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  #521  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2008, 4:53 PM
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Looking at the size of the streets around it, i'm so glad Measure H passed....
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  #522  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2008, 8:16 PM
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From Curbed LA,

Casden's Pico-Sepulveda Project Jumps on Expo Line Bandwagon



Wednesday, December 3, 2008, by jwilliams

Casden Properties is pushing forward with a massive mixed-use development at the corner of Pico and Sepulveda, which hopes to tie into the Sepulveda Station of the Expo Line - Phase II. The project application, filed on November 14, identifies 538 proposed apartment units with an affordable housing component, and "266,800 square feet of retail uses over five levels of subterranean parking..." Among the retail tenants moving in will be a big new Target. One reader emailed us awhile ago about the project noting that it will convert some of that precious industrial land into housing, among other concerns.

"This project is right near the freeway; I didn't think the State of California allowed construction of homes near freeways. Also, what about the preservation of industrial land in Los Angeles? I thought the Planning Department just put out a study in which the confirm their pledge to preserve the industrial land, especially light industrial, which has very flexible use. Not to mention the gridlock."
Based on all the entitlements requested (zone change, alcohol permit, general plan amendment, density bonus and site plan review) we're guessing this project has a long ways to go before any ground can be broken - at least two years worth of hearings and studies. And let's not forget the crappy economy.
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  #523  
Old Posted Dec 4, 2008, 11:28 PM
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From Curbed LA,

New View-Blocking Tower Planned for Howard Hughes Center

Thursday, December 4, 2008, by jwilliams



You got to feel bad for the poor residents of the Westchester Bluffs. When they're not coughing up dust from Playa Vista, they're getting peed on by drunken Loyola Marymount students. And now the bastards at the Howard Hughes Center are erecting a twenty-four story condo tower to ruin their northerly views. Gary Walker of The Argonaut reports that plans for a 24 story apartment tower at 6055 Center Drive and a smaller 7 story tower at 6040 Center Drive are quickly making their way through the planning department, to the chagrin of Westchester Bluffers who can't takes no more:

The possibility of having another high-rise in close proximity to them has upset some Westchester homeowners who live in the bluffs that overlook the area.

"The cumulative development that surrounds us is a very big concern to me and many of my neighbors," said Myra Kriwanek, who has lived on the bluffs for over 25 years. "So there is definitely a need for more responsible development that does not negatively impact our quality of life."


The Entrada Tower project site — a proposed 12-story, 176-foot-high office complex next to the Radisson Hotel — that is in Culver City, but within a few feet of the Los Angeles border, would be in direct view of many of the hilltop residents in Westchester. Kriwanek and many of her neighbors say that the tower would obstruct the northern view of many of those who live in the bluffs, which was a prime reason that some purchased homes there more than three decades ago.
"It's really starting to look like an oasis surrounded by development," Kriwanek lamented. "And it's getting more difficult to get off."

A hearing notice about the project, forwarded to Curbed by reader Will Campbell in November, indicated that the seven story building at 6040 Center Dr. will contain 325 apartment units and 1,500 square feet of retail. The 24 story tower at 6055 Center Dr. will contain 275 condominium units. The project is being developed by Equity Office Properties and will be "part of the build out" of Howard Hughes Center, that will include the previously discussed Gensler designed 5901 Center Drive.
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  #524  
Old Posted Dec 7, 2008, 8:05 AM
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NOVEMBER 22, 2008 | The Century

The Century


From Flickr, by Atwater Village Newbie
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  #525  
Old Posted Dec 14, 2008, 6:39 PM
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On my way to the Beverly Center to take part in some unabashed consumerism, I noticed an obvious facade test in one of the parking lots of Cedars-Sinai on San Vicente. It was glassy, modern and rather transparent.

