Title supplied by cataloger. The Metropolitan Building, National Register of Historic Places no. 1990001432, was designed by Los Angeles architects Robert F. Train and Robert E. Williams in 1906. The clock tower with its six-foot-diameter clock face was added in 1907. The structure is in French Renaissance Revival style and utilizes pressed yellow brick on the street sides and common red brick on the remaining two sides. The Security Trust and Savings Bank building, known as the Security Pacific National Bank Building, is Long Beach historical building no. 16.52.470. Built between 1923 and 1925, it was designed by architects Curlett and Beelman and is a classic Beaux Arts building. Divided into three parts of base, midsection, and attic, it is faced in contrasting light marble and dark red brick and crowned with a classical cornice. The three-story base has a recessed entryway behind giant Corinthian columns. The ornament is classically derived. Pawn shops, banks, drug stores, and cafes are some of the businesses operating on this commercial district in Long Beach on Pine Avenue north of Ocean Boulevard. The Metropolitan Building, corner of 1st Street and Pine Avenue, has a clock tower. The tall building on the right is the Security First National Bank, originally known as the Security Trust and Savings Bank building.
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;21 x 26 cm. Photographic prints
Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles Commercial buildings--California--Long Beach Commercial strips--California--Long Beach Streets--California--Long Beach Clock towers--California--Long Beach Williams, Robert Edmund Train, Robert F Pine Avenue (Long Beach, Calif.) Long Beach (Calif.) National Register of Historic Places Curlett & Beelman
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