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Travel + Leisure
17-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Travel + Leisure
This Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Building Could Soon Lose Its UNESCO World Heritage Site Status—Here's Why
Hollyhock House, located in East Hollywood, is one of Los Angeles's most iconic landmarks and is the only UNESCO World Heritage Site in the city—however, this architectural gem may soon lose its UNESCO status and close to the public. Facing a major budget shortfall, L.A.'s City Council is weighing municipal cuts and staffing reductions proposed by Mayor Karen Bass, some of which affect the Department of Cultural Affairs, which manages Hollyhock House. The landmark currently has two full-time employees, and under the potential plan, it would be left with just one staff member. Additionally, two other positions, which are currently vacant, would also be eliminated, making it impossible to support public tours and ongoing preservation efforts. The house officially earned UNESCO World Heritage status in 2019. It's one of just 26 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the United States and the only man-made one on the West Coast. However, guidelines require the house to have at least four full-time staffers in order to maintain its UNESCO status. Additionally, the cuts will affect the city's ability to preserve and maintain one of arguably the most unique buildings in L.A. 'Hollyhock House was the first Los Angeles commission for the legendary architect Frank Lloyd Wright,' says Andrew Salimian, director of advocacy at the Los Angeles Conservancy, a historic preservation organization. '... Hollyhock House is an extraordinary and early expression of Southern California Architecture." This massive, 17-room residence was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for American oil heiress and socialite Aline Barnsdall, who intended it to be a part of a massive, 36-acre art and theater complex. However, the project was never fully completed, and Barnsdall found the home too impractical to live in. So, in 1927, the house was donated to the City of Los Angeles, and it became a public museum in 1976. Heavily inspired by pre-Columbian Central American architecture, Hollyhock is considered to be one of Wright's most experimental works and is best known for the hollyhock motifs (Barnsdall's favorite flower) that visitors can spot around the property. As of now, the site is open to visitors Thursday through Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. In recent years, the city has invested heavily in renovating Hollyhock House. During the pandemic, it closed for two years, and during that time, its massive fireplace, art-glass balcony doors, the guesthouse, and original Wright-designed furnishings were restored. The proposed cuts have been a shock to both preservationists and architecture fans. 'The city worked for over 15 years to get UNESCO status for Hollyhock House, and now these cuts will adversely affect the preservation, protection, and public access to this site,' says Salimian.
Yahoo
14-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Letters to the Editor: After the loss of Will Rogers' home, L.A. must protect Hollyhock House from closure
To the editor: I was unsettled by reading of the city of Los Angeles' struggle to maintain the Hollyhock House ('Frank Lloyd Wright's Hollyhock House could close due to city budget cuts,' May 7). It would be awful to see it closed and to lose its UNESCO designation as a World Heritage Site. I know funding is always an issue, but if there is anything that the California State Park System can do to help support the city in keeping the property open and viable, I (and many others) would be most appreciative. It was tragic to see Will Rogers' home destroyed in the Palisades fire. Your recent article on that loss was powerful, detailing the permanent loss of a landmark ('At historic home of Will Rogers, a painful question after fire: What comes next?,' May 4). We shouldn't lose another landmark property as an indirect impact of the Altadena and Palisades fires. Robert C. Pavlik, San Luis Obispo This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Los Angeles Times
14-05-2025
- General
- Los Angeles Times
Letters to the Editor: After the loss of Will Rogers' home, L.A. must protect Hollyhock House from closure
To the editor: I was unsettled by reading of the city of Los Angeles' struggle to maintain the Hollyhock House ('Frank Lloyd Wright's Hollyhock House could close due to city budget cuts,' May 7). It would be awful to see it closed and to lose its UNESCO designation as a World Heritage Site. I know funding is always an issue, but if there is anything that the California State Park System can do to help support the city in keeping the property open and viable, I (and many others) would be most appreciative. It was tragic to see Will Rogers' home destroyed in the Palisades fire. Your recent article on that loss was powerful, detailing the permanent loss of a landmark ('At historic home of Will Rogers, a painful question after fire: What comes next?,' May 4). We shouldn't lose another landmark property as an indirect impact of the Altadena and Palisades fires. Robert C. Pavlik, San Luis Obispo