Los Angeles Times

THE GRAND VISION

Architect Frank Gehry unveils designs for his project facing Disney Hall

- By Roger Vincent

Visitors who come at all hours every day to marvel at architect Frank Gehry’s gleaming Walt Disney Concert Hall routinely turn their backs on the eyesore across Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles.

The shabby open-air parking structure known as “the Tinker Toy garage” has been a public embarrassm­ent for decades. Now, its days are numbered.

With a lift from downtown L.A.’s expansive constructi­on boom and an infusion of Chinese cash, work on the longdelaye­d $1-billion complement to the Walt Disney Concert Hall is finally set to begin in the fall.

Gehry has completed new — and nearly final — designs for the Grand, an open-air complex of apartments, condominiu­ms, movie theaters, restaurant­s and shops that promises to enliven a city block that has been mostly dead for half a century.

“We will be fully under constructi­on in early fall,” said Ken Himmel, president of Related Cos.’ mixed-use developmen­t division. The company got the contract to build the sprawling Grand Avenue Project in 2004 but repeatedly postponed work on the key parcel across the street from the concert hall on Grand at 1st Street as the recession and doubts about its viability slowed progress. The delay helped improve the project, Himmel insisted. Five years ago, there was a “disconnect” between what Gehry wanted to build and what Related could pay for, he said. “The budget wasn’t in line.”

Since then, Gehry has found ways to reconcile his vision with costs, Himmel said, and the prolonged burst of downtown developmen­t including housing, hotel and entertainm­ent projects has attracted upscale restaurate­urs and retailers who can afford to pay top rents.

“All that translates to higher revenues” for Related, Himmel said, “which allows us to build a better project.”

For his part, Gehry said he can now “live within the constraint­s” of Related’s budget and believes the Grand will stand out from other big mixed-use developmen­ts downtown.

“They look like everywhere else,” Gehry said, without identifyin­g specific projects he regards as uninspired. “You see them everywhere.”

The Grand will have a mix of shops and restaurant­s spread among a series of landscaped open terraces, along with an approximat­ely 450-seat cinema com-

plex on the east side above Olive Street. There will be a 20-story Equinox hotel with 314 rooms and a 39-story residentia­l tower with 113 condos and 323 apartments. Related will offer subsidized rents to low-income tenants for 20% of the apartments.

And it will blend with Disney Hall through shapes, colors and materials, Gehry said, so that the new complex is “not antithetic­al” to the distinctiv­e hall or “in your face.”

That’s not to say it won’t be bold, with off-center angles, multiple terraces and an open core designed to attract people into one big plaza between the concert hall and the Grand, especially when the street is closed for special events.

“You’ll see a lightness in the building,” Gehry said. “That’s in the way we are relating to Disney Hall. We are not building heavy stuff.”

With the new developmen­t, Gehry will be able to complete a trick he baked into his design for Disney Hall — its surfaces were carefully arranged to receive light projection­s from across the street. When the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic is performing inside, the live concert can be shown on multiple walls of Disney Hall to entertain people outside and in the Grand.

“We selected the metal surface that tested best for projection,” Gehry said of Disney Hall. “You close that piece of Grand Avenue, put some chairs out there and you’ve got something special. We’re not just building buildings, we’re building places.”

Philanthro­pist Eli Broad, who has supported Grand Avenue improvemen­ts for decades and was instrument­al in the erection of Disney Hall, predicted the Grand “will make certain Grand Avenue is viewed as the cultural and civic district of this region of 14 million people.”

It’s already one of the region’s top draws. Broad’s contempora­ry art museum, which opened next to Disney Hall in 2015, by itself draws 750,000 visitors a year, Broad said.

The Grand will replace a parking structure that was intended to be temporary when it was built after Bunker Hill’s once-fancy residentia­l neighborho­od was bulldozed in the 1950s and 1960s in an urban renewal project intended to create a new corporate and cultural center for the city.

Today Grand Avenue has office skyscraper­s, apartment towers, museums and the Colburn School for performing arts, but the lifeless block across from Disney Hall contribute­s to a reputation for sterility Bunker Hill hasn’t been able to shake.

“When they scraped the mansions and decided to build a planned community, the plan didn’t call for blocks of parking lots,” said downtown office landlord Christophe­r Rising. “What Related is doing is the completion of a vision that is two or three generation­s old. It’s the part of the puzzle that’s been missing.”

Filling it has proved to be a monumental challenge. Civic leaders wanted a spectacula­r mixed-use complex that would transform Bunker Hill into a lively 24-hour hub, but widely perceived lack of demand in the neighborho­od for deluxe hotel rooms, expensive residences and upscale stores discourage­d the financial investment required to get it done.

After the 2007 recession, however, downtown has evolved into one of the most desirable real estate investment markets in the country as the building spree near Staples Center and other neighborho­ods proved successful.

Key to getting the Grand underway is Related’s partnershi­p with a subsidiary of China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Group, one of China’s largest state-owned companies. Its subsidiary, called CCCG Overseas Real Estate Ltd., or CORE, has invested $290 million in the Grand since the companies partnered last year. It is CORE’s first project in the United States.

Related hired Rick Vogel, who speaks Mandarin, to manage developmen­t of the Grand and coordinate with CORE. Vogel will soon present the updated plans to city and county officials who make up the joint powers authority overseeing the Grand Avenue Project that also included the Broad, Grand Park and the 19-story Emerson apartment tower completed in 2014.

City Councilman Jose Huizar and County Supervisor Hilda Solis pressed Related to include amenities and community benefits such as free public events that would make the Grand welcoming to people beyond well-heeled symphony subscriber­s.

“Given the upscale view of Grand Avenue and what it’s become, we want it to invite everyone,” Huizar said.

That means there will be some inexpensiv­e shops and food offerings as well as the wide public plaza and multiple entrances.

“It can be used by normal people, and it can be fancy,” Gehry said. “You can pull up a Rolls-Royce, or you can pull up a food truck.”

‘You’ll see a lightness in the building .... We are not building heavy stuff.’ — Frank Gehry, architect who designed the Grand Avenue Project

 ?? Gehry Partners / Related Cos. ?? CONSTRUCTI­ON is set to begin this fall for a complex with apartments, condos, theaters, restaurant­s and shops on Grand Avenue in downtown L.A.
Gehry Partners / Related Cos. CONSTRUCTI­ON is set to begin this fall for a complex with apartments, condos, theaters, restaurant­s and shops on Grand Avenue in downtown L.A.
 ?? Claire Hannah Collins Los Angeles Times ?? FRANK GEHRY, at his office in Los Angeles, says his designs for the Grand Avenue Project will stand out from other downtown developmen­ts.
Claire Hannah Collins Los Angeles Times FRANK GEHRY, at his office in Los Angeles, says his designs for the Grand Avenue Project will stand out from other downtown developmen­ts.
 ?? Gehry Partners / Related Cos. ?? RELATED COS. is set to begin constructi­on in the fall for the Grand Avenue Project, a mixed-use complex across from the Walt Disney Concert Hall replacing the “Tinker Toy garage” many consider an eyesore.
Gehry Partners / Related Cos. RELATED COS. is set to begin constructi­on in the fall for the Grand Avenue Project, a mixed-use complex across from the Walt Disney Concert Hall replacing the “Tinker Toy garage” many consider an eyesore.
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