2014年12月9日火曜日

Da Vinci@Temple Street Burnt Down To The Ground







The structure that caught fire is Building A of the Da Vinci, developed by G. H. Palmer Associates, owner Geoff Palmer said in an e-mail. Palmer said an adjacent Building B is on schedule to open in January. He declined to comment further.

The development at 906 N. Fremont Ave. includes more than 1 million square feet (92,900 square meters), according to the Fire Department’s Twitter feed. The fire also damaged two adjoining buildings, one by radiant heat and one by water from fire hoses, Main said.

The project is part of a downtown redevelopment that includes more than 21,000 residential units and 3,780 hotel rooms currently under construction or planned. Many are financed by investors in China, Singapore and Korea and U.S. developers.




History of the Jews in Los Angeles — the history of Judaism and the Jews in Los Angeles, Southern California.
As of 1989 Los Angeles had the second highest population of Soviet Jews in the United States; New York City had the highest population.[1]

Geography

As of 2007 Orthodox Jews have increasingly settled Hancock Park.[10]
Jews have increasingly settled in areas near Los Angeles, such as San Fernando Valley and Thousand Oaks, California.[11][12]
When Jews settled in Los Angeles, they were originally located in the Downtown area. Industrial expansion in the Downtown area pushed the Jews to Eastside Los Angeles, where The Los Angeles Jewish community formed in the years 1910-1920. The Brooklyn Avenue-Boyle Heights area, the Temple Street area, and the Central Avenue area were the settlement points of Jews in that period.[7]

In the 1920s the Jewish population saw Boyle Heights as the heart of the Jewish community. In 1908 Boyle Heights had 3 Jewish families. In 1920 there were 1,842 Jewish families there. In the mid-1920s about 33% of all of the Jews in Los Angeles lived in Boyle Heights. By 1930 almost 10,000 Jewish families lived in Boyle Heights.[7]





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