Does anyone know of a proposed new building or re-clad on the Cedars-Sinai campus?
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  #526  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2008, 8:32 AM
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Here's a recent pic (by me)



from 12/12
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  #527  
Old Posted Dec 15, 2008, 10:55 PM
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nice pic! its looking good.
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  #528  
Old Posted Dec 16, 2008, 5:40 AM
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Wow, they almost look like they're gonna fall down.
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  #529  
Old Posted Dec 18, 2008, 6:38 PM
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Here's some interesting news from today's Los Angeles Business Journal:


Century Plaza Owners Unveil Redevelopment Plan

By DEBORAH CROWE
Los Angeles Business Journal Staff

Next Century Associates LLC, a partnership between Los Angeles based real estate investor Michael Rosenfeld and an entity of D.E. Shaw Group, on Thursday unveiled plans to demolish the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza hotel in Century City and create a $2 billion mixed-use project on the 5.75 acre site.

Next Century Associates, which bought the property for $367 million in June, said the redevelopment should generate 5,000 construction related jobs and at completion the development would employ more than 1,000 people. An economic benefit of $7.7 million annually in city tax revenue is anticipated.

“The Century Plaza project has the potential to become one of the most significant mixed-use projects in the country,” Francis Cappello, a senior vice president in the Shaw Group's real estate unit, said in a statement. “In a period of economic uncertainty, this project demonstrates our high degree of confidence in the city of Los Angeles."

The project, which is being designed by noted architect I.M. Pei’s firm, Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, will feature two towers rising from a plaza. The buildings would include a 240-room Five Star hotel and 163 hotel residences, 130 luxury residential condominiums, 100,000 square feet of office space, 106,000 square feet of retail shops and restaurants, and a spa and fitness center. The hotel would continue to operate as a Hyatt Regency.

“What excites me about this project is the opportunity to reinforce the original design intent for Century City our firm helped create nearly 50 years ago and incorporate new planning ideals that create a lively, eventful and memorable urban experience.” said Pei partner Henry Cobb in a statement.

Approvals are expected to be complete in three years, the partnership said.
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  #530  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2008, 4:23 AM
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Here is the LA Times article and render on the proposed towers to replace the Century Plaza:



In this architect’s rendering, the Century Plaza hotel is at left, but some existing high-rise buildings
in the background have been removed to better show the site. At right are two 50-story towers
that would replace the hotel in a developer’s $2-billion plan.
(render: Pei Cobb Freed & Partners)


Developer proposes to demolish Century Plaza hotel
Michael Rosenfeld, who bought the property for $366.5 million last May, calls for razing the 19-story arc-shaped hotel and erecting two 50-story towers in its place.

By Roger Vincent and Martha Groves
Los Angeles Times
December 18, 2008

The new owner of the Century Plaza hotel has revealed bold plans to demolish the renowned facility and replace it with two sleek skyscrapers containing condominiums, stores, offices and a smaller luxury hotel. The Century City proposal comes during a crushing downturn in both the commercial and residential real estate markets. And the $2-billion plan, which has yet to make its way through the grueling city approval process, is sure to alarm many Westside residents, who say the area is already too crowded.

The 726-room Century Plaza has played host to U.S. presidents, rock stars and business moguls, and served as the location for countless galas and social functions since it was completed in 1966 as the centerpiece of an office, retail and residential development carved out of the former back lot of the 20th Century Fox film studio. For many years the Century Plaza's doormen wore red Beefeater costumes. The hotel's ballrooms welcomed high-profile events, including an opening charity gala in 1966 emceed by Bob Hope, who with singer Andy Williams entertained the likes of Ronald and Nancy Reagan and Walt and Lillian Disney. President Nixon hosted a state dinner there in 1969 for the Apollo 11 astronauts after their successful journey to the moon. In 1995, Hollywood studio head and notorious embezzler David Begelman committed suicide in a room at the hotel. The architect was Minoru Yamasaki, who also designed New York's World Trade Center towers.

