Garden of Allah Hotel
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Garden_of_Allah_Hotel an entity of type: Thing
The Garden of Allah was a famous hotel in West Hollywood, California (then an unincorporated area of Los Angeles which was usually considered a part of Hollywood), at 8152 Sunset Boulevard between Crescent Heights and Havenhurst, at the east end of the Sunset Strip.
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Garden of Allah Hotel
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Garden of Allah Hotel
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Garden of Allah Hotel
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668947
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1118074363
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Hotel
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1927
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8152
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January 1927
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David Wallace
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Sheilah Graham
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columnist Lucius Beebe, a frequent Garden resident
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--07-26
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Lost Hollywood
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The Garden of Allah
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on why he liked living at the Garden of Allah.
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1926
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Demolished 1959
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Hollywood's and thus America's most unconventional hotel, actually "notorious" would be a more descriptive word.
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A light-hearted, unrealistic place.
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It reminds me of Hollywood.
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I'll be damned if I'll believe anyone lives in a place called the Garden of Allah.
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There is no place for a Garden of Allah that, for one brief moment, was Camelot. It was inevitable that Hollywood as we knew it, and its satellite, Alla's garden, should disappear together.
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Nothing interrupted the continual tumult that was life at the Garden of Allah. Now and then the men in white came with a van and took somebody away, or bankruptcy or divorce or even jail claimed a participant in its strictly unstately sarabands. Nobody paid any mind.
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The Garden of Allah was a famous hotel in West Hollywood, California (then an unincorporated area of Los Angeles which was usually considered a part of Hollywood), at 8152 Sunset Boulevard between Crescent Heights and Havenhurst, at the east end of the Sunset Strip. Originally a 2.5-acre estate called Hayvenhurst, it was built in 1913 as the private residence of real estate developer William H. Hay. Alla Nazimova acquired the property in 1919: she converted it into a residential hotel in 1926 by adding 25 villas around the residence, which opened as the "Garden of Alla Hotel" in January 1927. In 1930, new owners renamed it the "Garden of Allah Hotel" (adding an 'h'). The property operated under a succession of owners for three decades until the last, Bart Lytton, owner of Lytton Savings & Loan, demolished the hotel in 1959 and replaced it with his bank's main branch.
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25080
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1927
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1926
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Demolished 1959