland Park | Victorian home built in 1887 for Superior Court Judge David P. Hatch, who was later a writer on the occult. Later owned by the head of a railroad, and a deputy mayor, and used as the location in the cult film "Spider Baby. The house is also known as "El Mio"" | |
229 | Somerville Hotel | January 17, 1976 (#76000491) |
4225 S. Central Ave. 34°00′25″N 118°15′21″W / 34.006944°N 118.255833°W | South Los Angeles | Built in 1928; also known as Dunbar Hotel; focal point of the Central Avenue African-American community in the 1930s and 1940s; jazz club opened in early 1930s, welcomed Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, Billie Holiday, Lionel Hampton, Count Basie and Lena Horne | |
230 | South Bonnie Brae Tract Historic District | January 14, 1988 (#87002401) |
1026-1053 S. Bonnie Brae St. and 1830-1851 W. Eleventh St. 34°03′00″N 118°16′39″W / 34.05°N 118.2775°W | Pico-Union | ||
231 | South Serrano Avenue Historic District | January 28, 1988 (#87002407) |
400 blk. of S. Serrano Ave. 34°03′59″N 118°18′20″W / 34.066389°N 118.305556°W | Mid-City | Historic district of homes in the 400 block of South Serrano Avenue | |
232 | Southern California Gas Company Complex | June 22, 2004 (#04000623) |
800, 810, 820 and 830 S. Flower St. 34°02′48″N 118°15′37″W / 34.046667°N 118.260278°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
233 | Southwest Museum | March 11, 2004 (#92001270) |
234 Museum Dr. 34°06′03″N 118°12′21″W / 34.100833°N 118.205833°W | Mt. Washington | Museum, library, and archive; collections deal with the American Indian, pre-Hispanic, Spanish colonial, Latino, and Western American art and artifacts; opened at this location in 1914; currently closed to bring building up to modern seismic standards | |
234 | John Sowden House | July 14, 1971 (#71000151) |
5121 Franklin Ave. 34°06′20″N 118°18′00″W / 34.105556°N 118.3°W | Los Feliz | Also known as the "Jaws House"; built in 1926, designed by Lloyd Wright | |
235 | Spring Street Financial District | August 10, 1979 (#79000489) |
354-704 S. Spring St.; also 401 and 405-11 S. Main St. 34°02′48″N 118°14′59″W / 34.046667°N 118.249722°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Once known as the "Wall Street of the West", the old financial district includes the city's first skyscraper and more than 20 other historic buildings along a three-block stretch of Spring; Main Street addresses represent a boundary increase of April 21, 2000 | |
236 | Robert Louis Stevenson Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001021) |
803 Spence St. 34°01′40″N 118°11′50″W / 34.027778°N 118.197222°W | Boyle Heights | Branch library; built in 1927; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
237 | Stimson House | March 30, 1978 (#78000690) |
2421 S. Figueroa St. 34°01′47″N 118°16′30″W / 34.029722°N 118.275°W | University Park | Richardsonian Romanesque mansion; built in 1891; originally home of lumber and banking millionaire; survived a dynamite attack by a blackmailer in 1896; later occupied by a brewer, a fraternity house, student housing and a convent | |
238 | Storer House | September 28, 1971 (#71000152) |
8161 Hollywood Blvd. 34°06′03″N 118°21′57″W / 34.100833°N 118.365833°W | Hollywood Hills | Built in 1923; designed by Frank Lloyd Wright; one of his five Mayan Revival style textile-block houses in the Los Angeles area | |
239 | Strathmore Apartments | September 25, 2013 (#13000754) |
11005-11013 ½ Strathmore Dr. 34°03′55″N 118°27′03″W / 34.065278°N 118.450833°W | Westwood | ||
240 | Streetcar Depot | February 23, 1972 (#72000232) |
Pershing and Dewey Aves. 34°03′27″N 118°27′36″W / 34.057522°N 118.459914°W | West Los Angeles | Streetcar depot at the Veterans Affairs Center in West Los Angeles | |
241 | Subway Terminal Building | August 2, 2006 (#06000657) |
417, 415, 425 S. Hill St., 416, 420 424 S. Olive St. 34°03′00″N 118°15′01″W / 34.05°N 118.250278°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Renaissance Revival building; built in 1925; served as the downtown terminus for the "Hollywood Subway"; currently a luxury apartment building | |