The proposal by Los Angeles developer Michael Rosenfeld, who bought the property for $366.5 million in May, calls for razing the 19-story arc-shaped hotel on Avenue of the Stars and erecting two 50-story towers in its place. At 600 feet, they would be the tallest buildings in Century City and among the tallest in the region, with 293 condominiums, 100,000 square feet of office space, 106,000 square feet of retail space and a 240-room luxury hotel. Unlike the existing hotel, the new Century Plaza would actually have a plaza -- two acres of public space with fountains and gardens. The proposal won praise Wednesday from Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who through a spokesman said it could "transform an aging hotel into an iconic destination and a state-of-the-art, mixed-use development in the heart of our Westside."

But the development is certain to face scrutiny from neighbors worried that the Westside is becoming overbuilt. Traffic is already a nightmare much of the time, and city resources such as water and emergency services are stretched to their limits. Some opponents signaled that they would fight to protect the existing hotel. "We're seeing an assault on the '60s," said Linda Dishman, executive director of the Los Angeles Conservancy and one of several preservationists who increasingly are focusing their efforts on structures from the 1960s imperiled by new development. "If you look at Los Angeles in the '60s, the Century Plaza was one of the most significant projects," she said.

Rosenfeld faces the worst climate for real estate since the early 1990s. The D.E. Shaw Group, Rosenfeld's financial partner in acquiring the hotel, will back the new development, said Francis Cappello, a senior vice president at D.E. Shaw, an international investment firm. But the firm is among large Wall Street hedge funds caught up in the scandal around the $50-billion fraudulent investment scheme allegedly run by former Nasdaq chief Bernard Madoff, and has stopped redemptions of some of its funds. Cappello could not be reached for comment late Wednesday, but Rosenfeld said the firm's real estate fund was not one of the affected funds. "This is wholly unrelated," he said.

Rosenfeld has a strong track record in large-scale projects. His real estate investment company, Woodridge Capital Partners, has substantial hotel, residential and office assets in the U.S. and Canada, including a 3.5-million-square-foot, mixed-use project being developed in Calgary. Last year he sold the luxury Carlyle condominium tower under construction on Wilshire Boulevard near Westwood for almost $150 million. By the time the new Century Plaza project is completed in 2015, Rosenfeld said, the economy is likely to have turned around. "This is a great opportunity to plan for the future," he said.

Stan Ross, chairman of the USC Lusk Center for Real Estate, said getting rolling on a major development in the midst of a downturn made sense in some key ways. Developers can negotiate favorable terms for construction materials and labor, he said, and lock in financing at favorable rates if it is available. Under Rosenfeld's proposal, the Century Plaza hotel would continue to operate throughout the city approval and planning process, which Rosenfeld estimates would take as long as three years before demolition and construction could start. He said his ideas to redevelop the site were influenced by a proposal that property owners, developers and planners devised two years ago to make Century City greener, less car-centric and more pedestrian-friendly.

That plan, in the works at City Hall, was the community's response to the recent boom in the construction of luxury condominium towers. The design called for rows of stately trees and a pedestrian loop that would connect the new housing with the vastly expanded Century City shopping center, office towers and a growing number of eateries and cultural amenities. The intersection of Avenue of the Stars and Constellation Boulevard -- with the existing Century Plaza occupying the southwest corner -- was envisioned as the focal point. Ordinances that would implement the plan are expected to be ready for public hearings next year, said a spokeswoman for City Councilman Jack Weiss, who represents the area. Weiss described the proposal as "very interesting," saying it had major elements consistent with the vision for a greener Century City.

Mike Eveloff, president of Tract 7260, a homeowner group named for its subdivision in an area just west of Century City, said he and other homeowner representatives would meet with the developer to hear about the project, but he expressed concern that local roads, fire, police, schools, parks and libraries could not handle more development. Rosenfeld said the project would generate no more car trips than the Century Plaza does now, but Eveloff was skeptical. Moreover, he said, residents have grown weary of the constant construction in a community that has faced more than a decade of building. "The residents of this area already face some of the worst traffic in the city," he said. "And we have the perpetual 'temporary' impacts of construction."

