Tag: ER

  • The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from “ER”

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (15 of 15)

    The Grim Cheaper likes to say that I fixate on the silliest of things.  I typically scoff at the notion, but he’s 100% right.  Case in point – a few months back favorite blogger Emily Schuman, of Cupcakes and Cashmere, did a photo shoot at the Arts District Firehouse Hotel, a stylish fire-station-turned-lodging in downtown L.A.  While there, she recorded an Instagram story showing an assortment of blush matchbooks displayed at the check-in desk.  As it so happens, I had recently changed up my kitchen décor by adding some pops of pink, including a bowl filled with two rose-colored matchbooks.  One look at Emily’s story and I decided I had to snag some of the hotel’s matches ASAP to add to my new collection.  When the GC and I headed out to L.A. to take care of some business a few weeks later, I, of course, tried to reserve a room at the property, but it was completely booked.  Undeterred, I ventured right on over there as soon as we arrived in town to grab that matchbook – and an iced latte from the lobby coffee bar, natch.  The Arts District Firehouse Hotel is so artfully designed and unique that I couldn’t help but snap some pics while waiting for my drink, which turned out to be quite fortuitous, because, as it turns out, the place is a filming location!

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    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel began life as Engine Co. 17, which started servicing the downtown area on April 1st, 1905.  Interestingly, it was situated in a slightly different location at the time – at 2100 East Seventh Street, about 100 feet north of its current home.  At its inception, the handsome vine-covered building (which you can see here) sat facing Seventh Street, in pretty much the spot where Bread Lounge stands today  When the Seventh Street Bridge, which ran in front of the station, was raised above grade in the mid-20s, Engine Co. 17 had to be re-located.  I’ve come across a few reports stating that to accommodate the project, the entire building was picked up and moved the short distance to 710 South Santa Fe Avenue, but I don’t believe that to be true.  Though similar, the edifice of the original Engine Co. 17 is quite different from that of the Arts District Firehouse Hotel.  The former boasted an intricately paned, three-panel window with angled projections across its second floor (as you can see here), while the latter has six separate flat windows in that spot.  And while the original featured one bay door, the hotel has two.  Though subtle, the differences are just enough to lead me to believe the 1904 firehouse was razed during the bridge project and a replacement then built at the new location.  Whatever the case, per LAFire the Santa Fe Avenue facility opened its doors on September 9th, 1927.  The station operated at that site for the next five decades before being decommissioned in 1980, at which point Company 17 re-located once again to a new building eight blocks south at 1601 South Santa Fe.

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (12 of 15)

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (11 of 15)

    The former firehouse was subsequently sold to photographer Robert Blakeman who transformed it into four separate artist studios which he shared with various contemporaries over the next 20 years.  In 2006, he put the property up for sale for $2.95 million.  At the time, the 8,721-square-foot, 2-story structure boasted the station’s original kitchen, an indoor handball court, and parking for 13 cars.  There were no takers, though, and it was removed from the market in 2007.

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (2 of 15)

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (1 of 15)

    At some point, Engine Co. 17 did change hands and the owners began making plans to transform the space into a hotel, but those plans did not reach fruition until hospitality magnate Dustin Lancaster was brought onboard in 2016.  He quickly tapped interior designer Sally Breer, with whom he partnered on two prior projects, to reimagine the station’s interior.  Sally worked her magic, converting the site into an operable lodging, all the while keeping intact all of the original firehouse elements that make it so unique.  A woman after my own heart, she told the Los Angeles Times, “Always our job first and foremost is to respect the architecture and breathe some new life into it.”  Yaaaaas!  With that mantra in mind, Breer preserved the building’s concrete flooring, pressed-tin ceiling, and exposed beam work.

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (8 of 15)

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (4 of 15)

    To say the finished project is stunning would be a gross understatement!  Since the transformation, the hotel has been written up by everyone from Vogue to Architectural Digest to Time – and it’s not very hard to see why.  The place is serious #designgoals!

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (3 of 15)

    Opened this past April, the boutique lodging features nine suites, a restaurant and bar, event space (the station’s former handball court now serves as a private dining room), a coffee bar, a large patio complete with a fire pit, and a small shop featuring Los Angeles- and California-themed wares.

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (9 of 15)

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (10 of 15)

    I did not realize Engine Co. 17 had appeared onscreen until long after I got home, though it really shouldn’t have come as a surprise.  A decommissioned firehouse with many of its original elements intact that operated as a studio (and therefore could easily be shut down for filming) for over two decades?  Sounds like a dream site for any location manager working on a procedural!

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (5 of 15)

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (6 of 15)

    In the Season 8 episode of ER titled “A River in Egypt,” which aired in 2002, Kerry Weaver (Laura Innes) confronts her paramour, firefighter Sandy Lopez (Lisa Vidal), at Engine Co. 17 for outing her to her fellow County General Hospital coworkers.

