User:Pacificboy/Culver City

The architecture of Culver City reflects its history as an early location for film studios and, more recently, as a site for architectural experimentation, particularly for the projects of Eric Owen Moss at the Hayden Tract. The internationally renowned architecture offices Studio Pali Fekete and Morphosis are also headquartered here. Styles represented include Mission and Colonial Revival from the city's early days, to the PWA Moderne of the 1930s, to modern, postmodern, and deconstructivist styles from the past few decades. Architectural landmarks include:


 * Ivy Substation (1907), a Mission Revival building that now houses the Action Theatre Group
 * Culver Studios (1918-1920), offices in the style of a Colonial Revival mansion
 * Culver Hotel (Curlett and Beelman, 1924), a six-story brick flatiron
 * Helms Bakery (E. L. Bruner, 1930), in monumental PWA Moderne
 * Irving Thalberg Administration Building (Claud Beelman, 1939), a Moderne and Beaux Arts structure within the MGM (now Sony) campus
 * Kirk Douglas Theatre (Carl G. Moeller, 1946)
 * Robert Frost Auditorium (Flewelling and Moody, 1964), a late modern auditorium at Culver City High School
 * Filmland Corporate Center (now One Culver) (Maxwell Starkman, 1986), 10000 Washington Blvd, a late modern corporate office building
 * Paramount Laundry Building (Eric Owen Moss, 1989), 3960 Ince Blvd.
 * Child Care Center (Ehrlich Architects, 1994), 3845 Clarington Ave.
 * Bow Truss Building (Ehrlich Architects, 1994), 10101 Washington Blvd
 * Studio Pali Fekete Architects (Studio Pali Fakete, 2006), 8609 W. Washington Blvd
 * Morphosis Los Angeles Offices (Morphosis, 2012), 3440 Wesley St.
 * Platform (Abramson Teiger, 2016), centered on 8850 Washington Blvd.