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Bullock's Pasadena

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Revision as of 16:34, 4 November 2012 by Doncram (talk | contribs) (Undid revision 521325162 by Thundersnow (talk) not excess. pics add to the article, don't go backwards.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) United States historic place
Bullocks Pasadena
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Bullock's Pasadena from the street
Location401 S. Lake Ave.
Pasadena, California, United States
Built1944
ArchitectWurdeman and Becket
Architectural styleStreamline Moderne Art Deco
NRHP reference No.96000776
Added to NRHPJuly 12, 1996

Bullock's Pasadena, located at 401 S. Lake Ave. in Pasadena, California, is a 240,000-square foot (21 368 m²) Streamline Moderne Art Deco architectural style building now in use as a Macy's department store.

History

Design

The building was designed by noted Los Angeles architects Wurdeman & Becket, a partnership between Welton Becket and Walter Wurdemen. In addition to the building itself, the architects oversaw the design and installation of all aspects of the store's interior, from the wallpaper and display cases, to the unique mechanical conveyor system that delivered purchases directly to the parking lot.

Bullock's Pasadena, looking east

This attention to detail reflected the architect's philosophy of "total design," or taking responsibility for master planning, engineering, interiors, fixtures and furnishings, landscape, signage and graphics. The department store was purposely crafted to evoke an atmosphere of a "home" or that of an exclusive country club, in keeping with the company president's vision.

The design and merchandising of store were unique and stood in contrast to many older department stores of the time. Bullock's Pasadena was among the first department stores in the country to be located outside of a downtown area and was intended to appeal to the emerging "carriage trade," or those shoppers arriving by automobiles. As such, the store was oriented toward an unheard of 6-acre (24,000 m) parking lot located behind the structure.

Bullock's Pasadena, looking north

Notability

The store's promoters touted it as the "store of tomorrow" and Arts and Architecture magazine described it as "one of the world's most modern buildings." In fact, the design was recipient of an AIA Merit Award in 1950.

The store's elegance and prestige was the impetus for a surge in commercial development on both sides of South Lake Avenue following the Second World War. Previously a residential street bounded by houses, the street was soon dotted with upscale shops, boutiques, national retailers and restaurants and became known as one of the premiere shopping destinations in the San Gabriel Valley.

Decline

The South Lake Avenue shopping district, in which Bullock's Pasadena was a major player, started to lose its luster in the late 1980s. While Pasadena's once-seedy Old Town district was reborn as a trendy shopping and entertainment district, once-proud South Lake Avenue lost much of its distinction.

Current use of building

On July 12, 1996, the building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places as No. 96000776. In May 2000, the city of Pasadena's Design Review Board granted approval for a redevelopment of the building as part of a new shopping area called "The Shops on Lake Avenue," a $33 million project, featuring specialty shops, 27,000 square feet (2,500 m) of new restaurants and a new 300-space-parking garage, increasing parking capacity to nearly 1,200 spaces. Developed by Cleveland, Ohio-based Forest City Development California, Inc. and owned by Federated Department Stores, the project opened in the spring of 2002.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.preservela.com/archives/000395.html
  2. ^ Conyers, Patrick; Phillips, Cedar; and the Pasadena Museum of HistoryPasadena: A Business History.San Francisco, CA: Arcadia Publishing, 2007.
  3. Hayes, Elizabeth (March 2, 1998). "Macy's out to revitalize Pasadena's South Lake Avenue." Los Angeles Business Journal. http://www.allbusiness.com/sales/672651-1.html. Retrieved 2010-09-17.

External links

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Related
Store conversions to Macy's and predecessors
2006
Famous-Barr
The Jones Store
L. S. Ayres
  • The Famous Clothing Store (1911)
  • The William Barr Dry Goods Co. (1911)
  • The Jones Store added to division in 1998
  • Kaufman-Straus (1969, to L.S. Ayres)
  • Pogue's (1983, to L.S. Ayres)
  • Stewart Dry Goods (1985, to L.S. Ayres)
  • L.S. Ayres added to division in 1991
Filene's
Kaufmann's
Foley's
Hecht's
Strawbridge's

Strawbridge's added to division in 1996

Marshall Field's
Robinsons-May
Meier & Frank

Meier & Frank added to division in 2002; Zion's Cooperative Mercantile Institution (2001, to Meier & Frank)

2005
Rich's
Goldsmith's
Lazarus
Burdines
The Bon Marché
  • C.C. Anderson's (1937)
  • Missoula Mercantile (1978)
1996-2001
1947-1995
See also
Allied Stores
Associated Dry Goods
The May Department Stores Company
Macy's, Inc.
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