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Say Goodnight: Wilshire Grand Hotel Closing, Will Be Torn Down and Replaced By 2 New Towers

The Wilshire Grand Hotel, at the corner of Wilshire and Figueroa, is closing its doors, and will be torn down and replaced by two new skyscrapers. The hotel first opened in 1952 as the Hotel Statler, and had been at the time of its planning, the recipient of the largest single building permit the city had ever issued, at $15 million.

Nearly 60 years later, on the same property, a new 45-story hotel will go up, alongside "the tallest office building west of the Mississippi,” according to hotel spokesman Marc Loge, who spoke with a reporter for KNX.

During its six decades of business, the hotel has hosted many high-profile events, including the "1952 Emmy® Awards soon after its opening to being the headquarters hotel for the 2000 Democratic National Convention and the 2006 Miss Universe Pageant® in this past decade," explains the hotel.

The Wilshire Grand has also operated as the Statler Hilton and the Omni Los Angeles.

Closing the hotel means hundreds of employees losing their jobs when the doors close for good on December 31.

The new hotel is expected to open in 2015.

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Comments [rss]

  • JP

    There is no reason to demolish a perfectly functioning building in DT LA that really hasn't been around that long, especially with so many empty  lots in DT! Has this city ever heard of urban infill?? Just LA doing things backwards again. So wasteful and unnecessary.

  • I hope they are twin towers

  • I want to see a new subway entrance to go underneath the new towers. New construction would be the perfect time to add something extra.

    It's right across the street from the 7th/ Metro Center subway station.

  • J

    Can't wait for the new tall buildings to go up!!!

  • jennix

    Oh thank goodness. We don't have enough buildings in downtown LA.

  • DonnieK

    We actually don't.  Check out this map and see much of downtown is undeveloped parking lots.  We need to develop more land and create walkable, dense housing and commercial units, not to mention more parks and public spaces.

    http://la.streetsblog.org/2011...

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