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Arts District, Los Angeles

The Arts District is a neighborhood on the eastern edge of Downtown Los Angeles, California in the United States. The city community planning boundaries are Alameda Street on the west which blends into Little Tokyo, First Street on the north, the Los Angeles River to the east, and Violet Street on the south. Largely composed of industrial buildings dating from the early 20th century, the area has recently been revitalized,[1] and its street scene slowly developed in the early 21st century.[2] New art galleries have increased recognition of the area amidst the downtown, which is known for its art museums.[3]

Arts District
The Arts District
Arts District
Location within Downtown Los Angeles
Coordinates: 34°02′28″N 118°13′59″W / 34.04117°N 118.23298°W / 34.04117; -118.23298
Country United States
State California
County Los Angeles
City Los Angeles
Government
 • City CouncilJosé Huizar
 • U.S. HouseJimmy Gomez
Area code213

Early history Edit

Spanish priest Juan Crespi founded what is now known as the Arts District in 1796 during an expedition to Alta California. During his journey, he discovered a body of water that was surrounded by rich soil. This inspired a passage in his journal that states: "Should a town be needed in this location, this site shall be called Our Lady Queen of the Angels." The small pueblo was declared a new territory for the Spanish and was officially founded on September 4, 1781.[4]

Vignes Street is named for Jean-Louis Vignes, an aging adventurer and vintner who arrived in Los Angeles in 1831 by way of the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii) and Bordeaux. He planted grapes on an area span of 104 acres (42 ha) where Cabernet and Sauvignon Blanc vines imported from the southern France thrived. By 1849, El Aliso, Vignes' vineyard named for the sacred local sycamore tree,[5] was the largest producer of wine in California. The grapes are gone, but the San Antonio Winery just north of the community is a reminder of the area's past.

By the late 19th century, oranges and grapefruits had replaced grapes as the principal agricultural products of the area; as such, the property west of the riverbank was thick with citrus groves. The groves provided a location for filmmaker DW Griffith, who filmed parts of Hollywood's first feature film In Old California there in 1909. A print shop became the area's first commercial arts enterprise, employing artists from around the region designing labels for the boxes of citrus fruits shipped across the country.[citation needed]

 
Santa Fe Freight Depot Building

The growing Santa Fe Freight Depot and warehouses created to serve the citrus industry's shipping needs determined the area's economic character for most of the next century and were responsible for the architectural flavor of the district's structures that have survived earthquakes, floods, and fires. The freight depot would later, in 2001, became the home for an architecture school and a building in the National Register of Historic Places, after the school relocated there. Please see Art & Art Related Colleges in this article.

The single-room hotels for rail workers to the northwest, and the growth of Little Tokyo to the west and Chinatown to the north, created a mix of working-class and cosmopolitan.[citation needed]

By World War II, the citrus groves had been replaced by factories and the rail freight business was giving way to the trucking industry. The area had taken on an industrial character that was growing seedy around the edges.[2] Over the next twenty years, many of the small independent manufacturers had either been absorbed by larger competitors, grown too big for their quarters–or simply failed—and an increasing number of vacant warehouse and former factory spaces contributed to a dingy, decaying urban environment typical of many aging big American cities of the era.[6]

In the 1950s, many manufacturing companies moved overseas or were overtaken by larger manufacturing companies, resulting in vacant buildings and the lowering of property values. Artists struggling to pay rent in the city started moving to the Arts District in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Before 1979, the Arts District buildings had been zoned for industrial use only. It was not until 1979 that the State of California passed a live/work legislation[citation needed] and in 1981 the city passed the Artist-In-Residence (AIR) bill. This allowed artists to live legally in the areas that could no longer be used for industrial use as long as they obtained a business license. To make living standards more comfortable the building code was lifted. New regulations had been created and the AIR legislation required the lofts to have room to sleep, a fire alarm, and other requirements.[7]

Art scene Edit

1960s Edit

In 1969, Allen Ruppersberg presented Al's Cafe at 1913 West Sixth Street.[8] In the mid-'70s, a handful of artists, including Joel Bass, Dan Citron, Woods Davy, Marc Kreisel, Jon Peterson, Stephen Seemayer, Maura Sheehan, Coleen Sterritt, Sydney Littenberg, Peter Zecher, and others saw opportunity in the empty buildings and began colonizing the area, converting former industrial and commercial spaces into working studios and living quarters, sometimes renting space for as little as a three cents a square foot. This resulted in a surge of artistic activity, culminating in the highly controversial "Downtown L.A. in Santa Barbara" exhibition, organized by Betty Klausner for the Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, which is now known as the Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara. By the mid-1980s, the following artists were also living downtown: Linda Frye Burman, James Croak, Merion Estes, Joe Fay, George Herms, Mary Jones, Constance Mallinson, Paul McCarthy, Margaret Nielson, Richard Newton, Margit Omar, Lari Pittman, John Schroeder, Judith Simonian, Andy Wilf, and Takako Yamaguchi.[citation needed]

1970s Edit

LA Artcore, founded in 1976 by Lydia Takeshita with the purpose of exhibiting local artists, exists today in locations at the Brewery Art Colony and in Little Tokyo.[9] Lydia Takeshita and LA Artcore are considered the founding forces for the origins of the Arts District.[10] The foundation used to publish the magazine Visions Art Quarterly, which had covered the contemporary art scene at that time.[11][12][13]

In 1979, Marc Kreisel opened Al's Bar in the American Hotel on Hewitt just off Traction. This legendary punk rock venue was the training ground for Sonic Youth, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Beck, the Fall, the Residents, introducing generations of Angelenos to dozens of emerging groups.[14] The popular sound band Party Boys played the bars and art events. Also known as the downtown artists' central meeting place, Al's Bar occasionally hosted art exhibitions. Al's Bar, the West Coast's oldest punk club,[citation needed] finally closed in 2001, and the American Hotel received a facelift in 2012 and was renamed the American Apartments.[15] Stephen Seemayer's film The Young Turks (2012) documents the 1979–1981 years.