242 | Superior Oil Company Building | February 28, 2003 (#03000059) |
550 S. Flower St. 34°03′01″N 118°15′22″W / 34.050278°N 118.256111°W | Downtown Los Angeles | ||
243 | Textile Center Building | February 15, 2005 (#05000048) |
315 E. Eighth St. 34°02′27″N 118°15′01″W / 34.040833°N 118.250278°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Landmark building in the Fashion District developed in 1926 by pioneering female developer, Florence Casler; now converted into condominiums | |
244 | Title Guarantee and Trust Company Building | July 26, 1984 (#84000891) |
401-411 W. 5th St. 34°02′56″N 118°15′03″W / 34.048889°N 118.250833°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Art Deco style highrise building on Pershing Square designed by The Parkinsons; later converted into lofts | |
245 | C.E. Toberman Estate | September 15, 1983 (#83001205) |
1847 Camino Palmero 34°06′20″N 118°20′57″W / 34.105556°N 118.349167°W | Hollywood | Mission Revival mansion built by the "Father of Hollywood", later used as Vincent Chase's trophy house on HBO's Entourage | |
246 | The Town House | December 15, 1997 (#96000821) |
2959-2973 Wilshire Blvd. and 607-643 S. Commonwealth Ave. 34°03′44″N 118°17′05″W / 34.062222°N 118.284722°W | Mid-City | ||
247 | Twentieth Street Historic District | July 22, 1991 (#91000915) |
912-950 20th St. (even numbers) 34°02′09″N 118°16′44″W / 34.035833°N 118.278889°W | University Park | Bungalow and Craftsman style homes in the 900 block of Twentieth Street (south side only) | |
248 | Twenty-eighth Street YMCA | March 17, 2009 (#09000145) |
1006 E. 28th St. 34°01′02″N 118°15′26″W / 34.017139°N 118.257342°W | South Los Angeles | Also known as the "Colored YMCA"; provided gymnasium and swimming pool to African-American community in segregated LA; part of the African Americans in Los Angeles MPS | |
249 | US Court House and Post Office | February 9, 2006 (#06000001) |
312 N. Spring St. 34°03′18″N 118°14′33″W / 34.055053°N 118.242481°W | Downtown Los Angeles | National Historic Landmark designation October 16, 2012[9] | |
250 | US Post Office-Hollywood Station | January 11, 1985 (#85000130) |
1615 N. Wilcox Ave. 34°06′00″N 118°19′50″W / 34.1°N 118.330556°W | Hollywood | WPA commissioned art deco Post Office Building; designed by Claud Beelman in 1937; dead letter repository for love letters to such Hollywood luminaries as Clark Gable, Judy Garland, and others; part of the US Post Office in California 1900-1941 TR | |
251 | US Post Office-Los Angeles Terminal Annex | January 11, 1985 (#85000131) |
900 Alameda St. 34°03′30″N 118°14′07″W / 34.058333°N 118.235278°W | Downtown Los Angeles | Mission Revival building designed by Gilbert Stanley Underwood; LA's central mail processing facility from 1940 to 1989; part of the US Post Office in California 1900-1941 TR | |
252 | US Post Office-San Pedro Main | January 11, 1985 (#85000132) |
839 S. Beacon St. 33°44′11″N 118°16′47″W / 33.736389°N 118.279722°W | San Pedro | Historic Streamline Moderne Post Office built in 1935 as a Works Project Administration project | |
253 | University of Southern California Historic District | July 14, 2015 (#15000408) |
Roughly bounded by W. Jefferson & W. Exposition Blvds., S. Figueroa St. & McClintock Ave. 34°01′14″N 118°17′05″W / 34.0206°N 118.2846°W | University Park | ||
254 | Van Buren Place Historic District | August 10, 1989 (#89001103) |
2620-2657 Van Buren Pl. 34°01′55″N 118°17′45″W / 34.031944°N 118.295833°W | Adams-Normandie | Craftsman style homes built from 1903 to 1916 in 2600 block of Van Buren Place | |
255 | Van Nuys Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001019) |
14553 Sylvan Way 34°11′05″N 118°26′59″W / 34.184722°N 118.449722°W | Van Nuys | Former branch library; built in 1926; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
256 | Venice Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001020) |
610 California Ave. 33°59′28″N 118°28′29″W / 33.991111°N 118.474722°W | Venice | Former branch library; built in 1930; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
