Clock Tower Building, Santa Monica

Clock Tower Building

Clock Tower Building, Santa Monica
Location 225 Santa Monica Boulevard, Santa Monica
Coordinates 34°00′56″N 118°29′48″W / 34.01552°N 118.4967°W / 34.01552; -118.4967Coordinates: 34°00′56″N 118°29′48″W / 34.01552°N 118.4967°W / 34.01552; -118.4967
Built 1929 - 30
Architect Walker & Eisen
Architectural style(s) Art Deco

The Clock Tower Building, built between 1929 and 1930 in Art Déco style, is the highest skyscraper in Santa Monica. For around 40 years it held the record for the tallest building in the skyline. The skyscraper was commissioned by the Bay Cities Guaranty and Loan Association to the Californian architects Albert Raymond Walker (1881–1958) and Percy Augustin Eisen (1885–1946), whose firm, Walker & Eisen, with a staff of more than 50 draughtsmen, was the most important leading practice in California in the 1920s. Among its many completed projects, the firm had recently designed the extraordinary skyscraper in the Romanesque Revival style known as the Fine Arts Building in Los Angeles (now owned by Sorgente Group of America), one of the most representative buildings in the city.

The Clock Tower Building, not far from the beaches washed by the ocean and with an unobstructed view of the nearby mountains, occupies a rectangular lot located at 225 Santa Monica Boulevard, in the heart of the city’s business district and close to the main thoroughfare Third Street Promenade. The ground floor of the skyscraper, in the form of a compact parallelepipedal block surmounted by a tower, is occupied by retail spaces, and the upper storeys by offices.

The seemingly monolithic image of the building is actually enlivened by slight volumetric shifts that divide the high-rise into three sections: a wide basement level characterized by the large entrances to the retail areas; a robust second block, slightly tapered towards the top, that houses offices from the second floor to the twelfth, and lastly a square stepped tower which, placed off-centre with respect to the base, rises skywards and has clock-faces on each side – hence the name Clock Tower.

The skyscraper, with a load-bearing structure in reinforced concrete and steel, is faced with slabs of limpid, pure white stone that both absorbs and reflects the bright light and the clear Californian sky. The large masses and wall decorations of the skyscraper are reminiscent of pre-Columbian architecture, the pure geometries of the stepped temples and the pureness of form found in Mayan and Inca building. The twelve office floors are crowned by a crenellated border, where the most ornate decorations on the cladding are concentrated. The tapered, stepped tower on the top is also faced with white marble slabs, which form a zigzag pattern in relief on the sides and around the edge of the summit; it is visible from everywhere in the city and rendered instantly recognizable due to its rectangular clock with four black dials (one on each side of the tower), and whose shining hands mark the exact time and are an urban signal in the city.

Due to its height, its imposing volumes and the immediate recognizability of its architecture, the Clock Tower Building has possessed a powerful urban identity since it was built. This makes it a true landmark that acts as a compass and guide in the boundless Santa Monica cityscape.

Sorgente Group of America purchased the Clock Tower Building in Santa Monica in May 2013.[1][2]

Gallery

References

  1. Claudia Astarita, This is Italy, "The Clock Tower building in Santa Monica is now Italian" (May 03, 2013)
    Forbes Luis, Costar Group, "The Clock Tower building in Santa Monica is now Italian" (April 29, 2013)
    Herrera Kevin, Santa Monica Daily Press, "Santa Monica Clock Tower sells for $34.3M" (April 30, 2013)
    Roger Vincent, Los Angeles Times, "Italian investors buy Clock Tower building in Santa Monica" (May 01, 2013)
  2. Text edited by Marzia Marandola, Associated Researcher and Professor of History of Architecture, La Sapienza, University of Rome
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