Trinity Auditorium

The Trinity Auditorium, later known as the Embassy Hotel, is a historic building in Los Angeles, California, USA. It was built as a plant for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South in 1914. The Los Angeles Philharmonic debuted in this auditorium in 1919. It was used for jazz and rock concerts as well as labor union meetings from the 1920s to the 1950s. It was an annex of the University of Southern California from 1987 to 1998, when it was sold to the New York-based Chetrit Group. As of 2015, it has been vacant for more than a decade, with plans to remodel it into a new hotel.

Trinity Auditorium
Alternative namesEmbassy Hotel
General information
Architectural styleBeaux-Arts
Coordinates34.04491°N 118.25915°W / 34.04491; -118.25915
Construction started1911
Completed1914
CostUS$1 million
OwnerChetrit Group
Technical details
Floor count9
Design and construction
ArchitectHarry C. Deckbar
Thornton Fitzhugh
Frank George Krucker

Location

The building is located on the corner of 9th Street and Grand Avenue in Downtown Los Angeles.[1][2]

Reverend Charles Claud Selecman.

History

The nine-storey building was constructed with steel and concrete from 1911 to 1914.[2] It was dedicated on September 20, 1914.[3] It cost US$1 million to build.[3] It was designed in the Beaux-Arts architectural style by Frank George Krucker as the main architect, assisted by Thornton Fitzhugh and Harry C. Deckbar.[2]

The building was a church planting for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South,[4] with a large auditorium boasting the largest pipe organ in the Western United States and a men-only hotel on the six upper floors (renamed the Embassy Hotel in 1930).[3] It also came with "a cafeteria, roof garden, library, gymnasium, smoking room, bowling alley, nursery, barber shop, hospital and 16 club rooms."[3] The pastor was Reverend Charles Claude Selecman,[3] who later served as the third president of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.

Beyond Methodist services, the auditorium was used to show silent films. For example, actress Norma Talmadge watched a film she starred in, The Battle Cry of Peace, in this auditorium in 1915.[3] Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Philharmonic debuted here in 1919.[3] From the 1920s to the 1950s, the auditorium was used as a venue for labor union meetings.[3] Additionally, from the 1930s to the 1950s, jazz artists like Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Charlie Parker performed here.[3] By the 1960s, the auditorium was used for rock concerts.[3]

The building was acquired by the University of Southern California in the 1987, when it was used as a residential building and an annex.[1] They sold it to the Chetrit Group, chaired by Joseph Chetrit, in 1998.[3]

By 2005, the Chetrit Group decided to remodel the building as the Gansevoort West hotel scheduled for 2006.[3] The new hotel was supposed to be an LA version of the Hotel Gansevoort in New York City.[3] However, by 2007, the project had been cancelled.[5] By 2012, the owners decided to turn it into another hotel called the Empire Hotel,[6] with "183 hotel rooms, a groundfloor restaurant, an outdoor garden, a bar, and an entertainment venue."[7] The remodel was still underway in 2014.[7][8]

gollark: No, it doesn't.
gollark: Well, yes, but at atrocious throughput.
gollark: If you run it over a phone connection as if it is audio, you are subject to the same issues.
gollark: And in practice you'll get less because stuff isn't optimized for the precise weirdness of phone codecs and there's some lossiness.
gollark: If your phone uses a bitrate of, say, 64kbps, for encoding "voice" audio, then by the pigeonhole principle it is literally impossible to send more than 64kbps down that by meddling with audio.

References

  1. "Embassy Hotel & Auditorium". Dana and David Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. University of Southern California. Retrieved October 10, 2015.
  2. "Trinity Auditorium Building, Los Angeles, CA". Pacific Coast Architecture Database. University of Washington. Retrieved October 10, 2015.
  3. Vincent, Roger (September 19, 2005). "Another L.A. Comeback: A landmark auditorium will reopen as part of the conversion of a defunct downtown hotel into the Gansevoort West". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 10, 2015.
  4. "Trinity Auditorium Asking Conference for Moral Support". Santa Ana Register. Santa Ana, California. October 25, 1913. p. 1. Retrieved October 10, 2015 via Newspapers.com.
  5. "No Gansevoort for Downtown LA". Curbed. May 15, 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2015.
  6. Broverman, Neal (June 25, 2012). "Grand Ave.'s Trinity Auditorium to Become the Empire Hotel". Curbed. Retrieved October 10, 2015.
  7. Barragan, Bianca (March 13, 2014). "Sneak a Look Inside the Beautiful Trinity Auditorium's Slow Transformation Into a Hotel". Curbed. Retrieved October 10, 2015.
  8. Barragan, Bianca (November 21, 2014). "DTLA's Super-Delayed Clark and Embassy Hotels Finally, Actually Moving Forward". Curbed. Retrieved October 10, 2015.
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