1970s-1980s Edit

 
Cirrus Gallery

The Atomic Cafe on 1st Street at Alameda was an artist and musician haunt in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE) created exhibitions at its gallery space, located in the late 70s on Broadway St before moving to Industrial Street in the 1980s. Several commercial art galleries, including Oranges and Sardines, Kirk DeGoyer Gallery, the Downtown Gallery, Vanguard Gallery, Exile, and Galleria by the Water opened in the late seventies, only to close in the early eighties. The Rico Gallery opened in 1988 closed in 1991, Julie Rico Gallery lived on in Santa Monica, CA. Cirrus Editions, the first gallery to open downtown, remains open.

Around 1980, Jon Peterson and Stephen Seemayer opened "DTLA," a club that had exactly one show before it closed, adjacent the Atomic Cafe. High Performance magazine used DTLA as its performance space until its one-year lease was up. In that year, Paul McCarthy performed Monkey Man during the Public Spirit Performance Festival, Part 1.[16] The name DTLA was later adopted by the neighboring coffee house where Beck got his start.

In 1981, the City of Los Angeles passed its "Artist in Residence" or "AIR" ordinance, which allowed residential use of formerly industrial and commercially zoned buildings; artists had long used such spaces as living quarters illegally, and the AIR law sought to bring this practice into legality and regulation.[17] Art galleries, cafes, and performance venues opened as the live/work population grew.

 
The Brewery Art Complex

In 1982, the Brewery Art Colony opened in the Arts District in what was a former brewery building. It was described by the Los Angeles Times in 1999 as “world’s largest art complex."[18]

During the '80s, Bedlam, created by artist Jim Fittipaldi, on 6th Street (and later, briefly, in the former premises of Al's bar) was a salon with drawing workshops, art installations, theater, live music, and a speakeasy. Dangerous Curve, on an unsafe curve of 4th Place between Mateo and Molino, put on exhibitions of artists whose work was often difficult to categorize. The Spanish Kitchen, a warehouse space on Third near Traction, was home to series of happenings, events, raves, installations, and blowout parties. It now houses the 3rd Steakhouse and Lounge, an eatery that hosts community events and exhibitions of works by local artists. Cocola (later known as the 410 Boyd St. Bar and Grill), the legendary artists' bar just west of the Arts District, lives on as Escondite.

In 1985, Fritz Frauchiger curated "Off the Street," a "one-time art exhibition" sponsored by the Cultural Affairs Department in the Old City Print Shop, which featured paintings, sculptures, photographs, and installations by 48 Los Angeles artists, most of whom lived downtown.[19]

1990s Edit

In 1994, the nonprofit group Downtown Arts Development Association (DADA) was formed as a spinoff of LARABA by several artist members of the LARABA board of directors in order to provide a platform for the burgeoning downtown art scene; DADA hosted exhibits of more than 400 downtown artists in 1994–1998. After 1994, the heart of the Arts District was Bloom's General Store, presided over by Joel Bloom, a veteran of Chicago's Second City, who became an advocate for the community and who is remembered as The Arts District's once and only unofficial mayor. (Bloom died in 2007, but his memory is honored with a plaque from the city declaring the triangle around Third, Traction, and Rose to be Joel Bloom Square.[20]) Cornerstone Theater, an enterprise that brings community theater to locations all around the country, resided on Traction Avenue for 20 years.[21] Around the corner, on Hewitt at 4th Place, the nonprofit ArtShare offers lessons in art, dance, theater, and music to urban youth and features a small theater once used by Padua Playwrights. Padua stages plays around the city, often in non-traditional environments, and hosts playwriting workshops.[22]

2000s Edit

 
The former Santa Fe Freight Depot building is now the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc). View facing the institute library.

In 2001, the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc) relocated from Marina Del Rey, California to Downtown Los Angeles, to the former Santa Fe Freight Depot building and has been an anchor for the Arts District.

In February 2020 the website la-artsdistrict.com la-artsdistrict.com was launched to highlight Arts District mural art and artists to the public. It includes a current map of the Arts District and professional photos of the mural artwork found here and in the surrounding downtown LA neighborhoods. The website also highlights local artists with art maps, interviews & photos specific to them.

