One of Glendale’s most beloved landmarks received a complete rehabilitation, allowing the story of the city’s aviation history to live on in a new form.
Griffith Park is the heart and soul of Los Angeles and in 2009 was designated as an Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM) to recognize its significance and ensure its long-term preservation.
The Harriet and Samuel Freeman House is the smallest of Frank Lloyd Wright's textile block houses in Southern California. Under the ownership of the Freeman's until 1986, the property gained a rich architectural and cultural legacy.
The last Victorian built on Carroll Avenue and one of the few "Gay Nineties" houses remaining in Los Angeles, this quintessential Queen Anne vividly illustrates the height of late Victorian exuberance,
One of the original Victorian-era homes built during the initial development of the Angelino Heights neighborhood, it is one of three easements held by the Conservancy on Carroll Avenue.
Julia Morgan, the first licensed female architect in California, designed this Mission Revival style building to house the operations of William Randolph Hearst's newspaper, the Los Angeles Examiner.
Built on a lot only sixty feet wide and 160 feet deep, the Mayflower Hotel's exterior is Spanish in style while the interior leans more toward "Pilgrim Revival."