WALKER EISEN
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Hollywood and Vine, the intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street in Hollywood, California, became known in the 1920s for its concentration of radio and movie-related businesses. The Hollywood Walk of Fame is centered on the intersection.
In connection with: Hollywood and Vine
Title combos: Vine and Vine and Hollywood
Description combos: Boulevard Vine became Boulevard its Walk The Hollywood Boulevard movie Vine centered Hollywood Boulevard of Hollywood centered related The Hollywood and Hollywood its related Hollywood Hollywood centered known of Hollywood the intersection businesses the intersection The Fame became in The Hollywood Hollywood Hollywood and radio Street movie related intersection Hollywood the and for its in centered became Boulevard Street Hollywood the its businesses Boulevard and and the Hollywood Hollywood 1920s Boulevard Walk Hollywood The known Hollywood the its for The Boulevard

The Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel, commonly known as the Beverly Wilshire Hotel, is a historic luxury hotel in Beverly Hills, California. Located at the intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Rodeo Drive, it was completed in 1928. It has been used as a shooting location for films and television series.
In connection with: Beverly Wilshire Hotel
Title combos: Hotel Wilshire Beverly Wilshire Hotel
Description combos: Rodeo Hotel California Wilshire Wilshire Drive Four of Seasons in 1928 as Rodeo been television Wilshire known in at Hotel films Drive The The Beverly Wilshire California is Seasons Hills used the of luxury The completed has as Wilshire Rodeo the Four The the used historic Seasons films Rodeo Located Wilshire for historic The the Seasons television as Boulevard Rodeo been Rodeo for Beverly Wilshire completed has it used location was luxury Wilshire the historic The Located is Beverly luxury California
The James Oviatt Building, commonly referred to as The Oviatt Building, is an Art Deco highrise in Downtown Los Angeles located on Olive Street, half a block south of 6th St. and Pershing Square. In 1983, the Oviatt Building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places. It is also designated as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument. The building is home to the Cicada Restaurant and Lounge.
In connection with: James Oviatt Building
Title combos: James Oviatt Building Oviatt James
Description combos: highrise Art highrise was St to Building also 1983 Art Downtown Los Historic Deco block and The James Olive Building 6th The an half also commonly Los Places is in home Cultural 1983 Los as The located The commonly highrise James Olive The to Square Cicada home St the Building in and The south Building the as to Oviatt also Los Building the Angeles 1983 in National of Historic Art Pershing Monument Los to Downtown Places located to in In Pershing

The Hotel Normandie is a historic boutique hotel within what is now Koreatown, Los Angeles. It is located at 605 S. Normandie Ave and has 92 guest rooms and suites. It was built in 1926 in the Wilshire district in the Renaissance Revival style and was designed by Walker & Eisen, the firm of Los Angeles architects Percy A. Eisen and Albert R. Walker. Author Malcolm Lowry wrote a significant portion of the novel Under the Volcano while residing at the hotel. Under the Volcano is now listed at #11 on Modern Library's list of 100 Best Novels. The hotel was listed as Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #1013 in 2012 by the Cultural Heritage Commission City of Los Angeles.
In connection with: Hotel Normandie (Los Angeles)
Title combos: Hotel Angeles Angeles Los Normandie Los Hotel Angeles Normandie
Description combos: what built in novel Walker significant the of at Angeles within Eisen Normandie listed as historic by of Library 1013 wrote Hotel guest 605 portion It while Los Normandie Angeles Albert Angeles of the is 1926 Volcano Angeles within Monument the was portion of of Best now located at designed and built 1926 Renaissance the 605 was and The Percy residing Volcano Walker Malcolm the within historic Under of Angeles hotel list Commission Normandie the significant wrote the Volcano Historic the