2020 Arts District mural art.

A+D Museum of architecture and design, which was founded by Stephen Kanner and Bernard Zimmerman in 2001, is located in the Arts District. Natasha Sandmeier was named Executive Director of the museum in 2022.[23]

Landmarks Edit

According to the Los Angeles Conservancy the area's registered landmarks are:[24]

  1. Pickle Works/Citizen Warehouse: 1001 East 1st Street
  2. Challenge Dairy Building: 929 East 2nd Street
  3. Southern California Supply Co.: 810 East 3rd Street
  4. Southern California Institute of Architecture: 960 East 3rd Street
  5. American Hotel: 303 South Hewitt Street
  6. Toy Factory Lofts: 1855 Industrial Street
  7. Biscuit Company Lofts: 1850 Industrial Street

Current status Edit

The city community planning boundaries today are Alameda Street on the west, First Street on the north, the Los Angeles River to the east, and Violet Street on the south.[25] Challenges facing the district today include the loss of affordable live/work lofts, artists, and historically significant buildings.[26] Community leaders are struggling to create balance amidst the economic issues brought about by gentrification and the need to preserve the character of the Arts District as a creative community that has made contributions to the cultural and economic well-being of the city for decades.[27] In 2014, the average annual income for neighborhood residents was $120,000.[28] While the initial decades saw the conversion to residential and commercial uses of low-slung warehouses and industrial spaces, downtown zoning laws could be rewritten to permit the heights of buildings to double, allowing up to 1,500 new residential units to be built in eight-story, one hundred feet (30 m) edifices.[25]

The Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc) resides in a quarter-mile-long (0.40 km) former Santa Fe Freight Depot built in 1907 that has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places. Across the street is a 438-unit apartment complex, One Santa Fe, which opened in 2014 and was designed by Michael Maltzan Architecture (MMA).[29][30]

The century-old Coca-Cola manufacturing plant at 4th and Merrick Streets, around the corner from the oversize Santa Fe railroad dock that houses SCI-Arc, is the latest in adaptive reuse into creative spaces. The three-story brick-clad building was described as the "headquarters for the company's Pacific Coast business and for its export trade in the Hawaiian Islands and Old Mexico" when it was built in 1915.[1] The complex has been renamed Fourth & Traction after Traction Avenue.[28] The Hauser Wirth & Schimmel complex opened in 2016 in buildings that date from the 1890s to the 1940s that occupy an entire city block on East 3rd Street.[31]

The district continues to be a popular location for filming due to its historic vibe. In 2016, the head of the neighborhood's business improvement district stated that "There's not one day where there's not shooting." The popular TV sitcom New Girl takes place largely in an apartment loft located in the Arts District.[32] Filming has become complicated due to the development of the retail sector and residents who will be disturbed by filming at night. Also, many formerly empty lots and streets are now under development where crews used the space to park trucks and trailers.[33]

In 2017 developer Suncal proposed a $2 billion, 1.95 million square-foot mixed-use project which includes two 58-story buildings designed by Herzog and de Meuron. The project, called "6 am," will be located along 6th Street between Mills and Alameda. The live/work space will include 1,700 apartments and condos, shops, offices, hotels, charter schools, and an underground garage.[34] Condos average price will be &1,000 per square foot. New developments have displaced artists since they can no longer afford to be in the Arts District. In 2016 the median price for the property was $714,500, a huge increase from 2013 when open lofts were priced at 370 per square foot.[35]

In 2017, the district received a $15 million award from the Active Transportation Program which will enhance the Arts District with new bike lanes, enhancement of sidewalks, and street lighting. The program will bring two signalized intersections, pedestrian lighting, four pedestrian crosswalks, and one mile of bike lanes. Little Tokyo and Arts District Regional Connector Station have pedestrian and bicycle access with the Sixth Street Viaduct.[36] The bridge, a $588-million span rebuilt in 2022, connects the Arts District to the Eastside and Whittier Boulevard.[37]

Warner Music Group moved into a building in 2019 that formerly housed a Ford Motor Company assembly plant.[38]

Transportation Edit

The Arts District is located near the center of Downtown Los Angeles making it more accessible to alternate forms of transportation. The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) L Line station was located along Alameda Street, though this is currently closed and was replaced by an underground light rail station between Alameda Street & Central Avenue on the A and E lines in 2023 as part of the Regional Connector project. The cross streets are along East First and East Temple Streets. The small neighborhood is also serviced by the Los Angeles Department of Transportation (LADOT) DASH bus making several stops on Hewitt Street.

Additionally, Metro offers a bike share program in many neighborhoods around the area. The following five stations currently available to pick up or leave a bike are listed below.[39]

  1. 740 East 3rd Street
  2. 999 East 3rd Street
  3. 1245 Factory Place
  4. 1301 Willow Street
  5. 720 East Temple Street

There are a total of sixteen parking lots scattered around the Arts District. As the area became a social hub for city folk, parking became an issue to local residents. Public and private lots/structures including on-street parking offer a variety of parking options for visitors.[40]

In addition, there is a proposal to extend the terminus of the Los Angeles Metro Rail's B Line and D Line, both heavy rail subway lines, to a station in order to give more efficient public transit to the members of the fast-growing community.[41] It is currently in the environmental review stage, with a report expected to come out in 2022.[42]

Art and Art-related Colleges Edit

The Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc) relocated to the Santa Fe Freight Depot, a building originally constructed in 1907. The school has become an anchor for the arts district.[43]

Otis College of Art and Design was originally in the downtown Los Angeles area in Westlake, across the street from MacArthur Park. For qualified artists, the college was able to offer faculty positions. In 1997, the college moved its main campus to the Westchester area, near the Los Angeles airport.[44]

