Quote:
Originally Posted by CaliNative
The grand old Richfield Oil tower is unfortunately just out of the photo on the left. Richfield was my favorite "noir" L.A. building. It was especially magnificent at night, with the "oil derrick" spire lit up. Almost 380 feet to the top of the spire. Second in height to City Hall in the '50s. Like someone said, freeway medians were quite primitive and inadequate before the 1960s and 70s.
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CaliNative, are you saying that you actually saw the Richfield Tower
in person?
If so, (1) that's amazing, and (2),
could you describe what the lights on the “derrick” actually did? I've heard the lights were animated, and simulated an erupting geyser - is that correct?
The Richfield Tower is one of my favorite LA buildings, too. I wish I could have seen it - it was torn down while I was still an infant.
Of course, I'd LOVE to see a
movie of the tower's lighting, but I don't know that such a thing exists.
Quote:
Originally Posted by CaliNative
A pity the ARCO towers project couldn't have built around it & preserved it, but it was viewed as an aged relict (as were all the Victorian neighborhoods on Bunker Hill). So it was torn down in 1968/69. "Progress"?
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If the Mona Lisa, Acropolis, and Notre Dame had their home
in Los Angeles, they too would have been considered “relics” and gleefully destroyed in the name of progress. It's a travesty what was done to Los Angeles in the name of “progress”.