Fleur de lis los angeles apartments
This is a simply amazing building to live in! Tanya, the property manager is on top of everything, very friendly and her maintenance staff is prompt and professional. She lives on site and is Sign In.
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ATG Studios. Add review No registration required. Lindsey L. The vintage charm of the lobby and individual units really sells. I never see sketchy people around the building and always feel safe.
The utilities are included and the resident landlord Tanya is very sweet and approachable about anything. The Maintenance guy has fixed all my requests promptly and he is always smiling.
I have nothing bad to say! I love living here! Elden P. Bryan was a Texan who landed in Los Angeles in and made a fortune in real estate, most notably selling H. Huntington his first piece of property. Around , the Bryan family decided to reside in the quickly developing Bunker Hill neighborhood and construction began at S. Grand Avenue. A superstitious man, Bryan allegedly halted construction and altered architectural plans numerous times to suit his paranoia. The finished product was an elegant home with two sets of stairs leading up to the front door.
One set was made up of fourteen steps and the other twelve, deliberately designed to avoid the unlucky number thirteen. The real estate baron and his wife, Georgie, entertained other prominent Los Angeles folk at the residence, frequently receiving coverage in the society column.
In , Bryan was developing the Westmoreland Tract in the Wilshire-Pico District and construction commenced on an eighteen room home by architect Charles F Whittlesey, who incorporated his trademark reinforced concrete into the design.
It is unknown if Bryan left Bunker Hill because Westmoreland was more fashionable or because he felt the Grand Ave residence to be unlucky after all. By , the Bryan family had moved into their palatial new quarters and the home on Bunker Hill was gone, replaced by the Fleur-de-Lis Apartments and another house.
Bryan Residence has existed for approximately fourteen years. Perhaps the superstitious homeowner had been onto something.
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