An art-related school that is presently in the downtown Los Angeles area is presently the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising (FIDM). As of 2023, FIDM is part of Arizona State University (ASU) and is now ASU FIDM.[45] Not far from the Arts District as well is the Los Angeles Fashion District, which was historically a source of jobs for artists working with textile patterns and design.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Chang, Andrea (March 7, 2015). "Tech scene takes hold in revitalized downtown L.A." Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Vincent, Roger (January 20, 2013). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on January 24, 2013. Retrieved July 29, 2017.
  3. ^ Regardie, Jon (February 18, 2011). "The Downtowners of Distinction". Los Angeles Downtown News. Retrieved March 26, 2016.
  4. ^ "Founding a city".
  5. ^ "Forgotten Los Angeles History: El Aliso, the Big Tree of Los Angeles | Los Angeles Public Library". Lapl.org. April 27, 2018. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  6. ^ Holland, Gale (May 17, 2013). "Private security patrols pull out of downtown Arts District". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 28, 2017.
  7. ^ Miller, Lindsey (2014). ""Isolation and authenticity in Los Angeles' arts district neighborhood"". Dissertations & Theses Global: The Humanities and Social Sciences Collection: 157 – via ProQuest.
  8. ^ "Al's Cafe - R+D". blog.christinewongyap.com.
  9. ^ "History". LA Artcore. Retrieved September 3, 2023.
  10. ^ Reports, Rafu (May 8, 2019). "OBITUARY: Lydia Takeshita, Founder of LA Artcore Gallery". Rafu Shimpo. Retrieved September 3, 2023.
  11. ^ "History". LA Artcore. Retrieved September 3, 2023.
  12. ^ Kinney, Tulsa (July 3, 2019). "SHOPTALK". Artillery Magazine. Retrieved September 3, 2023.
  13. ^ "LINDA JACOBSON, VISIONS MAGAZINE, ART QUARTERLY". Linda Jacobson. Retrieved September 3, 2023.
  14. ^ Pike, Laurie (August 16, 2001). "Raise a Glass for Al's Bar--It's Last Call". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 14, 2016.
  15. ^ Guzmán, Richard. "Upgrades for Arts District Projects".
  16. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2012. Retrieved April 6, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ Gerber, Marisa (July 29, 2014) "Arts District's changing landscape is worrisome to longtime residents" Los Angeles Times Retrieved 15 October 2018
  18. ^ "About – Brewery Artwalk". Retrieved September 12, 2023.
  19. ^ Fritz Frauchiger. Off the Street. City of Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department. 1985
  20. ^ Nelson, Valerie J. (July 14, 2007) "Joel Bloom, 59; activist helped shape the arts district in L.A." Los Angeles Times
  21. ^ "Cornerstone Theater Company to Leave Los Angeles Home". American Theatre. Theatre Communications Group. June 12, 2018. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  22. ^ Los Angeles River Artists' & Business Association
  23. ^ "Natasha Sandmeier named new Executive Director of Los Angeles' A+D Museum". Archinect. Retrieved September 4, 2022.
  24. ^ "The Arts District History and Architecture in Downtown LA" (PDF).
  25. ^ a b Saillant, Catherine (December 1, 2014) "Some fear Arts District development plan would ruin the neighborhood" Los Angeles Times
  26. ^ Khouri, Andrew (June 12, 2014) "Downtown condo shortage shuts out buyers" Los Angeles Times
  27. ^ Khouri, Andrew (September 25, 2014) "Upscale new residential complex opens in L.A. arts district" Los Angeles Times
  28. ^ a b Vincent, Roger (November 13, 2014) "Old Coca-Cola building in L.A. to be refreshed as plush office complex" Los Angeles Times Retrieved 15 October 2018
  29. ^ Hawthorne, Christopher (October 10, 2014). "Maltzan's One Santa Fe apartment complex plays with notion of density". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  30. ^ Varian, Ethan (February 20, 2018). "How Can L.A. Keep Artists in the Arts District?". Los Angeles Magazine. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
  31. ^ Miranda, Carolina A. (February 5, 2016). "Hauser Wirth & Schimmel in downtown Los Angeles has big ideas". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  32. ^ Lindsay (April 17, 2012). "The New Girl Apartment Building". iamnotastalker.com. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
  33. ^ Ng, David (December 25, 2016). "'La La Land' looks beautiful, but gentrification makes it harder for old Hollywood to play itself". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 27, 2016.
  34. ^ Hawthorne, Christopher (2016). "Betting L.A. will like density and height". Los Angeles Times.
  35. ^ Brass, Kevin (2017). "Los Angeles' Arts District lures developers - but loses artists". FT.com. Archived from the original on December 11, 2022.
  36. ^ "Arts District Awarded $15 Million in Multi-modal Transpo Funding".
  37. ^ Vincent, Roger (August 15, 2022). "A big studio complex is planned for downtown L.A.'s Arts District". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 15, 2022.
  38. ^ Vincent, Roger (April 7, 2019). "Warner Music turns former Ford assembly plant into Arts District music factory". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  39. ^ "Getting Around".
  40. ^ "Arts District Parking Lots".
  41. ^ Nelson, Laura J. (March 18, 2015). "Metro could expand subway service to the downtown L.A. Arts District". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 7, 2022.
  42. ^ Hymon, Steve (March 30, 2021). "Scoping meetings in April for upcoming Arts District Station environmental report". The Source. LACMTA. Retrieved January 7, 2022.
  43. ^ "Southern California Institute of Architecture", Wikipedia, September 10, 2023, retrieved September 10, 2023
  44. ^ "History and Timeline". Otis College of Art and Design. Retrieved September 9, 2023.
  45. ^ Mallon, Jackie (May 2, 2023). "ASU and FIDM unite to elevate the fashion profile of the Southwestern US". FashionUnited. Retrieved September 9, 2023.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Arts District, Los Angeles at Wikimedia Commons

