Harman Patil (Editor)

First National Bank of Long Beach

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Location
  
101--125 Pine Ave

NRHP Reference #
  
90001432

Area
  
1,214 m²

Added to NRHP
  
13 September 1990

Built
  
1906

Opened
  
1906

Architectural style
  
Renaissance architecture

Nearest city
  
Long Beach

First National Bank of Long Beach httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Ocean Center Building, Los Cerritos Ranch H, Renaissance Long Beach Ho, Aquarium of the Pacific, RMS Queen Mary

The First National Bank (also known as the Metropolitan Building and the Enloe Building) building in Long Beach, California is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The original bank building had three stories, which were surpassed in 1906 with the current building, designed by Los Angeles architects Robert F. Train and Robert E. Williams. The distinctive clock tower with its six-foot-diameter clock face was added in 1907. The structure was designed in a French Renaissance Revival style utilizing pressed yellow brick on the street sides and common red brick on the remaining two sides.

A number of bank tenants have occupied the building, including (in order):

  • The First National Bank of Long Beach (5456) (1906-1925)
  • The California National Bank of Long Beach (11873) (1925-1929)
  • California First National Bank of Long Beach (11873) (1929-1936)
  • Bank of America, National Trust & Savings Association (13044) 1936 to sometime in the 1960s.
  • During the 1950s, many of the original decorative elements such as the decorative cornice were removed or covered as part of modernizations efforts. In the 1980s, federal tax incentives motivated a project to restore the building to its original look and to repair the clock tower. Today, the ground floor of the building houses a restaurant.

    References

    First National Bank of Long Beach Wikipedia


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