Hollywood's Historic Buildings

Theaters and other architectural gems lined Hollywood's famous boulevards during its Golden Age and now hold restored star appeal

  • By Laura Kiniry
  • Smithsonian.com, March 01, 2010
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Capitol Records building

Vine Street near corner of Hollywood Avenue, showing the Capitol Records building (© Bettmann / Corbis)


Capitol Records Tower

1750 Vine Street

Instantly recognizable for its resemblance to a stack of vinyl records, the 13-story Capitol Records Tower was nicknamed “The House that Nat Built” to acknowledge the financial success singer Nat King Cole brought to the company. The tower was constructed in 1956 and is the world’s first circular office building. A rooftop spire flashes “Hollywood’ in Morse code, and the building’s three glass and wood studios remain some of the best in the business. Everyone from Dean Martin to Coldplay has recorded here. Music pioneer Les Paul helped design the property’s eight underground echo chambers, each producing a unique reverberation that can’t be duplicated. Though parent company EMI sold the tower in 2006 they continue to lease it, despite rumors of closing down West Coast operations. Still, the proposed construction of nearby 16-story condos has some worrying about Capitol’s future in Hollywood.

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Comments (11)

Hollywood sucks

I remember those days well, especially the Palladiam - it wwas alwys such a thrill to walk into that ballroom. Also shopping on Hollywood Blvd. I had a suit made for !00.00 dollars and hated to geg rid of that one. There was a great tailor on the the Blvd.

It wouldn't BE Hollywood if it weren't in California

For the record, the corner pictured in the Capitol records entry is Vine and Argyle. There is no Hollywood Avenue. Hollywood Boulevard is a block South, where you can see the neon lights of the Broadway Hollywood.

Thank you for helping to preserve Classic Hollywood. I worked in the Capitol Record Tower in the sixties. Alan Livingston was President of Capitol, and Ed Nash was President of the Capitol Record Club. They made me Vice President of Marketing and Creative Services of the Capitol Record Club. We had to move the Club to Thousand Oaks because our 420 employees simply wouldn't fit in the tower, but I always kept an office there, and attended many policy meetings in the conference room on the thirteenth floor.

ALWAY SAVE THE PAST. GREAT TO SEE HISTORICAL BUILLDINGS. I HAVE A HOME OVER 200 YEARS. BUILT IN 1740

Thank you so much for a wonderful tour,something I always wanted to do in person, but................

I'm linking to this article for our blog WES BRYAN - MY LIFE IN MUSIC. Our blog is about rockabilly, the early rock and roll era, which Wes Bryan was part of as a singer, then a singer-songwriter, then a songwriter for American Music, and as a music producer. By linking to your article and the pictures, our readers can get a better sense of Hollywood as it was when Wes and so many that he worked with were walking their new songs into small record labels.

We're at http://www.wesbryan.blogspot.com

Christine Trzyna

The problem with Hollywood is that it's located in California.

Used exstensivly in Capital Record Club Advertising in the 60's a monument in LA...May it live forever!!!

Fascinating article. Loved reading about the historical places. So well researched. Want to see them in person next time we visit Hollywood.



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