257 | Venice Canal Historic District | August 30, 1982 (#82002193) |
Roughly bounded by Grand, Carroll, Eastern, and Sherman canals 33°59′01″N 118°27′55″W / 33.983611°N 118.465278°W | Venice | Noteworthy for its man-made canals; built in 1905 by developer Abbott Kinney; "Venice in America" | |
258 | Venice of America House | April 9, 2001 (#00001623) |
1223 Cabrillo Ave. 33°59′26″N 118°28′04″W / 33.990556°N 118.467778°W | Venice | ||
259 | Vermont Square Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001022) |
1201 W. 48th 33°59′59″N 118°17′42″W / 33.999722°N 118.295°W | South Los Angeles | Oldest branch library; built in 1913; surviving example of a Carnegie library; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
260 | View Park Historic District | July 12, 2016 (#16000434) |
Roughly bounded by Mt. Vernon, Enoro, Northland & Northridge Drs., Kenway S. Victoria & Floresta Aves. 33°59′57″N 118°20′58″W / 33.999033°N 118.349338°W | View Park | ||
261 | Villa Bonita | September 12, 1986 (#86001950) |
1817 Hillcrest Rd. 34°06′17″N 118°20′19″W / 34.104722°N 118.338611°W | Hollywood | ||
262 | Douglas and Octavia Walstrom House | April 19, 2016 (#16000175) |
10500 Selkirk Ln. 34°06′40″N 118°26′53″W / 34.1111°N 118.4481°W | Beverly Glen | ||
263 | Warner Brothers Theatre | January 21, 1999 (#98001633) |
478 W. 6th St. 33°44′19″N 118°17′29″W / 33.7386°N 118.2914°W | San Pedro | Historic movie palace; opened on January 20, 1931 | |
264 | Watts Happening Cultural Center | October 23, 2023 (#100009466) |
1827 E. 103rd St. 33°56′36″N 118°14′23″W / 33.9432°N 118.2398°W | Watts | ||
265 | Watts Station | March 15, 1974 (#74000523) |
1686 E. 103rd St. 33°56′35″N 118°14′32″W / 33.9431°N 118.2422°W | Watts | Rail station built in 1904 as a stop for the Pacific Electric Railway's "Red Cars"; only building not damaged along "Charcoal Alley" during Watts Riots | |
266 | Watts Towers of Simon Rodia | April 13, 1977 (#77000297) |
1765 E. 107th St. 33°56′19″N 118°14′26″W / 33.9386°N 118.2406°W | Watts | Sculpture consisting of 17 connected structures built from found objects by Italian immigrant construction worker Simon Rodia in his spare time from 1921 to 1954 | |
267 | West Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Historic District | November 19, 2014 (#14000926) |
11301 Wilshire Blvd. 34°03′14″N 118°27′14″W / 34.0538°N 118.454°W | West Los Angeles | ||
268 | Westminster Place Historic District | November 19, 2014 (#100010439) |
parts of St. Andrews Place east side, from Wilshire Boulevard to 5th Street 34°03′49″N 118°18′42″W / 34.0636°N 118.3116°W | |||
269 | Whitley Court | July 28, 2004 (#04000732) |
1720-1728½ Whitley Ave. 34°06′08″N 118°19′56″W / 34.1022°N 118.3322°W | Hollywood | Cluster of Dutch Colonial bungalows designed by architect Oliver P. Dennis in 1919 and a two-story Colonial Revival house built in 1903 just north of Hollywood Boulevard | |
270 | Whitley Heights Historic District | August 19, 1982 (#82002189) |
Roughly bounded by Franklin, Highland, Cahuenga, and Fairfield Aves. 34°06′27″N 118°20′03″W / 34.1075°N 118.3342°W | Hollywood | Developed in 1920s in hills above Hollywood; once home to celebrities including Rudolph Valentino, Jean Harlow, Charlie Chaplin, Bette Davis, W.C. Fields and Gloria Swanson | |
271 | Wilmington Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001023) |
309 W. Opp St. 34°03′13″N 118°16′06″W / 34.0536°N 118.2683°W | Wilmington | Branch library; built in 1927; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
272 | Wilshire Branch | May 19, 1987 (#87001024) |
149 N. Saint Andrews Pl. 34°04′28″N 118°18′39″W / 34.0744°N 118.3108°W | Mid-City | Branch library; built in 1926; part of the Los Angeles Branch Library System TR | |
273 | Wilshire Vista West Historic District | October 22, 2020 (#100005714) |
Roughly bounded by South Fairfax Ave., West San Vicente Blvd., South Spaulding Ave., and Packard St. 34°03′19″N 118°21′46″W / 34.0552°N 118.3629°W | Mid-Wilshire | ||
