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Pacific Palisades Business Block

Coordinates:34°02′50″N118°31′34″W / 34.0472°N 118.5261°W /34.0472; -118.5261
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic building in Los Angeles, California

Business Block building
Pacific Palisades Business Block is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Pacific Palisades Business Block
Location within the Los Angeles metropolitan area
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Pacific Palisades Business Block is located in California
Pacific Palisades Business Block
Pacific Palisades Business Block (California)
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Pacific Palisades Business Block is located in the United States
Pacific Palisades Business Block
Pacific Palisades Business Block (the United States)
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General information
StatusIncinerated in thePalisades Fire
Architectural styleMission/spanish Revival
LocationPacific Palisades, California
Coordinates34°02′50″N118°31′34″W / 34.0472°N 118.5261°W /34.0472; -118.5261
DestroyedJanuary 7, 2025
Technical details
Floor area30,000 sq ft (2,800 m2)
Design and construction
ArchitectClifton Nourse
DesignatedMarch 22, 2010

TheBusiness Block Building was a historic building located inPacific Palisades, California, that was designed by architect Clifton Nourse and dedicated in 1924. The building was 30,000 square feet (2,800 m2) and sat on 36,000 square feet (3,300 m2) of land. The Business Block building was located between Antioch, Swarthmore and Sunset in the Village neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, an area in theWestside of Los Angeles.[1] It was destroyed by thePalisades Fire in January 2025.

History

[edit]

In 1925 photos of the building, there is a small park across the street on the other side of Swarthmore before a service station was built there years later. The park was eventually restored as the Village Green in 1973. This Spanish Colonial Revival-style structure has long benefited from the large adjacent parking lot below Via de la Paz as well as a deep setback in front of most of the building.[1]

In 1982, real estate developer Rohit Joshi made a $4.5-million cash offer for the landmark building. Joshi said at the time that he intended to demolish the Business Block building to make way for a $22-million, three-story shopping mall with an underground parking garage. Joshi would later admit that he was unprepared for the massive uproar from local residents that ensued, which culminated in a massive rally on the Village Green which was organized by Joan Graves, wife of thenHonorary MayorPeter Graves. Mrs. Graves would later state, "We got most of the celebrities in the Palisades organized [including her husband Peter, and former honorary mayors of the Palisades includingTed Knight,Dom DeLuise,Walter Matthau andJohn Raitt], rented a big stage and closed Swarthmore for our rally. We had bands and singers, and speeches about why it was important to save the building—and we made it on the evening news!"[2]

When Joshi ultimately backed out of the deal, Mrs. Graves and her supporters convinced the company TOPA Management to purchase the aging structure in 1983, bring it up to state earthquake standards and give it a new paint job. The following year the Business Block building was officially rededicated and was declared a City of Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument.[2]

2020s

[edit]

In 2020, architects working on behalf of the building's owner, TOPA Management, offered their design plan for a renovation of the building that would include painting it white with black awnings, from its original pink with green awnings. This concept did not go over well with residents across the community.[2]

By 2024, the building held aStarbucks coffee shop location and a local Italian restaurant, among other businesses.

The Historic Pacific Palisades Business Block was destroyed in the 2025Palisades Fire.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abEdlen, Michael (January 30, 2017)."Pacific Palisades Business Block Building Examined".Palisades News. Palisades News. RetrievedFebruary 21, 2021.
  2. ^abc"Bill Bruns Discusses Importance of the Business Block Building". Circling The News. RetrievedFebruary 21, 2021.
  3. ^Lubell, Sam (January 15, 2025)."The Design Legacy of Los Angeles That Fell to the Fires".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. RetrievedJanuary 31, 2025.
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