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10 April, 201010 April, 2010 0 comments Promotion Promotion

This online business opportunity selling wireless products is FREE to join and offers an excellent compensation package.
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TagsTags: cell phone 
25 March, 201025 March, 2010 0 comments Promotion Promotion

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9 March, 20109 March, 2010 0 comments Promotion Promotion

 

As the birthplace of Los Angeles, Downtown has a long and intriguing history. The following account of some interesting moments in Downtown L.A. history have been graciously provided by the Los Angeles Conservancy , the largest membership-based local historic preservation organization in the country, dedicated to the recognition, preservation, and revitalization of the architectural and cultural heritage of greater Los Angeles.

 



The Historic Core of Downtown
Los Angeles

On September 4, 1781, a group of 44 settlers founded El Pueblo de la Reina de Los Angeles ("The Town of the Queen of Angels"). The pueblo flourished and, by the late 1840s, Los Angeles was the largest town in California. The center of the city lay a little to the north of the present Downtown, in the area we now call El Pueblo.

In the 1880s, Los Angeles experienced a land boom fed by huge tracts of available land, cheap transportation by newly arrived railroads, outrageous promotion, and hordes of Midwesterners eager to retire from snowy winters. Between 1880 and 1896, Los Angeles went from a population of 11,000 to 97,000. By 1889, the boom subsided, but Los Angeles had established itself.

 

 

As the nineteenth century drew to a close, businesses began migrating south from El Pueblo toward the area that we now refer to as the historic core. Although a few buildings from this era still stand (notably the Bradbury Building, 1893), the true explosion of commercial growth in the area came during the 1910s, '20s, and early '30s. Many of the buildings near Pershing Square are from this period, including the Biltmore Hotel (1923).

 

 

Los Angeles' strict height limit on buildings was lifted in 1957, triggering another building boom. But even as huge skyscrapers dramatically redefined the city's skyline, regional shopping malls, entertainment complexes, and business parks were luring consumers out of the city center - and sending Downtown into a decline.

Downtown began a renaissance in the mid-1990s that continues to this day, as revitalized residential, business, and arts communities are once again redefining the way we view the city. The reuse of historic buildings in the area, coupled with new construction, once again poise Downtown as the heart of the City of Angels.

 

 

Pershing Square in Downtown
Los Angeles

The five acres that make up Pershing Square are original pueblo lands whose ownership can be traced back to 1781, when Spain granted them to the City of Los Angeles. In 1866, the area was set aside as a public park known as La Plaza Abaja ("the lower plaza"). Improvements, including the planting of cypress and citrus trees, were made to the park in the 1870s. In the 1880s, it was given its first official layout by city engineer Fred Eaton.

During Los Angeles' real estate boom of 1910-11, architect John Parkinson redesigned the park in a formal Beaux Arts style. In 1918, one week after the end of World War I, the square was renamed in honor of General John Pershing, the commander of the American forces overseas. Over the ensuing decades, a variety of design changes were made to the Olive Street between Fifth Street and Sixth Street square, most notably the addition of an underground parking garage in 1951.

With access ramps to the garage effectively cutting off the park from the surrounding area, the square gradually fell into disuse and disrepair throughout the 1960s and '70s. In 1984, it was cleaned and replanted for the Olympics, but it was almost a decade later when the square received a full facelift. This current design, by architect Ricardo Legorretta and landscape architect Laurie Olin, includes a number of works of public art that allude to the city's history. To help reconnect the square to the surrounding city, the ramps to the garage below have been made less intrusive and a public sidewalk around the square has been added.

 

 

Downtown's Evolving Skyline

The Birthplace of LA
Bunker Hill with Central Library in foreground & City Hall in background
Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection

Picture postcards of Los Angeles often feature sleek skyscrapers set against a backdrop of snow-covered mountains. These skyscrapers, which define the contemporary Los Angeles skyline, are located on and around Bunker Hill in the Central Business District in the heart of Downtown Los Angeles.

These skyscrapers are predominately in the Corporate International style that prevailed from the end of World War II through the 1970s - tall, monolithic structures with smooth façades of steel, glass, and stone, embodying corporate strength and efficiency. During the 1980s, innovations in design and engineering led to buildings in the Late Modern and Postmodern styles, which celebrated the exuberance of the period with new shapes, vivid colors, textured materials, and highly stylized interpretations of classical elements.