274 | Warren Wilson Beach House | July 17, 1986 (#86001666) |
15 Thirtieth St. 33°58′47″N 118°27′57″W / 33.9797°N 118.4658°W | Venice | ||
275 | Winona Boulevard Mid-Century Modern Historic District | March 25, 2024 (#100010100) |
Both sides Winona Boulevard, Franklin Avenue to Hollywood Boulevard 34°06′14″N 118°18′08″W / 34.1038°N 118.3021°W | |||
276 | Westlake Theatre | January 7, 2010 (#09001200) |
634-642 S. Alvarado St. 34°03′31″N 118°16′32″W / 34.0585°N 118.2755°W | Westlake | Designed by architect Richard M. Bates in the Mission/Spanish Colonial Revival style, updated by architect S. Charles Lee. Extant mural by Anthony Heinsbergen, rooftop neon sign.[10] | |
277 | Wilton Historic District | July 24, 1979 (#79000490) |
S. Wilton Pl., S. Wilton Dr., and Ridgewood Pl. 34°04′16″N 118°18′47″W / 34.0711°N 118.3131°W | Mid-City | ||
278 | Woman's Club of Hollywood | December 27, 2016 (#16000883) |
1741-1749 N. La Brea Ave. 34°06′10″N 118°20′45″W / 34.1029°N 118.3457°W | Hollywood | ||
279 | Women's Twentieth Century Club of Eagle Rock | July 30, 2013 (#13000551) |
5105 Hermosa Ave. 34°08′22″N 118°12′27″W / 34.1395°N 118.2075°W | Eagle Rock | ||
280 | Yamashiro Historic District | September 25, 2012 (#12000811) |
1999 N. Sycamore St. 34°06′17″N 118°20′32″W / 34.1048°N 118.3422°W | Hollywood Heights | Built in 1914 by brothers Charles and Adolph Bernheimer to house their collection of Japanese art | |
281 | Young's Market Company Building | June 15, 2004 (#04000595) |
1610 W. Seventh St. 34°03′14″N 118°16′14″W / 34.0539°N 118.2706°W | Westlake | Built in 1920s as a market & office building with marble columns and terra cotta frieze; converted into lofts | |
282 | Ziegler Estate | June 27, 2002 (#02000679) |
4601 N. Figueroa Blvd. 34°05′55″N 118°12′16″W / 34.0986°N 118.2044°W | Highland Park |
Former listings
[edit][2] | Name on the Register | Image | Date listed | Date removed | Location | Neighborhood | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mission San Fernando Rey de España | July 14, 1971 (#71001076) | August 8, 1973 | 15151 San Fernando Mission Blvd. | Mission Hills | Destroyed by the 1971 San Fernando earthquake, and was completely rebuilt. Not to be confused with the Convento co-located at the site, which was listed on the Register in 1988. | |
2 | Pan-Pacific Auditorium | June 16, 1978 (#78000688) | September 27, 1989 | 7600 W. Beverly Blvd. | Fairfax District | Destroyed by fire May 24, 1989 |
See also
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Register of Historic Places in Los Angeles, California.
- List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments
- California Historical Landmarks in Los Angeles County, California
- List of National Historic Landmarks in California
- National Register of Historic Places listings in California
References
[edit]- ^ National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions", retrieved November 29, 2024.
- ^ a b Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 24, 2008.
- ^ The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- ^ Geocode coordinates derived from NRHP nomination form.
- ^ Geocode coordinates derived from NRHP nomination form.
- ^ "Home of the Day: John Lautner's Foster Carling House". June 19, 2014. Archived from the original on February 29, 2016.
- ^ Nguyen, Lilly (November 30, 2023). "Building designed by architect Richard Neutra preserved in Newport Beach". Daily Pilot. Retrieved December 5, 2023.
- ^ "Weekly list of actions taken on properties: 10/22/12 through 10/27/12". National Park Service. November 2, 2012. Retrieved November 4, 2012.
- ^ Office of Historic Resources, Newsletter, April 2010.
External links
[edit]Categories:
- National Register of Historic Places in Los Angeles
- Lists of National Register of Historic Places in California by populated place
- Los Angeles-related lists
- Buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in Los Angeles
- History of Los Angeles
- Lists of National Register of Historic Places by populated place