Share what you know,
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Share what you know,
and discover more.
Mar 07, 2022

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- Charmaine Bantugan
28th Street Apartments
This building designed by Paul Revere Williams, the first African American member of the American Institute of Architects, originally served the African American community as a YMCA. Throughout the twentieth century it was the site of important political meetings and social gatherings. The building featured two community rooms, a gymnasium, a pool, a communal cafeteria, and fifty-two dormitory-style rooms with shared toilets on each floor. The pool was an important feature, as municipal swimming pools were racially segregated in Los Angeles until 1931, providing African Americans with few swimming options. In 2012, the historic YMCA reopened as 28th Street Apartments after a renovation project that converted the original building and a new addition into forty-nine studio apartments with private kitchens and baths. The building now serves low-income adults and formerly homeless youths transitioning to independent living. The project preserved a cultural and architectural icon in Los Angeles, earning it a Conservancy Preservation Award in 2013. Photo by Eric Staudenmaier Photography ... Read More Read Less
28th Street Apartments
This building designed by Paul Revere Williams, the first African American member of the American Institute of Architects, originally served the African American community as a YMCA. Throughout the twentieth century it was the site of important political meetings and social gatherings. The building featured two community rooms, a gymnasium, a pool, a communal cafeteria, and fifty-two dormitory-style rooms with shared toilets on each floor. The pool was an important feature, as municipal swimming pools were racially segregated in Los Angeles until 1931, providing African Americans with few swimming options. In 2012, the historic YMCA reopened as 28th Street Apartments after a renovation project that converted the original building and a new addition into forty-nine studio apartments with private kitchens and baths. The building now serves low-income adults and formerly homeless youths transitioning to independent living. The project preserved a cultural and architectural icon in Los Angeles, earning it a Conservancy Preservation Award in 2013. Photo by Eric Staudenmaier Photography ... Read More Read Less
Mar 07, 2022


28th Street Apartments
This building designed by Paul Revere Williams, the first African American member of the American Institute of Architects, originally served the African American community as a YMCA. Throughout the twentieth century it was the site of important political meetings and social gatherings.The building featured two community rooms, a gymnasium, a pool, a communal cafeteria, and fifty-two dormitory-style rooms with shared toilets on each floor. The pool was an important feature, as municipal swimming pools were racially segregated in Los Angeles until 1931, providing African Americans with few swimming options.
In 2012, the historic YMCA reopened as 28th Street Apartments after a renovation project that converted the original building and a new addition into forty-nine studio apartments with private kitchens and baths. The building now serves low-income adults and formerly homeless youths transitioning to independent living. The project preserved a cultural and architectural icon in Los Angeles, earning it a Conservancy Preservation Award in 2013.
Photo by Eric Staudenmaier Photography
Posted Date
Mar 06, 2022
Historical Record Date
Mar 07, 2022
Source Name
Los Angeles Conservancy
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