Construction of an American court building of the architect E. J Lennox In 1886, the city held a court design competition. 13 architects participated in the competition and E. J Lennox was elected to build the building. He announced the design of Richardsoninan Romanesque in a unique way, so he was chosen by the architect (in North America, this design is considered a style of public dignity). But as the project was in progress the municipal government decided to require a city hall and a court, so Lennox set up a new design for the building combining the two.
E. J. Eckel, "American Architect Dean", and the National Biscuit Company Building, designed by the founder of the famous company Eckel & Aldrich, opened in the West Coast headquarters in 1925. - The National Biscuit Company (often called Nabisco) became a feeling of architecture soon. In 2006, the building was refurbished for $ 25 million by Aleks Istanbullu Architects. This space on the first floor has changed to 104 actual live / working lofts at French Bistro (DTLA's favorite church and state). In 2007, the attic of the recently discovered biscuit company was declared as a historical and cultural monument and became subject to the Mills Law Program, a California regulation that provides annual property tax subsidies to homeowners It was.
In August 1925, voters approved public debt of $ 175,000 and began making permanent courts. Following a detailed survey of the state's court by the county committee, the famous Virginia state architect Fred Bishop was chosen to design the building. Construction began on June 15, 1926 and was completed in March 1927 with a total cost of approximately 270,000 dollars.
In 1903, investor Henry Pellatt bought 25 hands from developers Kertland and Rolf. Perat asked architect E. J. Lennox to design Casa Loma. It was built in 1911 and has several hundred feet of stables, potted huts, hunting huts (aka: coach house) on the north side of the main building. The hunting hut is a two story house with 407 square meters with a servant district. When a stable building was completed, Pera sold his summer house in Scarborough to his son and moved to a hunting cottage. These stables were used as castle construction sites (and also as male servants' dwellings), but some of them remained in the room under the stables.