Title supplied by cataloger.; Photographs taken for Historic American Landscapes Survey which includes documentation.; Photograph on sheet with 3 other images. Located at 211 W. Temple Street, The Los Angeles County Hall of Justice was built in 1925, designed by the Allied Architects Association, a collective of prominent architects whose other contributions include City Hall and the Hollywood Bowl. The historic fourteen-story building was built in the Beaux Arts and Italian Renaissance style with concrete floor slabs, a steel frame structure, and an exterior of white granite. The Hall of Justice is the oldest surviving government building in the civic center area and was the nation's first consolidated judicial facility housing the Los Angeles County courts, Los Angeles County Coroner, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office, the Los Angeles County District Attorney and the Los Angeles County jail, until it was red-tagged and vacated after damage from the Northridge Earthquake in 1994. It was host to many infamous trials including those for Sirhan Sirhan and Charles Manson and housed such notables as Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel, Errol Flynn, Charlie Chaplin and Robert Mitchum. Autopsies were also performed here including those for Marilyn Monroe and Robert F. Kennedy. After the Northridge earthquake, many attempts had been made to renovate and re-open the Hall of Justice. It is currently undergoing a major $234-million renovation and, once open, will again house offices for the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department and the District Attorney. Exterior view of the Los Angeles County Hall of Justice southeast corner, looking northwest. A parking lot is at the east side of the building and the 101 Freeway is visible in the background.
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;13 x 11 cm. on sheet 26 x 21 cm. Photographic prints
Los Angeles County Hall of Justice Public buildings--California--Los Angeles Municipal buildings--California--Los Angeles Courthouses--California--Los Angeles Jails--California--Los Angeles Eclecticism in architecture--California--Los Angeles Renaissance revival (Architecture)--California--Los Angeles--Italian influences Parking lots--California--Los Angeles Automobiles--California--Los Angeles Express highways--California, Southern Streets--California--Los Angeles Downtown Los Angeles (Los Angeles, Calif.) Spring Street (Los Angeles, Calif.) Aliso Street (Los Angeles, Calif.) United States Highway 101 Allied Architects Association of Los Angeles Positive Image Photographic Services
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