Beautiful theater. Well worth a visit, and features quite a bit of history.
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Beautiful theater. Well worth a visit, and features quite a bit of history.
Hollywood Walk of Fame. Hollywood Boulevard A tribute to over 2000 artists who have made significant contributions to film, radio, television, theatre and the recording industries. The first star
Note that the Farmer's Market area is really two things, the original Farmer's Market, which is an outdoor eating and shopping area begun by farmers during the depression, and The Grove which is an...
A convent of cloistered Dominican nuns. Visitors can view the building and grounds and shop in the gift shop.
In addition to the famous "backlot" tour of old film sets, this attraction offers several movie-themed rides.
Anything and everything on this famous concrete strip - from hippies to skateboarders, you will see it all here.
First Los Angeles train depot.
This popular tourist attraction features 12 turn-of-the-century houses and buildings that have been relocated and restored.
Home of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, this concert hall is designed to be one of the most acoustically sophisticated in the world.
Perched atop Mount Lee, this global symbol of Hollywood glamour measures 450 feet in length with mammoth white letters, each standing 45 feet high, spelling out the name of the city.
This Japanese neighborhood is a good place for eating and visiting gardens.
A huge bell given to the US as a bi-centennial gift and as a commemoration of veterans of the Korean War
History on Venice Beach, California can be found on Wikipedia: http://en.wikiped... It is a very interesting read!
Neighborhood in the city's midtown section that serves as the hub for cultural, social and business life for Korean residents.
Though much smaller than the Chinese neighborhoods of New York and San Francisco, great food and numerous small Chinese specialty stores still abound in Chinatown.
A unique folk-art masterpiece, this 99-foot-tall group of steel towers is decorated with scrap metal, bed frames, bottles, ceramic tiles, and thousands of seashells. One of LA's famous local landmarks, the towers were created by a construction worker who toiled over them in his spare time for 30 years until their completion in 1954.
