Los Angeles: Hill
Places and attractions in the Hill category
Categories
- Museum
- Park
- Theater
- Concerts and shows
- Church
- Shopping
- History museum
- Area
- Art gallery
- Shopping centre
- Art museum
- Specialty museum
- Historical place
- Music venue
- Nightlife
- Street
- Neighbourhood
- City
- Spanish colonial revival architecture
- Architecture
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Library
- Memorial
- Cemetery
- Concert hall
- Natural attraction
- Golf
- Nature
- Cinema
- Bridge
- Entertainment
- Skyscraper
- Performing arts
- Outdoor activities
- Synagogue
- Postmodern architecture
- Sacred and religious sites
- Garden
- Music and shows
- Hill
- Monuments and statues
- Modernist architecture
- Science museum
- Natural history museum
- Victorian architecture
- Temple
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Vernacular architecture
- Tower
- Neo-renaissance architecture
- Event space
- Arenas and stadiums
- Romanesque architecture
- Beaux-Arts architecture
- Modern art museum
- Welton Becket
- Beach
- Tours
- Gambling
- Dancing
- Rock club
- Mountain
- Romanesque revival architecture
- Canyon
- Auditorium
- Sculpture
- Military museum
- Casino
- Universities and schools
- City hall
- Zoo
- Colonial revival architecture
- Art Deco architecture
- Streamline Moderne architecture
- Queen Anne architecture
- Neoclassical architecture
Hollywood Sign
Iconic letters atop Mount Lee since 1923 Perched on the southern slope of Mount Lee in the Hollywood Hills area of the Santa Monica Mountains, the Hollywood Sign stands as an emblem of the entertainment industry and Los Angeles itself. This cultural icon, composed of 45-foot-tall white letters, spells out...
Chemosphere
The Chemosphere is a modernist house in Los Angeles, California, designed by John Lautner in 1960. The building, which the Encyclopædia Britannica once called "the most modern home built in the world", is admired both for the ingenuity of its solution to the problem of the site and for its unique octagonal design.
Stahl House
The Stahl House is a modernist-styled house designed by architect Pierre Koenig in the Hollywood Hills section of Los Angeles, California, which is known as a frequent set location in American films.
Baldwin Hills Dam disaster
The Baldwin Hills Dam disaster occurred on December 14, 1963, in the Baldwin Hills neighborhood of South Los Angeles, when the dam containing the Baldwin Hills Reservoir suffered a catastrophic failure and flooded the residential neighborhoods surrounding it.
Bailey House
The Bailey House, or Case Study House #21, is a steel-framed modernist house in the Hollywood Hills, designed by Pierre Koenig.
Hollywood Hills
The Hollywood Hills are a residential neighborhood in the central region of Los Angeles, California.
Samuel Freeman House
The Samuel Freeman House is a Frank Lloyd Wright house in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles, California built in 1923. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971. The house has also been listed as a California Historical Landmark #1011, and as Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #247 in 1981.
Rosecrans Hills
The Rosecrans Hills are a low range of hills in the Transverse Ranges, in the South Los Angeles region of Los Angeles County, California. The Rosecrans Hills run north–south in the communities of West Athens and Westmont. They are bisected by the Century Freeway, and Western Avenue, between Century Boulevard and El Segundo Boulevard.
Whittier Narrows
The Whittier Narrows is a narrows or water gap in the San Gabriel Valley of Los Angeles County, California, United States, between the Puente Hills to the east and the Montebello Hills to the west.
The Mansion
The Mansion is a four-bedroom mansion owned by music producer Rick Rubin in the Laurel Canyon area of Los Angeles. Originally built in 1918, the house is famous for the successful bands who have recorded music there.