Los Angeles Times

Hearst turning the page

The Herald Examiner building, vacant for decades, will become creative office space.

- By Andrew Khouri

The former offices of the Herald Examiner opened a century ago on Broadway with red-tiled roofs and prominent arches in the Mission Revival style inspired by California’s past.

Now the downtown Los Angeles landmark, vacant since the newspaper closed in 1989, will experience yet another sort of revival: conversion into creative offices and mixed use, the latest trend in commercial real estate.

New York developer Georgetown Co. purchased an undisclose­d stake in the beige architectu­ral gem from Hearst Corp. and is partnering with the newspaper chain on a $40-million project to redevelop the building into offices and ground-floor restaurant­s.

Georgetown plans to preserve and restore the ornate lobby and the iconic Spangreat ish-Moorish facade, while opening up the street-level arched windows that were enclosed decades ago during a 10-year strike against the paper.

“It’s been asleep a long time. It’s time to wake her up,” said Steve Hearst, a vice president of Hearst and grandson of William Randolph Hearst, the newspaper’s founder.

Most of the rest of the building’s interior, which is considered far less architectu­rally significan­t, will be converted into about 80,000 square feet of creative office space, Georgetown Vice President Michael Fischer said.

Long popular with technology companies, creative offices are now in demand even by law firms and bankers who like the emphasis on open floor plans, shared work spaces and a dash of

authentici­ty such as exposed brick, or in the case of the Herald Examiner, a bit of Spanish architectu­ral flare with ties to a famous press baron.

The developmen­t, expected to be completed toward the end of 2017, will join a previously run-down Broadway that’s changed dramatical­ly in recent years. New establishm­ents such as the trendy Ace Hotel two blocks away have helped lure more investment, including boutiques and upscale restaurant­s.

Across from the Herald building, which is at 11th Street, a historic 13-story tower formerly known as the Case Hotel is being converted into the boutique Downtown L.A. Proper Hotel. And developer Forest City is building two residentia­l and retail complexes, including one directly behind the Herald Examiner, on land that it picked up from Hearst in late 2013.

“Everywhere surroundin­g us is developmen­t activity,” Fischer said.

The old Herald building is iconic for many different reasons, including its architectu­re and connection to the newspaper magnate, who once kept a private apartment there, said Linda Dishman, president of the Los Angeles Conservanc­y

“It tells so many stories,” she said, noting that the conservanc­y supports the repurposin­g of the building.

In the early 1900s, Hearst commission­ed California’s first registered woman architect, Julia Morgan, to design a headquarte­rs for what was then the Los Angeles Examiner prior to a merger with another paper. Morgan, who later designed Hearst Castle, incorporat­ed Spanish, Italian and Moorish touches and created an ornate lobby of marble and gold with hand-painted tiled flooring.

When it opened, the building featured groundleve­l arched windows. But during a labor rally to support striking Herald Examiner workers in January 1968, many of those were shattered as some in the crowd turned violent and “fireworks began to explode around the premises,” the Los Angeles Times reported.

The windows were soon enclosed with cement to protect the building, Steve Hearst said.

The strike lasted until 1977 and the paper struggled to recover. By the time the feisty and locally focused Herald Examiner closed in 1989, Broadway was no longer a shopping, entertainm­ent and theater hub. Major retailers had decamped for the suburbs and blight had swept up and down the once grand corridor.

The building has remained vacant ever since except for use as a filming site. Last year it was the secondmost-filmed location in the Los Angeles area, according to a review of permit data. Over the years, shows such as “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelph­ia” and “Parenthood” have used the building, where sets such a police station and bar will be torn down to make way for the project.

A previous plan by Hearst to redevelop the building was canceled during the last economic downturn. But with the real estate market on the upswing and a flood of investment pouring into downtown, the company is moving forward with Georgetown as a partner.

Founded in the 1970s by Marshall Rose, Georgetown has developed large-scale properties around the country, including InterActiv­eCorp’s New York headquarte­rs designed by Frank Gehry and office buildings locally on the Paramount and Sony studio lots. Rose is married to actress Candice Bergen.

Architectu­re firm Gensler is leading the rehab’s design. Rob Jernigan, the company’s regional managing principal, said most of the newly restored arched windows will open onto the street to allow for outdoor dining.

The public also will have access to the famed lobby, possibly through a restaurant.

“What we are not going to do is put a security guard in the front door to say ‘If you’re not an office space tenant you can’t come into the lobby,’ ” Jernigan said. “The intent is to have that great lobby be enjoyed and shared by more than just tenants.”

Real estate broker Carle Pierose of Industry Partners, who specialize­s in leasing creative offices but is not involved with the project, said the developmen­t should help pull Broadway’s economic comeback south to 11th Street and perhaps beyond.

But since Morgan and Hearst intended the newspaper to be the sole occupant of the building, it could be a challenge to divide it up into discrete offices.

“It looks like the type of building that would be tricky to multi-tenant,” Pierose said.

 ?? Al Seib
Los Angeles Times ?? THE HERALD EXAMINER building on Broadway at 11th street in downtown L.A. was commission­ed by publisher William Randolph Hearst in the early 1900s.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE HERALD EXAMINER building on Broadway at 11th street in downtown L.A. was commission­ed by publisher William Randolph Hearst in the early 1900s.
 ?? Al Seib
Los Angeles Times ?? DEVELOPER GEORGETOWN plans to preserve and restore the building’s ornate lobby and the iconic Spanish-Moorish facade, while opening up the street-level arched windows that were enclosed decades ago.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times DEVELOPER GEORGETOWN plans to preserve and restore the building’s ornate lobby and the iconic Spanish-Moorish facade, while opening up the street-level arched windows that were enclosed decades ago.
 ?? Georgetown Co. ?? A RENDERING shows the plan to convert the longvacant building into creative offices and restaurant­s.
Georgetown Co. A RENDERING shows the plan to convert the longvacant building into creative offices and restaurant­s.
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Los Angeles Times ?? PROPERTY MANAGER Doyle Murphy views downtown L.A. from the Herald Examiner building.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times PROPERTY MANAGER Doyle Murphy views downtown L.A. from the Herald Examiner building.

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