Scattered among these giants of glass and steel are earlier Beaux Arts and Art Deco office, civic, and retail buildings. These older structures give historic perspective to the area, making a walk through the Central Business District a lesson in how corporate architecture has evolved over the past century, reflecting changing values in business and society.

One of the ways older buildings survive is through expansion by addition, a good alternative to destruction when handled in a sensitive manner. Adaptive reuse - restoring and rehabilitating a historic structure for a new use - is a powerful way to use preservation for community and economic revitalization. When done according to preservation standards, it maintains the building's historic integrity while meeting the changing needs of owners and the community.

Shifting cultural tastes have certainly contributed to the evolution of the area's built environment. Invariably and inevitably, styles become passé before they become classic. Prevailing tastes typically equate "new" with "progress" and "old" with "old-fashioned," as when Victorian structures were razed in the 1920s and 1930s to make way for "modern" Art Deco buildings. It typically takes considerable hindsight to recognize the true value of a building or style, and buildings often succumb to demolition long before - or in some cases, just before - they get their due. Yet, lamentable as the loss of historic structures may be, their successors are starting to be recognized for their own architectural and historic merits.

The diversity of the architecture in the Central Business District not only conveys how the concept of Downtown itself changes over time, but also how historic preservation plays a vital role in helping Downtown celebrate its past while forging its future.

TagsTags: history downtown 
9 March, 20109 March, 2010 2 comments Promotion Promotion

jlm-stars-hollywood-sign

/TheSignInTheMovies.

The Hollywood Sign is a famous landmark in the Hollywood Hills area of Mount Lee in Los Angeles, California, spelling out the name of the area in 45-foot (14 m) tall white letters. It was created as an advertisement in 1923, but garnered increasing recognition after the sign was left up. The sign was a frequent target of pranks and vandalism but has since undergone restoration, including a security system to deter vandalism. The sign is protected and promoted by the Hollywood Sign Trust, a nonprofit organization whose purpose is to physically maintain, repair and secure the sign, to educate the world about its historical and cultural importance, and to raise the funds necessary to accomplish these projects.

From the ground, the contours of the hills give the sign its well-known "wavy" appearance. When observed at a comparable altitude, as in the photo to the right, the letters appear straight-across.

The sign makes frequent appearances in popular culture, particularly in establishing shots for films and television programs set in or around Hollywood,

TagsTags: hollywood sign 
5 March, 20105 March, 2010 0 comments Promotion Promotion

Original Blog Marketing & Blog Promotion

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  • We Create & Maintain TWO (2) Different Blogs for You
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  • Weekly - 400 Word Blog Posting - Written and Promoted on Your Behalf
  • Blog Pinging to All the Top Blog Directories & Search Engines After Each Blog Post
  • All Blog Content is Social Bookmarked
  • Three Links per Blog Post Will Point Direct to Your Web Site
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    What IS the Blog Marketing Service?

We will create 2 (two) different online blogs for you.
One blog is created from Google's blog and then a second blog is also created for you from Google as well - but this time using different keywords. Having these Google blogs are important to you because we know that Google will index your blogs regularly as new content is added into each of your blogs. These type of blogs are very search engine friendly and have proven to be very important for many of the other top online search engines such as Yahoo and MSN too. When we create each of these blogs for you, we will be utilizing your most important keywords as part of the URL paths for each of your blogs. This is important to you because your blogs will be regarded much better and your blog's content will rank much higher by search engines for the particular subject matter that relates to the text and keywords within your blogs URL paths. 

 

    What Does This Service Include?

EVERY WEEK we will write 1 (one) interesting, informative and professionally written - 400 word blog post - on your subject matter and place it in one of your blogs.
We will alternate from one week to the next week placing blog posts in each of your two different blog sites. Each of these writings and blog posts will contain three different, relevant text links utilizing your important keywords and keyword phrases that you provide to us that will point direct to your website. Of course some of these links can point directly to your important interior web page urls. These text links will also be using variations of your important keywords so that your web site will grow in link popularity for all your relevant and related keywords. Also to to further add to the value of your blog, we will also place an occasional link to other relevant and related subject matter web sites that will add value to your blog and to your blog reader's experience. These may be links to sites like Wikipedia or Majon's article directory etc. Of course, you will have access to each of your blogs so that you can edit or change any blog posts that you desire. All blog postings are well written by our English speaking writers. You will get high quality 400 word blog posts that will drive targeted traffic to your site and give you blog marketing results!
 

TagsTags: blog marketing promotion 
16 February, 201016 February, 2010 0 comments Promotion Promotion
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