The city’s flourishing restaurant, nightlife, and hotel scene creatively embraces Tinseltown’s extensive historic building stock.
Peyton Hall laughs when he remembers a call he got in 2003 from a developer client fresh off a successful hotel launch in Los Angeles. The developer, whose transformation of a neglected midcentury building into a boutique hotel had turned heads among the hipper-than-thou set, was in search of another L.A. property ripe for reuse.
“We’ve come a long way from 1980, when people didn’t want to touch historic buildings because they were too much trouble and too expensive,” says Hall, who is a principal architect at the Pasadena-based Historic Resources Group, a historic preservation consulting firm. When Hall first moved to the city, interest in local architectural relics was arguably at its nadir. “Now we have a developer looking for them,” he recalls. That the client’s enthusiasm included postwar structures, a style then only tepidly appreciated by the general public, made the call all the more memorable.
Though adaptive reuse may have been a novelty in the early aughts, it is now an in-demand practice in Los Angeles— and one that’s dovetailed with the city’s recent hotel and restaurant boom.
“L.A. has a reputation for being a progressive city architecturally, and a city that’s always transforming itself,” says Eric Needleman, cofounder of 213 Hospitality. Needleman and his partner Cedd Moses develop and operate bars known for, aside from top-tier mixology, their siting in older building stock. “We have an amazing amount of architecturally significant historic buildings. I think people have grown to appreciate what those have to offer.”
Denne historien er fra April 2019-utgaven av Metropolis Magazine.
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Denne historien er fra April 2019-utgaven av Metropolis Magazine.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
No New Buildings
The energy already embodied in the built environment is a precious unnatural resource. It’s time to start treating it like one.
The Circular Office
Major manufacturers are exploring every avenue to close the loop on workplace furniture.
Signs of Life
Designers, curators, and entrepreneurs are scrambling to make sense of motherhood in a culture that’s often hostile to it.
Interspecies Ethic
In probing the relationship between humans and nature, two major exhibitions question the very foundations of design practice.
Building on Brand
The Bauhaus turned 100 this year, and a crop of museum buildings sprang up for the celebration.
Building for Tomorrow, Today
Radical change in the building industry is desperately needed. And it cannot happen without the building trades.
Strength from Within
Maggie’s Centres, the service-focused cancer support network, eschews clinical design to arm patients in their fight for life.
Next-Level Living
The availability of attractive, hospitality-grade products on the market means everyday consumers can live the high life at home.
Mi Casa, Su Casa
Casa Perfect creates a memorable shopping experience in lavish private homes.
Enter The Culinarium
AvroKO imagines the future of residential amenities—where convenience, comfort, and sustainability meet.