34°02′28″N 118°13′59″W / 34.04117°N 118.23298°W / 34.04117; -118.23298

arts, district, angeles, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, se. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Arts District Los Angeles news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Arts District is a neighborhood on the eastern edge of Downtown Los Angeles California in the United States The city community planning boundaries are Alameda Street on the west which blends into Little Tokyo First Street on the north the Los Angeles River to the east and Violet Street on the south Largely composed of industrial buildings dating from the early 20th century the area has recently been revitalized 1 and its street scene slowly developed in the early 21st century 2 New art galleries have increased recognition of the area amidst the downtown which is known for its art museums 3 Arts DistrictNeighborhood of Los AngelesThe Arts DistrictArts DistrictLocation within Downtown Los AngelesCoordinates 34 02 28 N 118 13 59 W 34 04117 N 118 23298 W 34 04117 118 23298Country United StatesState CaliforniaCountyLos AngelesCity Los AngelesGovernment City CouncilJose Huizar U S HouseJimmy GomezArea code213 Contents 1 Early history 2 Art scene 2 1 1960s 2 2 1970s 2 3 1970s 1980s 2 4 1990s 2 5 2000s 3 Landmarks 4 Current status 5 Transportation 6 Art and Art related Colleges 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly history EditSpanish priest Juan Crespi founded what is now known as the Arts District in 1796 during an expedition to Alta California During his journey he discovered a body of water that was surrounded by rich soil This inspired a passage in his journal that states Should a town be needed in this location this site shall be called Our Lady Queen of the Angels The small pueblo was declared a new territory for the Spanish and was officially founded on September 4 1781 4 Vignes Street is named for Jean Louis Vignes an aging adventurer and vintner who arrived in Los Angeles in 1831 by way of the Sandwich Islands now Hawaii and Bordeaux He planted grapes on an area span of 104 acres 42 ha where Cabernet and Sauvignon Blanc vines imported from the southern France thrived By 1849 El Aliso Vignes vineyard named for the sacred local sycamore tree 5 was the largest producer of wine in California The grapes are gone but the San Antonio Winery just north of the community is a reminder of the area s past By the late 19th century oranges and grapefruits had replaced grapes as the principal agricultural products of the area as such the property west of the riverbank was thick with citrus groves The groves provided a location for filmmaker DW Griffith who filmed parts of Hollywood s first feature film In Old California there in 1909 A print shop became the area s first commercial arts enterprise employing artists from around the region designing labels for the boxes of citrus fruits shipped across the country citation needed nbsp Santa Fe Freight Depot BuildingThe growing Santa Fe Freight Depot and warehouses created to serve the citrus industry s shipping needs determined the area s economic character for most of the next century and were responsible for the architectural flavor of the district s structures that have survived earthquakes floods and fires The freight depot would later in 2001 became the home for an architecture school and a building in the National Register of Historic Places after the school relocated there Please see Art amp Art Related Colleges in this article The single room hotels for rail workers to the northwest and the growth of Little Tokyo to the west and Chinatown to the north created a mix of working class and cosmopolitan citation needed By World War II the citrus groves had been replaced by factories and the rail freight business was giving way to the trucking industry The area had taken on an industrial character that was growing seedy around the edges 2 Over the next twenty years many of the small independent manufacturers had either been absorbed by larger competitors grown too big for their quarters or simply failed and an increasing number of vacant warehouse and former factory spaces contributed to a dingy decaying urban environment typical of many aging big American cities of the era 6 In the 1950s many manufacturing companies moved overseas or were overtaken by larger manufacturing companies resulting in vacant buildings and the lowering of property values Artists struggling to pay rent in the city started moving to the Arts District in the late 1960s and early 1970s Before 1979 the Arts District buildings had been zoned for industrial use only It was not until 1979 that the State of California passed a live work legislation citation needed and in 1981 the city passed the Artist In Residence AIR bill This allowed artists to live legally in the areas that could no longer be used for industrial use as long as they obtained a business license To make living standards more comfortable the building code was lifted New regulations had been created and the AIR legislation required the lofts to have room to sleep a fire alarm and other requirements 7 Art scene Edit1960s Edit In 1969 Allen Ruppersberg presented Al s Cafe at 1913 West Sixth Street 8 In the mid 70s a handful of artists including Joel Bass Dan Citron Woods Davy Marc Kreisel Jon Peterson Stephen Seemayer Maura Sheehan Coleen Sterritt Sydney Littenberg Peter Zecher and others saw opportunity in the empty buildings and began colonizing the area converting former industrial and commercial spaces into working studios and living quarters sometimes renting space for as little as a three cents a square foot This resulted in a surge of artistic activity culminating in the highly controversial Downtown L A in Santa Barbara exhibition organized by Betty Klausner for the Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum which is now known as the Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara By the mid 1980s the following artists were also living downtown Linda Frye Burman James Croak Merion Estes Joe Fay George Herms