![]() The work was designed by a team led by AE3 Partners in association with Steinberg Hart and was constructed by a joint venture of KSJ Construction and VCC Builders. A new six-level building constructed on the original building's parking lot was added and together both buildings serve as the main "Legacy Plaza" campus for the South Central Los Angeles Regional Center (SCLARC), a non-profit dedicated to serving the developmentally disabled. ![]() Recent Renovation īetween 2014 – 2015 the building was completely renovated, its building systems replaced and its original 1949 appearance restored at the exterior and within key interior spaces. In response, the owners and local preservationists petitioned the City of Los Angeles to add the building as Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #1000 and ultimately prevailed in their efforts to retain the murals as part of the building's original fabric. In 2011 this Commission also attempted to separately sell off the famous lobby murals to the Smithsonian Institution. The California Department of Insurance forced the liquidation of the company and its assets, including its building and its art collection. The Golden State Mutual Life Insurance company occupied the building until 2009 when the company became insolvent. These were removed in recent renovations. In the mid 1950s vertical sun shades were added to the three prominent vertical window bands facing the intersection possibly due to heat gain on the then un-air conditioned building. It was described in one contemporary source "…as the finest building to be erected and owned by Negroes in the nation" Building History The building opened in August 1949 in a week-long celebration attended by California Lieutenant Governor Goodwin Knight and other dignitaries and cemented the company's place in the community. Baruch Corporation with a final cost of $956,000 with an additional $107,000 in furniture. Woodruff that represented the history of African American in California from the state's founding to the then present day.Ĭonstruction was completed by the Herbert M. The generous two story main lobby was flanked by two murals by Charles H. He designed the five-story steel and concrete structure (with mezzanine and basement levels) to accommodate over 300 employees and planned its interior "around the way the company operates" with a 400-seat auditorium with state of the art audiovisual equipment, a 150-person cafeteria, and employee lounge and medical department. The company commissioned Paul Williams as the architect for the new building. The company's decision to locate here, in part, signaled the decline of the Central Avenue District for the City's African American Population. At that time this location was described as "most attractive business corners outside of downtown Los Angeles" due to its convenient location on major bus lines. In 1946 the board of the Golden State Mutual Company decided it had outgrown its second 1928 building on Central Ave (also an historic building) and to relocate to a new site at the corner of West Adams Boulevard and South Western Ave (1999 West Adams) in the West Adams District. The company grew extensively during the 1920s and 1930s serving this previously unserved market. This was the company's second building to bear this name, the first having been built in 1928.įounded in 1925 Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company (GSM) was the largest African American owned insurance company in the Western United States and was the first to offer all persons life insurance regardless of race. The building is located in West Adams in South Los Angeles about 3.5 miles southwest of Downtown Los Angeles and 2 miles northwest of Exposition Park and USC. The building was designed by Paul Revere Williams, the noted African-American Architect. The Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building is a landmark 5-story, 84 ft (26 m) office building in the Late Modern style built in 1949 as the headquarters for its namesake company.
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