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    Thanks to firehouse expert Richard Yokley (you may remember him from this post and this post), I learned that Jack Malone (Anthony LaPaglia) and Danny Taylor (Enrique Murciano) investigated the disappearance of a firefighter at Engine Co. 17 in the Season 2 episode of Without a Trace titled “Trip Box,” which aired in 2003.

    Kate Beckett (Stana Katic) interrogates Rod Halstead (John M. Jackson) at Engine Co. 17 about a fire her mother had been looking into in the Season 4 episode of Castle titled “Rise,” which aired in 2011, though little of the building is visible in the scene.

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     Richard also informed me that Captain Ray Holt (Andre Braugher), Jake Peralta (Andy Samberg) and Charles Boyle (Joe Lo Truglio) headed to Engine Co. 17 to apologize to Fire Marshall Boone (Patton Oswalt) in the Season 1 episode of Brooklyn Nine-Nine titled “Sal’s Pizza,” which aired in 2013.

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    The episode gives us some nice glimpses of the firehouse’s Interior, as well.

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    The music video for A Great Big World’s 2014 song “Already Home,” which you can watch here, also largely took place at Engine Co. 17.  The song tells the story of lovers who live on opposite coasts, which explains why the top screen capture below is split.

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    Per On Location Vacations, the pilot of Like Father was also lensed at the firehouse in 2012, but, sadly, it appears as if the show never made it on air.

    The Arts District Firehouse Hotel from ER (7 of 15)

    And for those asking, pictured below are the matchbooks I went out of my way to procure – a fabulous addition to my collection, don’t you think?

    For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

    Stalk It: The Arts District Firehouse Hotel, aka the former Engine Co. 17 from the “A River in Egypt” episode of ER, is located at 710 South Santa Fe Avenue in downtown Los Angeles.  You can visit the lodging’s official website here.

  • Stalking the WB – For the Third Time!

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    As I’ve mentioned a few times before, this past October, my good friends from Switzerland came to visit my family for a few weeks.  While they were here, I decided to take them on a Hollywood studio tour.  The only problem was I couldn’t decide exactly which Hollywood studio tour to take them on.  So, I got Mike, from MovieShotsLA, on the phone and the two of us had a very in-depth discussion about it, carefully weighing all of our options.  Not kidding – you should have heard the two of us.  🙂   Anyway, we quickly narrowed down our choices to either the Paramount Studio Tour or the Warner Brothers VIP Studio Tour.   And even though I was leaning towards Paramount, Mike convinced me that because the WB Tour covers the overall studio experience, it would be the best choice for those stalkers who had yet to visit a movie studio.  Paramount is geared more towards us die-hard stalkers, in my opinion, which is probably why I like it the best.  🙂  So, with our tour location finally decided upon, the four of us headed out bright and early the following morning to stalk the WB.  This was actually my third time stalking the lot and it really is true what they say – no two tours are alike.  I already want to go back for a fourth time.  🙂   Sadly, though, our tour guide left quite a bit to be desired on this particular venture.  We still had a blast while there, don’t get me wrong – it’s pretty hard not to have fun on the WB lot – but, for whatever reason, our guide was a grump pretty much the whole way through.  She also seemed to have a pretty high opinion of herself, which didn’t help my opinion of her.  😉   

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    She even got a bit testy with me at one point, after bringing us to the Central Park portion of the lot and asking if anyone knew what television show it had been featured in.  I, of course, raised my hand and said “It’s where Phoebe runs weird on Friends!” to which she snapped, “Well, you must have been on the tour before, which is the only reason you’d know that!”  I wanted to explain that I had actually known the answer to that question while on my first WB tour, but I was afraid she’d pretty much bite my head off if I did!    So, since it was obvious she didn’t appreciate stalkers, I kept my mouth shut for the remainder of the tour.  The other disappointing aspect of the day was that Hennesy Street, which is one of the WB’s New York areas, Midwest Street, aka Anytown USA, and the Jungle area were all closed off to tour groups due to filming.  🙁  The Witches of Eastwick was actually the production being filmed on Midwest Street and we were very briefly allowed to venture over to the outskirts of that area to take a peek at what was going on, but unfortunately no photographs were allowed.  Anyway, aside from Debbie Downer and the fact that numerous areas of lot were closed off, we had a great time on the tour.   🙂    

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    The tour began the way it always does, with our guide driving us via golf cart through the very same studio gate that Carrie Bradshaw drove through in the Season Three episode of Sex and the City entitled “Escape from New York”.  LOVE IT!  🙂

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    Our first stop was the old ER hospital set which has all but been dismantled.  🙁   So sad!  While the hospital entrance and L Train track will be left up to be used by future productions . . .

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    . . . the area behind the large brown double doors which used to contain the ambulance bay and waiting room set, is now just empty space, as you can sort of see in the above photograph. 

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    The way it used to look is pictured above.  You can see more photographs of the old ER  set on my two previous WB Tour posts which can be viewed here and here.  According to our tour guide, ER’s Jumbo Mart Diner set is going to be left intact to serve as the studio’s tribute to the longest running medical drama ever to air on television.

