Read the whole article if you can, as it discusses the changing nature of downtown generally and several developments in the works specifically.
Megadevelopments like Fourth & Central are L.A.’s future, some say
The Conrad Los Angeles, a 28-story hotel tower, is part of Grand LA, designed by architect Frank Gehry. (Jay L. Clendenin/Los Angeles Times)
A rendering of the Fourth & Central courtyard. (Studio One Eleven / Adjaye Associates)
Passengers wait at the Little Tokyo / Arts District Metro Station. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
Thomas Curwen
Los Angeles Times
August 28, 2024
When the Los Angeles City Council approved a new community plan for its
historic core last year, the unanimous vote set into motion a radical change
for the city. Downtown, primarily known for its office buildings and industry,
could now be key in solving the region’s housing crisis.
DTLA 2040 — as the community plan is known — will nearly double the area
where housing can be built, with the goal of enticing developers to enter the
market and build nearly 100,000 new residences downtown over the next 20
years. It will go into effect early next year, pending committee approvals and
another council vote.
Even though the megadevelopment Fourth & Central was well in its planning
stages before DTLA 2040 was approved, it offers a preview of how
downtown Los Angeles will probably change in the coming decades.
Critics may oppose its size and scale, but some urbanists believe this type of
development is unavoidable if Los Angeles is to meet the goals of DTLA 2040
and create more housing in a region where buildable land is both scarce and
expensive. “Los Angeles is continuing to follow a trajectory of greater
density, moving from the kind of suburban-sprawl city to one that has
greater mass,” said architect Michael Maltzan, who has worked in the city for
almost 30 years. “That is an inevitability.”
. . . .