LA's Cutting-Edge Architecture
The Getty Center
Broad Contemporary Art Museum at LACMA
Caltrans District 7 Headquarters
Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels
Walt Disney Concert Hall
U.S. Bank Tower (Library Tower)

People from all over the world visit Los Angeles to admire the city's stunning architecture. From iconic to spiritual, these buildings impact LA in many ways and have become parts of the city's heart and soul. The architects mentioned in this story have all earned the Pritzker Prize, including Frank Gehry, Thom Mayne, Richard Meier, José Rafael Moneo, I.M. Pei and Renzo Piano. Read about their ingenuity and the architectural highlights of their renowned buildings.

Architect: Richard Meier
Opened: 1997
Address: 1200 Getty Center Drive
Features: Home to the J. Paul Getty Museum, this building took more than a decade to build, and sits above LA as a $1.2 billion investment in the Los Angeles art scene. It occupies two ridges in the Santa Monica Mountains, with a series of interconnected buildings built of concrete and steel with travertine cladding. The surrounding landscape provides a welcome complement to the building’s grandeur, with sprawling gardens, plazas and terraces created to prevent erosion but also to integrate the building with its natural setting. The Getty Center has installed 28 major sculptures from the collection of the late Fran and Ray Stark. Works include masterpieces by many of the 20th century’s greatest artists, including Calder, Magritte and Miró, among others.


Architect
:
Renzo Piano
Opened: 2008
Address: 5905 Wilshire Boulevard
Features: Since its February 2008 opening, the Broad Contemporary Art Museum (BCAM) at Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) became an instant star on LA’s architectural walk of fame. Standing three stories tall, BCAM serves as the focal point for arriving visitors as it welcomes guests to the venerable institution. Clad in travertine panels joined as a sheathing over a steel skeleton, the building fits perfectly into the existing surroundings. On the third level, a louvered roof system brings natural light to interior spaces in a way that also protects the art. The entire LACMA expansion project was overseen by Renzo Piano, including the design for BCAM.
Caltrans Building flickr/omar omar

Architect
:
Thom Mayne/Morphosis
Opened: 2004
Address: 100 S. Main Street
Features: This building is guaranteed to elicit strong reactions from viewers. But love it or hate it, the building can’t be ignored. Perforated metal panels create a skin that covers exposed structural elements, visible from inside the building’s walkways and interior spaces. At night, the exterior panels open up to reveal windows. The south wall has a photovoltaic system capable of producing up to 5 percent of the building’s energy. Many of the building’s features are meant to evoke the state’s highway system, including the environmental art installation by Keith Sonnier in the outdoor lobby. The area consists of red and blue neon lights meant to suggest automobile head and tail lights.

Architect
:
José Rafael Moneo
Opened: 2002
Address: 555 W. Temple Street
Features: A contemporary cathedral designed with virtually no right angles, this building breaks the mold of the classic European cathedral of the Middle Ages. As the third largest cathedral in the world, the significance of this building is tied to more than just its architecture; it’s the seat of the Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles, serves more than 4 million Catholic worshipers and is the site of the Archbishop’s major liturgies. The exterior is sand-colored concrete, with an interior lit during the day by sunlight shining through thousands of alabaster panels. The large bronze doors by sculptor Robert Graham, the tapestries by artist John Nava and other works of art complete the building, making it well worth close inspection. Read more about the cathedral.

Architect
:
Frank Gehry
Opened: 2003
Address: 111 S. Grand Avenue
Features: There aren’t many buildings in Los Angeles as recognizable as the Walt Disney Concert Hall at the Music Center. The stainless steel skin covers a framework of steel beams erected in the shape of billowing sails or flower petals, depending on your point of view. Inside, the building houses one of LA’s best concert venues, with an auditorium known as much for its acoustics as its design. Read more about Walt Disney Concert Hall.
Architect
:
I.M. Pei
Opened: 1989
Address: 633 W. Fifth Street
Features: The tallest building in the United States west of Chicago, this is one of LA’s most iconic structures. With 1.3 million square feet, the U.S. Bank Tower is 73 stories tall and reaches a height of 1,018 feet. The design of the building features interlocking sets of granite planes and curves that step down in a series of terraces and ledges, creating a building that’s neither round nor square. A large glass “crown” on top of the building is illuminated at night, and in the lobby a giant mixed-media mural entitled Unity depicts the history of Los Angeles.
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The Getty Center
Broad Contemporary Art Museum at LACMA
Caltrans District 7 Headquarters
Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels
Walt Disney Concert Hall
U.S. Bank Tower (Library Tower)
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