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    Our next stop was the Nate’s Bar & Grill set from ER, which is also being left intact to be used by future productions.  Nate’s Bar & Grill is what’s called a “practical set” in studio terminology because both its interior and its exterior can be used for filming.

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    Unlike the facade pictured above which has no interior area.

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    As you can see in the above photograph, Nate’s Bar & Grill lacks a ceiling, which is actually typical of movie sets.  The ceilings of sets are always left open so that lights and other production equipment can be hung above the area being filmed.  That’s often how I can tell if something was filmed in a studio or on location somewhere – if a ceiling is shown onscreen, that’s pretty much a dead giveaway that the production was filmed at a real life location.   😉

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    Located just outside of Nate’s is a very realistic looking subway set, which was extremely cool to see being that we had just returned from our New York trip a few days beforehand.  🙂

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    Our next stop was the the Embassy Courtyard, an area which was used in the 1999 made-for-TV movie Annie, in the television series Without a Trace, Hotel, and, as you can see in the above screen captures, Chuck .

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    We also visited New York Street, which is not to be confused with Hennesy Street, the lot’s other Manhattan-like area.  New York Street has been used in the movies The Big Sleep, Blade Runner, Yankee Doodle Dandy, and The Last Samurai, for which the entire area was dressed to look like 1870s Japan. 

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    Located on New York Street is the movie theatre facade pictured above, which was featured in the “New York and Queens” episode of The Drew Carey Show in which Drew and the gang challenge Mimi and her friends to a Rocky Horror Picture Show/Priscilla Queen of the Desert dance-off.

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    That very same area was also featured in the Season One episode of The Mentalist entitled “A Dozen Red Roses”.

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    We also briefly visited the Warner Village area of the lot, where we saw “New Christine’s” apartment building from the series The New Adventures of Old Christine. 

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    Our next stop was the soundstage used in the filming of the television show Chuck, a series which I have never before seen.  But I was extremely excited to see the set nonetheless because it was modeled after the very same apartment building featured in the movie ‘Til There Was You – an apartment building which I have not only stalked, but also blogged about.  🙂   I cannot tell you how cool it was to be seeing that set in person, as it looks very much the same as its real life counterpart.  Love it!  And while our tour guide did let us know that the Chuck set was based on a real life apartment building, she mistakenly told our group that said building was located in Los Feliz, which is actually incorrect.  The building, which is named El Cabrillo, is actually located in Hollywood.  I didn’t dare correct her, though, since she had already made it pretty clear that she didn’t care to hear any information I had to share. 😉 We also got to venture inside the characters’ individual apartments, which really are located directly off the building’s courtyard area.   Unfortunately no photographs were allowed inside of the Chuck soundstages, but you can see what the set looks like in the above screen captures.  When I asked our tour guide why the area was off-limits to cameras she said it was to prevent spoilers, i.e. if a crewmember accidentally left something on set that gave away a future plot point and then a tour group came in and took pictures of the set and then those pictures somehow wound up on the internet ;), fans might figure out the future plot development and stop watching the show.  Which I think is pretty silly reasoning, but c’est la vie.

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    No WB VIP Tour would be complete without a visit to the car museum, where we got to see several vehicles from The Dark Knight, including the Batmobile;

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    the Bat-Pod motorcycle;

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    and the Stealth Launch Batmobile; all of which my best friend, Robin, the only guy in the group, loved seeing.  🙂

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    Also on display was the Ducati 996 motorcycle from The Matrix Reloaded;

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    the “Shaguar” from Austin Powers in Goldmember;

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    Clint Eastwood’s Gran Torino from the movie of the same name;

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    the Nerd Herd car from Chuck;

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    the General Lee from The Dukes of Hazzard;

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    several vehicles from AI, including the Hovercopter;

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    the Ford Angila from Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets;

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    and a 1969 Lincoln Continental from The Matrix, along with a wax figure of “Agent Smith”.

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    The best part of the tour for me, though, had to be when we got to see the Central Perk set from Friends.  Granted, I’ve seen the set twice before on the two other WB Tours I’ve attended, but this time we were actually allowed to venture ONTO the set, walk around, touch things, and even sit on the furniture!  YAY!   Let me tell you, I just about DIED I was so excited!   (Those are my friends Doina and Stephanie sitting on the Friends couch with me in the above photograph.)

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    And I just HAD to take pictures of absolutely EVERYTHING!

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    Well, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – I HIGHLY recommend taking the WB VIP Studio Tour!  Even with a craptastic tour guide, it’s still a fabulous adventure to have in L.A.

    Until next time, Happy Stalking!  🙂

    Stalk It: Warner Brothers Studios is located at 3400 Riverside Drive in Burbank. Tours run every 30 minutes Monday through Friday from 8:20 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Advance reservations are recommended. Tickets cost $45 per person. You can learn more about the tour here .