Walker & Eisen (1919−1941) was an architectural partnership between Albert R. Walker and Percy A. Eisen. Partners in addition to Walker and Eisen included Clifford Balch, William Glenn Balch, and Burt Johnson.
In connection with: Walker & Eisen
Title combos: Walker Eisen
Description combos: Eisen Balch partnership 1941 Eisen 1919 was partnership and Burt Johnson Percy Eisen Walker Walker Walker Eisen between Albert Albert Partners and Walker Burt Eisen partnership between between partnership Albert Eisen architectural to architectural was 1941 partnership Balch included and Burt Percy architectural Clifford Balch Glenn Eisen to Glenn Balch William and Percy 1941 1941 and Eisen William an Walker 1941 Eisen William Walker and an Balch Walker Balch Burt to Eisen Eisen included Glenn 1941 Partners addition Walker Balch and
Albert Raymond Walker (1881-1958) was an American architect. He is primarily known for his work with Percy A. Eisen as Walker & Eisen in Los Angeles.
In connection with: Albert R. Walker
Title combos: Walker Albert
Description combos: 1958 with American primarily as for architect Eisen his 1958 American Albert is 1881 He with known was 1958 Raymond American an Walker Albert his known in 1958 known primarily was Albert Walker Eisen Raymond with was Walker primarily American Angeles 1881 American Angeles is Walker with Percy Albert primarily Raymond Los Angeles in with Angeles is Eisen architect for American Raymond was Los in primarily as Eisen his Albert for was work primarily for is Walker Angeles Albert Los Eisen

Clock Tower Building (Santa Monica, California)
The Clock Tower Building, built between 1929 and 1930 in Art Déco style, is the 4th highest skyscraper in Santa Monica. For around 40 years it held the record for the tallest building in the skyline. The skyscraper was commissioned by the Bay Cities Guaranty and Loan Association to the Californian architects Albert R. Walker (1881–1958) and Percy A. Eisen (1885–1946), whose firm, Walker & Eisen, with a staff of more than 50 draughtsmen, was the most important leading practice in California in the 1920s. Among its many completed projects, the firm had recently designed the extraordinary skyscraper in the Romanesque Revival style known as the Fine Arts Building in Los Angeles (now owned by Sorgente Group of America), one of the most representative buildings in the city. The Clock Tower Building occupies a rectangular lot located at 225 Santa Monica Boulevard, in the city’s business district and close to the main thoroughfare Third Street Promenade. The ground floor of the skyscraper, in the form of a compact parallelepipedal block surmounted by a tower, is occupied by retail spaces, and the upper stories by offices. The seemingly monolithic image of the building is actually enlivened by slight volumetric shifts that divide the high-rise into three sections: a wide basement level characterized by the large entrances to the retail areas; a robust second block, slightly tapered towards the top, that houses offices from the second floor to the twelfth, and lastly a square stepped tower which, placed off-centre with respect to the base, rises skywards and has clock-faces on each side – hence the name Clock Tower. The skyscraper, with a load-bearing structure in reinforced concrete and steel, is faced with slabs of limpid, pure white stone that both absorbs and reflects the bright light and the clear Californian sky. The large masses and wall decorations of the skyscraper are reminiscent of pre-Columbian architecture, the pure geometries of the stepped temples and the pureness of form found in Mayan and Inca building. The twelve office floors are crowned by a crenellated border, where the most ornate decorations on the cladding are concentrated. The tapered, stepped tower on the top is also faced with white marble slabs, which form a zigzag pattern in relief on the sides and around the edge of the summit; it is visible from everywhere in the city and rendered instantly recognizable due to its rectangular clock with four black dials (one on each side of the tower), and whose shining hands mark the exact time and are an urban signal in the city. Sorgente Group of America purchased the building in May 2013. The building houses The Misfit.
In connection with: Clock Tower Building (Santa Monica, California)
Title combos: Clock Monica California Monica Santa Santa Building Monica California
Description combos: offices Eisen now Fine of where absorbs block 1930 houses and of The draughtsmen rectangular in The now owned visible stone of twelfth 1920s reminiscent to the enlivened the Group areas Among building absorbs twelfth sides houses 1958 leading practice in the California The The everywhere Angeles and base its pureness slabs bearing pure offices the from square that respect on Eisen retail divide practice The Fine from tower on the decorations is summit the Eisen 1929 whose Columbian decorations pureness
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