Mary Jones Constance Mallinson Paul McCarthy Margaret Nielson Richard Newton Margit Omar Lari Pittman John Schroeder Judith Simonian Andy Wilf and Takako Yamaguchi citation needed 1970s Edit LA Artcore founded in 1976 by Lydia Takeshita with the purpose of exhibiting local artists exists today in locations at the Brewery Art Colony and in Little Tokyo 9 Lydia Takeshita and LA Artcore are considered the founding forces for the origins of the Arts District 10 The foundation used to publish the magazine Visions Art Quarterly which had covered the contemporary art scene at that time 11 12 13 In 1979 Marc Kreisel opened Al s Bar in the American Hotel on Hewitt just off Traction This legendary punk rock venue was the training ground for Sonic Youth Red Hot Chili Peppers Beck the Fall the Residents introducing generations of Angelenos to dozens of emerging groups 14 The popular sound band Party Boys played the bars and art events Also known as the downtown artists central meeting place Al s Bar occasionally hosted art exhibitions Al s Bar the West Coast s oldest punk club citation needed finally closed in 2001 and the American Hotel received a facelift in 2012 and was renamed the American Apartments 15 Stephen Seemayer s film The Young Turks 2012 documents the 1979 1981 years 1970s 1980s Edit nbsp Cirrus GalleryThe Atomic Cafe on 1st Street at Alameda was an artist and musician haunt in the late 1970s and early 1980s Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions LACE created exhibitions at its gallery space located in the late 70s on Broadway St before moving to Industrial Street in the 1980s Several commercial art galleries including Oranges and Sardines Kirk DeGoyer Gallery the Downtown Gallery Vanguard Gallery Exile and Galleria by the Water opened in the late seventies only to close in the early eighties The Rico Gallery opened in 1988 closed in 1991 Julie Rico Gallery lived on in Santa Monica CA Cirrus Editions the first gallery to open downtown remains open Around 1980 Jon Peterson and Stephen Seemayer opened DTLA a club that had exactly one show before it closed adjacent the Atomic Cafe High Performance magazine used DTLA as its performance space until its one year lease was up In that year Paul McCarthy performed Monkey Man during the Public Spirit Performance Festival Part 1 16 The name DTLA was later adopted by the neighboring coffee house where Beck got his start In 1981 the City of Los Angeles passed its Artist in Residence or AIR ordinance which allowed residential use of formerly industrial and commercially zoned buildings artists had long used such spaces as living quarters illegally and the AIR law sought to bring this practice into legality and regulation 17 Art galleries cafes and performance venues opened as the live work population grew nbsp The Brewery Art ComplexIn 1982 the Brewery Art Colony opened in the Arts District in what was a former brewery building It was described by the Los Angeles Times in 1999 as world s largest art complex 18 During the 80s Bedlam created by artist Jim Fittipaldi on 6th Street and later briefly in the former premises of Al s bar was a salon with drawing workshops art installations theater live music and a speakeasy Dangerous Curve on an unsafe curve of 4th Place between Mateo and Molino put on exhibitions of artists whose work was often difficult to categorize The Spanish Kitchen a warehouse space on Third near Traction was home to series of happenings events raves installations and blowout parties It now houses the 3rd Steakhouse and Lounge an eatery that hosts community events and exhibitions of works by local artists Cocola later known as the 410 Boyd St Bar and Grill the legendary artists bar just west of the Arts District lives on as Escondite In 1985 Fritz Frauchiger curated Off the Street a one time art exhibition sponsored by the Cultural Affairs Department in the Old City Print Shop which featured paintings sculptures photographs and installations by 48 Los Angeles artists most of whom lived downtown 19 1990s Edit In 1994 the nonprofit group Downtown Arts Development Association DADA was formed as a spinoff of LARABA by several artist members of the LARABA board of directors in order to provide a platform for the burgeoning downtown art scene DADA hosted exhibits of more than 400 downtown artists in 1994 1998 After 1994 the heart of the Arts District was Bloom s General Store presided over by Joel Bloom a veteran of Chicago s Second City who became an advocate for the community and who is remembered as The Arts District s once and only unofficial mayor Bloom died in 2007 but his memory is honored with a plaque from the city declaring the triangle around Third Traction and Rose to be Joel Bloom Square 20 Cornerstone Theater an enterprise that brings community theater to locations all around the country resided on Traction Avenue for 20 years 21 Around the corner on Hewitt at 4th Place the nonprofit ArtShare offers lessons in art dance theater and music to urban youth and features a small theater once used by Padua Playwrights Padua stages plays around the city often in non traditional environments and hosts playwriting workshops 22 2000s Edit nbsp The former Santa Fe Freight Depot building is now the Southern California Institute of Architecture SCI Arc View facing the institute library In 2001 the Southern California Institute of Architecture SCI Arc relocated from Marina Del Rey California to Downtown Los Angeles to the former Santa Fe Freight Depot building and has been an anchor for the Arts District In February 2020 the website la artsdistrict com la artsdistrict com was launched to highlight Arts District mural art and artists to the public It includes a current map of the Arts District and professional photos of the mural artwork found here and in the surrounding downtown LA neighborhoods The website also highlights local artists with art maps interviews amp photos specific to them 2020 Arts District mural art A D Museum of architecture and design which was founded by Stephen Kanner and Bernard Zimmerman in 2001 is located in the Arts