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Granada Shoppes and Studios

Granada Shoppes and Studios
Granada exterior.jpg
Granada Buildings, 2011
Granada Shoppes and Studios is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Granada Shoppes and Studios
Granada Shoppes and Studios is located in California
Granada Shoppes and Studios
Granada Shoppes and Studios is located in the US
Granada Shoppes and Studios
Location 672 S. Lafayette Park Place, Westlake District, Los Angeles, California
Coordinates 34°3′38″N 118°16′57″W / 34.06056°N 118.28250°W / 34.06056; -118.28250Coordinates: 34°3′38″N 118°16′57″W / 34.06056°N 118.28250°W / 34.06056; -118.28250
Built 1927
Architect Harper,Franklin
Architectural style Mediterranean Revival, Spanish Colonial Revival, Other
NRHP Reference # 86003320
LAHCM # 238
Significant dates
Added to NRHP November 20, 1986
Designated LAHCM 1981-04-09

Granada Shoppes and Studios, also known as the Granada Buildings, is an imaginative, Mediterranean Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival style block-long complex consisting of four courtyard-connected structures, in Central Los Angeles, California. It was built immediately to the southeast of Lafayette Park in the Westlake District, in 1927.

The project was designed by architect Franklin Harper with 42 suites combining offices and studios. Each unit had two levels, with office or shop space on the ground floor and living space on the second level or loft area. When Harper announced his plan in October 1927, the Los Angeles Times described the $1 million combined shop, studio and apartment structure as something entirely new in Los Angeles, resembling the design of European specialty shops. The apartments were located on the mezzanine level and consisted of kitchen, living room, bath and open porch.

The dominant feature of the Granada is the courtyard running between the four structures. The courtyards serve both a functional role as the paths to each of the suites and an aesthetic role as a garden area providing shade. One architectural textbook describes the exterior space as the dominant organizing theme for the building, giving the complex "all the attributes of the traditional narrow commercial street."

The beauty of the Granada has attracted architects, artists, and urban planners from its earliest days. Gregory Ain and James Garrott shared office space here before World War II. George Hurrell, a noted Hollywood portrait photographer, lived and worked in Suite 9, photographing silent film stars in his office at the Granada. In the Princeton Architectural Press' 1997 book, "Courtyard Housing," the authors described the Granda as follows:

"The Granada Buildings have attained an almost mythical quality in the Los Angeles design world, as architects, graphic designers, and artists have made them their homes. The court is one of the monuments of southern California architecture and one that contains the seeds of an urban existence whose promise was never fulfilled."


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