The developer wants to revitalize the southern edge of the neighborhood by building more offices and street-level retail. The building would have murals, balconies, and 270 parking spaces.
The Hollywood restaurant’s new owners, who purchased the place in March, aren’t wasting any time. They say their renovations will be based on the property’s original 1914 plans.
Once featured in Dwell magazine, the 8,000-square-foot structure has gone through a number of incarnations since it was constructed in 1939. Right now, it contains two live/work lofts and three retail spaces.
Crimson Holdings is planning two new buildings across from each other on Venice Boulevard with retail and a combined 129 residential units, five of which would be set aside for very low-income tenants.
Will the newspaper ever get Los Angeles right? The latest in a series of blunders is a story about our new light rail line to Santa Monica. The NYT mistakes it for the "Subway to the Sea," then blasts it for not being a subway.
A new report from the city's public works departments says tough restrictions on Airbnb and other short-term rentals passed in October are proving tough to enforce. Right now, nearly two percent of the residential units in WeHo are listed on Airbnb.
The famed gay club might be mostly spared under a new plan from developers whose project once endangered the structure. The club would be moved, restored, and incorporated into the future project.
Plans call for 230 units, plus 16,429 square feet of commercial space, with street level storefronts facing both Wilshire and Wilton Place. The developer, Jamison Services, is working on at least two other developments in the neighborhood.
The John Anson Ford Theatre hosted its first show in nearly two years last night, after a huge overhaul added a new stage, new lighting and a freeway noise barrier. Still to come: a picnic area and food stand. Those should be ready in August.