District Natasha Sandmeier was named Executive Director of the museum in 2022 23 Landmarks EditAccording to the Los Angeles Conservancy the area s registered landmarks are 24 Pickle Works Citizen Warehouse 1001 East 1st Street Challenge Dairy Building 929 East 2nd Street Southern California Supply Co 810 East 3rd Street Southern California Institute of Architecture 960 East 3rd Street American Hotel 303 South Hewitt Street Toy Factory Lofts 1855 Industrial Street Biscuit Company Lofts 1850 Industrial StreetCurrent status EditThe city community planning boundaries today are Alameda Street on the west First Street on the north the Los Angeles River to the east and Violet Street on the south 25 Challenges facing the district today include the loss of affordable live work lofts artists and historically significant buildings 26 Community leaders are struggling to create balance amidst the economic issues brought about by gentrification and the need to preserve the character of the Arts District as a creative community that has made contributions to the cultural and economic well being of the city for decades 27 In 2014 the average annual income for neighborhood residents was 120 000 28 While the initial decades saw the conversion to residential and commercial uses of low slung warehouses and industrial spaces downtown zoning laws could be rewritten to permit the heights of buildings to double allowing up to 1 500 new residential units to be built in eight story one hundred feet 30 m edifices 25 The Southern California Institute of Architecture SCI Arc resides in a quarter mile long 0 40 km former Santa Fe Freight Depot built in 1907 that has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places Across the street is a 438 unit apartment complex One Santa Fe which opened in 2014 and was designed by Michael Maltzan Architecture MMA 29 30 The century old Coca Cola manufacturing plant at 4th and Merrick Streets around the corner from the oversize Santa Fe railroad dock that houses SCI Arc is the latest in adaptive reuse into creative spaces The three story brick clad building was described as the headquarters for the company s Pacific Coast business and for its export trade in the Hawaiian Islands and Old Mexico when it was built in 1915 1 The complex has been renamed Fourth amp Traction after Traction Avenue 28 The Hauser Wirth amp Schimmel complex opened in 2016 in buildings that date from the 1890s to the 1940s that occupy an entire city block on East 3rd Street 31 The district continues to be a popular location for filming due to its historic vibe In 2016 the head of the neighborhood s business improvement district stated that There s not one day where there s not shooting The popular TV sitcom New Girl takes place largely in an apartment loft located in the Arts District 32 Filming has become complicated due to the development of the retail sector and residents who will be disturbed by filming at night Also many formerly empty lots and streets are now under development where crews used the space to park trucks and trailers 33 In 2017 developer Suncal proposed a 2 billion 1 95 million square foot mixed use project which includes two 58 story buildings designed by Herzog and de Meuron The project called 6 am will be located along 6th Street between Mills and Alameda The live work space will include 1 700 apartments and condos shops offices hotels charter schools and an underground garage 34 Condos average price will be amp 1 000 per square foot New developments have displaced artists since they can no longer afford to be in the Arts District In 2016 the median price for the property was 714 500 a huge increase from 2013 when open lofts were priced at 370 per square foot 35 In 2017 the district received a 15 million award from the Active Transportation Program which will enhance the Arts District with new bike lanes enhancement of sidewalks and street lighting The program will bring two signalized intersections pedestrian lighting four pedestrian crosswalks and one mile of bike lanes Little Tokyo and Arts District Regional Connector Station have pedestrian and bicycle access with the Sixth Street Viaduct 36 The bridge a 588 million span rebuilt in 2022 connects the Arts District to the Eastside and Whittier Boulevard 37 Warner Music Group moved into a building in 2019 that formerly housed a Ford Motor Company assembly plant 38 Transportation EditThe Arts District is located near the center of Downtown Los Angeles making it more accessible to alternate forms of transportation The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority Metro L Line station was located along Alameda Street though this is currently closed and was replaced by an underground light rail station between Alameda Street amp Central Avenue on the A and E lines in 2023 as part of the Regional Connector project The cross streets are along East First and East Temple Streets The small neighborhood is also serviced by the Los Angeles Department of Transportation LADOT DASH bus making several stops on Hewitt Street Additionally Metro offers a bike share program in many neighborhoods around the area The following five stations currently available to pick up or leave a bike are listed below 39 740 East 3rd Street 999 East 3rd Street 1245 Factory Place 1301 Willow Street 720 East Temple StreetThere are a total of sixteen parking lots scattered around the Arts District As the area became a social hub for city folk parking became an issue to local residents Public and private lots structures including on street parking offer a variety of parking options for visitors 40 In addition there is a proposal to extend the terminus of the Los Angeles Metro Rail s B Line and D Line both heavy rail subway lines to a station in order to give more efficient public transit to the members of the fast growing community 41 It is currently in the environmental review stage with a report expected to come out in 2022 42 Art and Art related Colleges EditThe Southern California Institute of Architecture SCI Arc relocated to the Santa Fe Freight Depot a building