Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

Barker Brothers Building

Historic building in Los Angeles, California
United States historic place
Barker Brothers Building
The building in 2014
Location722 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, California
Coordinates34°02′41′′N 118°15′13′′W / 34.0446°N 118.2537°W / 34.0446; -118.2537
Built1909
ArchitectRobert Brown Young
Part ofBroadway Theater and Commercial District (ID79000484)
Designated CPMay 9, 1979[1]

Barker Brothers Building, also known as Sassony Building[2] and The Barker,[3] is a historic seven-story building located at 722 S. Broadway in the Broadway Theater District in the historic core of downtown Los Angeles.

History

[edit ]

Barker Brothers Building, built in 1909, was designed by Robert Brown Young, the architect responsible for several buildings on Broadway, including O. T. Johnson Block, Forve-Pettebone Building, J. E. Carr Building, Lankershim Hotel, Gebhard Building, and more,[1] and built by Clara Burdette.[4] The building's original tenant was Barker Bros., who were headquartered in the building from 1909 to 1926.[5] Upon opening, the building was marketed as "California's largest popular priced furniture store."[6]

In 1979, the Broadway Theater and Commercial District was added to the National Register of Historic Places, with Barker Brothers Building listed as a contributing property in the district.[1]

Barker Brothers Building was sold for 7ドル.8 million in 2013 (10ドル.5 million in 2024) and 8ドル.4 million in 2014 (11ドル.2 million in 2024). In 2016, Satila Studios bought the building for 14ドル.5 million (19ドル million in 2024), after which they rehabilitated it and converted it into offices with ground floor retail. The rehabilitation was part of the Bringing Back Broadway initiative.[2] [4] [7]

Architecture and design

[edit ]

Barker Brothers Building is made of steel, concrete, and brick with a pressed-brick facade. The building originally featured cornice and lugsills, but they were removed. The United States Department of the Interior described the building as "plain but restorable" when they included it as a contributing property in the Broadway Theater and Commercial District.[1] [4]

The building's interior features dark wood flooring and a grand stairway with large-scale archways and wooden columns.[4]

See also

[edit ]

References

[edit ]
Districts and
neighborhoods
Buildings
Government
City
County
State
Federal
Multiple
Hotels
Converted
Original
Industrial
Office
Converted
Original
Religious
Residential
Converted
Original
Retail
Theaters
Theater District
Music Center
Other
Other
Other
Points of
Interest
Museums
Parks
Plazas
Restaurants
Schools
Shopping
Other
Transportation
Freeways
Metro
Streets
East-West
North-South
Intersections
Union
Station
Other
Contributing
properties
Buildings
Theaters
2002
additions
Removed
in 2002
Non-
contributing
Mentioned
but not listed
Featured
architects
Other
individuals
Related topics

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /