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Visit our Tour Destination: Southern California page to see the entire tour of the area’s Save America’s Treasures sites.
Vickrey-Brunswig building on the left and the Plaza House on the right, now the home of LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes. Photo courtesy of LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes. |
The Plaza House and
Vickrey-Brunswig Building
501 North Main Street
Website: LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes
The Treasure: The
historic Vickrey-Brunswig building and the Plaza House have been folded into LA
Plaza de Cultura y Artes, a multi-disciplinary cultural center that celebrates the Mexican-American culture of Southern California.
Accessibility: LA
Plaza is open Wednesday through Monday from noon to 7.
Background: The construction of the Plaza House in 1883
and the Vickrey-Brunswig building in 1888 took place right near the beginning
of the first major industrial expansion of the city of Los Angeles . Change really began with the
completion of the first transcontinental railroad in 1876. The Central Pacific
Railroad crossed the Rockies, reaching the west coast in San Francisco, but the
line wasn’t fully complete until it stretched southward down to its
final freight destination—Los Angeles. Two years after the Plaza House was
built, Los Angeles received another railroad
boost when the Atchison ,
Topeka and
Santa Fe Railway connected with the city. Growth was swift. From the early 1870s to 1900, the
city's population swelled from around 5,000 to over 100,000.
Kysor & Morgan was one of the first architectural firms
in Los Angeles .
Octavius Morgan designed the Plaza House in a Victorian Italianate style.
Stores, markets, saloons, and restaurants lined the ground floor, with the
upper floor reserved for private residences.
Five years later, Los
Angeles buildings were already growing in size,
reflecting the population growth. The Vickrey building (later the Vickrey-Brunswig)
was a five-story structure built for the Eastside Bank. Over the years, both
the Plaza House and the Vickrey-Brunswig building saw a wide variety of tenants
and passed through good times and bad.
Thanks in part to the Save
America’s Treasures funding, these two historic buildings were recently
restored to serve as a new center for Mexican-American culture in the heart of Los Angeles . Just opened
in 2011, LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes offers interactive exhibits and exciting
programs all revolving around the historic influence of Mexican and
Mexican-American culture in this region.
Calle Principal: Main Street, Los Angeles, 1920s, at LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes. Photo courtesy of LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes. |
Two exhibits focus on the historical details. LA Starts Here! uses artifacts and
interactive experiences to explore the city’s history from the early days of
the Spanish Empire to the current sprawling metropolis. The other exhibit, Calle Principal, lets you tour through a
recreation of a 1920s-era Main
Street serving a vibrant immigrant community.
Other Recommended
Sites: LA Plaza is just a five minute walk from Union Station, one of
the great American rail stations. You may even recognize it as a movie location
used in Bugsy, The Way We Were, and Blade
Runner. Directly across from LA Plaza is El Pueblo Historical Monument
which includes the Pico House, a historic fire station, Olvera Street , and the Sepulveda House.
Tour America's History Itinerary
The Vickrey-Brunswig building and the Plaza House, now the home of LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes. Photo courtesy of LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes. |
Tour America's History Itinerary
Friday’s destination: San Diego Museum of Man
© 2012 Lee Price
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