originally constructed in 1907 The school has become an anchor for the arts district 43 Otis College of Art and Design was originally in the downtown Los Angeles area in Westlake across the street from MacArthur Park For qualified artists the college was able to offer faculty positions In 1997 the college moved its main campus to the Westchester area near the Los Angeles airport 44 An art related school that is presently in the downtown Los Angeles area is presently the Fashion Institute of Design and Merchandising FIDM As of 2023 FIDM is part of Arizona State University ASU and is now ASU FIDM 45 Not far from the Arts District as well is the Los Angeles Fashion District which was historically a source of jobs for artists working with textile patterns and design See also EditThe Brewery Art ColonyReferences Edit a b Chang Andrea March 7 2015 Tech scene takes hold in revitalized downtown L A Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 15 2018 a b Vincent Roger January 20 2013 Gaining Traction Trendy shops eateries and offices transform downtown L A s arts district Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on January 24 2013 Retrieved July 29 2017 Regardie Jon February 18 2011 The Downtowners of Distinction Los Angeles Downtown News Retrieved March 26 2016 Founding a city Forgotten Los Angeles History El Aliso the Big Tree of Los Angeles Los Angeles Public Library Lapl org April 27 2018 Retrieved October 15 2018 Holland Gale May 17 2013 Private security patrols pull out of downtown Arts District Los Angeles Times Retrieved July 28 2017 Miller Lindsey 2014 Isolation and authenticity in Los Angeles arts district neighborhood Dissertations amp Theses Global The Humanities and Social Sciences Collection 157 via ProQuest Al s Cafe R D blog christinewongyap com History LA Artcore Retrieved September 3 2023 Reports Rafu May 8 2019 OBITUARY Lydia Takeshita Founder of LA Artcore Gallery Rafu Shimpo Retrieved September 3 2023 History LA Artcore Retrieved September 3 2023 Kinney Tulsa July 3 2019 SHOPTALK Artillery Magazine Retrieved September 3 2023 LINDA JACOBSON VISIONS MAGAZINE ART QUARTERLY Linda Jacobson Retrieved September 3 2023 Pike Laurie August 16 2001 Raise a Glass for Al s Bar It s Last Call Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 14 2016 Guzman Richard Upgrades for Arts District Projects Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 21 2012 Retrieved April 6 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Gerber Marisa July 29 2014 Arts District s changing landscape is worrisome to longtime residents Los Angeles Times Retrieved 15 October 2018 About Brewery Artwalk Retrieved September 12 2023 Fritz Frauchiger Off the Street City of Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department 1985 Nelson Valerie J July 14 2007 Joel Bloom 59 activist helped shape the arts district in L A Los Angeles Times Cornerstone Theater Company to Leave Los Angeles Home American Theatre Theatre Communications Group June 12 2018 Retrieved November 17 2018 Los Angeles River Artists amp Business Association Natasha Sandmeier named new Executive Director of Los Angeles A D Museum Archinect Retrieved September 4 2022 The Arts District History and Architecture in Downtown LA PDF a b Saillant Catherine December 1 2014 Some fear Arts District development plan would ruin the neighborhood Los Angeles Times Khouri Andrew June 12 2014 Downtown condo shortage shuts out buyers Los Angeles Times Khouri Andrew September 25 2014 Upscale new residential complex opens in L A arts district Los Angeles Times a b Vincent Roger November 13 2014 Old Coca Cola building in L A to be refreshed as plush office complex Los Angeles Times Retrieved 15 October 2018 Hawthorne Christopher October 10 2014 Maltzan s One Santa Fe apartment complex plays with notion of density Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 15 2018 Varian Ethan February 20 2018 How Can L A Keep Artists in the Arts District Los Angeles Magazine Retrieved March 3 2018 Miranda Carolina A February 5 2016 Hauser Wirth amp Schimmel in downtown Los Angeles has big ideas Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 8 2016 Lindsay April 17 2012 The New Girl Apartment Building iamnotastalker com Retrieved January 31 2017 Ng David December 25 2016 La La Land looks beautiful but gentrification makes it harder for old Hollywood to play itself Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 27 2016 Hawthorne Christopher 2016 Betting L A will like density and height Los Angeles Times Brass Kevin 2017 Los Angeles Arts District lures developers but loses artists FT com Archived from the original on December 11 2022 Arts District Awarded 15 Million in Multi modal Transpo Funding Vincent Roger August 15 2022 A big studio complex is planned for downtown L A s Arts District Los Angeles Times Retrieved August 15 2022 Vincent Roger April 7 2019 Warner Music turns former Ford assembly plant into Arts District music factory Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 8 2019 Getting Around Arts District Parking Lots Nelson Laura J March 18 2015 Metro could expand subway service to the downtown L A Arts District Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 7 2022 Hymon Steve March 30 2021 Scoping meetings in April for upcoming Arts District Station environmental report The Source LACMTA Retrieved January 7 2022 Southern California Institute of Architecture Wikipedia September 10 2023 retrieved September 10 2023 History and Timeline Otis College of Art and Design Retrieved September 9 2023 Mallon Jackie May 2 2023 ASU and FIDM unite to elevate the fashion profile of the Southwestern US FashionUnited Retrieved September 9 2023 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Arts District Los Angeles at Wikimedia Commons Portals nbsp Arts nbsp Los Angeles 34 02 28 N 118 13 59 W 34 04117 N 118 23298 W 34 04117 118 23298 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arts District Los Angeles amp oldid 1180826787, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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