The Los Angeles Times Building
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The historic Los Angeles
Times Building, located at 1st and Spring streets in downtown
Los Angeles, opened in 1935 and at the time was the largest
building in the western U.S. designed and occupied entirely
as a daily newspaper publishing operation. |
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Gordon B. Kaufmann designed the Times
Building, which won a gold medal at the 1937 Paris Exposition
for its Moderne architectural style. Kaufmann’s
other works include Hoover Dam on the Arizona- Nevada border
and, locally, Santa Anita Park in Arcadia and the Athenaeum
at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. |
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The Globe Lobby is one of the aesthetic
highlights of the Times Building. Its 10-foot-high murals
were painted in 1935 by Hugo Ballin, who also painted
the Griffith Observatory rotunda, and represent some of
the finest murals produced in Los Angeles during the 1930s.
The lobby also includes an historical exhibit showcasing
the first 100 years of The Times. |
Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times