But Rosenfeld said the hotel had seen its best days. "We recognize that the Century Plaza has its place in West L.A., but we also think planning is an evolutionary process and this is an important opportunity that can't be lost," he said. His architect, Henry N. Cobb, said the new design would help Century City live up to its original vision as a dense urban neighborhood with 24-hour living. In large part because it was built in an automobile-centric era, the area has always favored cars over people, a configuration that many say is not compatible with the surge in new residences.

Cobb's firm, led at that time by architect I.M. Pei, was one of the original designers of Century City, though not of the Century Plaza. Cobb said the new design would help connect key parts of the neighborhood and create a gathering spot. "What we want is a space that sort of does for Los Angeles what Rockefeller Plaza does for New York, a place that people celebrate and think is emblematic of the city," Cobb said. "The whole thing is about public life and public space. It will be a place for people, enlivened by shops and restaurants around it."
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  #531  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2008, 4:52 AM
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The hotel should've been included in the design of the towers. I don't see how this is gonna get built if there is so much history to it.
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  #532  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2008, 5:03 AM
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December 18, 2008

The Century


From Curbed by Dakota


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  #533  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2008, 8:48 AM
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I think they should leave Century Plaza Hotel alone. I actually like it. If they really wanna tear down a hotel they should blow up the Beverly Hilton and build those towers on that site. The BH Hotel is a hideous eyesore stuck in the 70s.
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  #534  
Old Posted Dec 19, 2008, 10:27 PM
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the BH Hotel is going through a major remodel since Measure H passed
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  #535  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2009, 7:05 AM
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Scaffolding, Reveals Sexy Red Self
http://la.curbed.com/archives/2009/0..._self.php#more



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Palihouse Vine, described as an "extended-stay luxury, boutique hotel," flashed locals in late November, and now the project--located at 1717 Vine Street in Hollywood--is showing it all off. The scaffolding dropped last weekend on the development, a relative of Palihouse Holloway in West Hollywood. It's not clear how much prices will be at this Palihouse, which'll open this spring, but Palihouse Holloway goes for anywhere from $250 (for month long stays)-$400 a night, according to the web site. (Hey, but all the hotels are on sale right now!)

The concept, for those just catching on, is targeted at celebrities, it would seem, or busy professionals who want to crash for a week or two or six. The LA Times wasn't entirely thrilled with the concept when they reviewed the West Hollywood location in March. So far, this newest sibling gets points for its robin red exterior.
· Construction Watch: Hollywood's Palihouse on Vine [Curbed LA]


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The red sure isn't as bright as it appears to be in the rendering. I also don't see James Dean anywhere.
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  #536  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2009, 7:57 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DowntownCharlieBrown View Post
I also don't see James Dean anywhere.
Supergraphics prohibition ordinance?
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  #537  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2009, 9:27 AM
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and LA continues to be a place where it almost seems like we always have to tear down a large building in order to build a large building. we hardly ever just add new structures here. i'll be sad to see another piece of history go. but that's how it is in a city which never anchors itself to the ground (figuratively and literally). no wonder we still struggle to find our cultural roots - our identity

Quote:
"What we want is a space that sort of does for Los Angeles what Rockefeller Plaza does for New York, a place that people celebrate and think is emblematic of the city,"
oh the irony
and the beat goes on and on and on...
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  #538  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2009, 6:05 PM
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It's hard to tell from that picture, but Palihouse appears to be red-painted stucco. I'll have to check it out for myself to make sure. If it is, it's another sad example of LA fauxchitecture. If not, it's not a bad building.
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  #539  
Old Posted Jan 7, 2009, 6:13 PM
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If anything, it appears more smoother than stucco.
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  #540  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2009, 2:45 AM
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Thanks for the update on the Palihouse DCB. I thought the Palihouse was going to be condos and didn't realize it was going to be a boutique hotel.

I know the back of it has an exposed brick facade (hopefully not faux brick). I just hope the lot next to it with the recently torn down building doesn't become a parking lot. Maybe the Palihouse owners can buy the lot and expand the Hotel onto Hollywood Blvd.
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