Helen Bernstein High School (Los Angeles, California)
USA /
California /
West Hollywood /
Los Angeles, California /
North Wilton Place, 1309
World
/ USA
/ California
/ West Hollywood
World / United States / California
place with historical importance, interesting place, high school
Helen Bernstein High School
1309 North Wilton Place
Los Angeles, CA 90028-8526
(323) 817-6400
hbdragons.com/
District: Los Angeles Unified School District
Helen Bernstein High School is a Public High School in the Hollywood area of Los Angeles, California. The school is named after educational reformer and former president of United Teachers Los Angeles, Helen Bernstein.
Bernstein High is a comprehensive school. Academic Performance Excellence (APEX) Academy, a program geared toward low income families in East Hollywood, and the Science, Technology, Engineering, and Medicine (STEM) Academy also operate independently within the school
The campus is home to the Dragons. Bernstein is home to sports including Football, Basketball, Track and Field, Soccer, Volleyball, Softball, Wrestling, Swimming, Cross Country, Cheerleading, and Drill Team.
Historical Information of this site:
Metromedia Square-Nassour Studios
5746 Sunset at Van Ness.
Metromedia Square (also known as Fox Television Center from 1986 to 1996) was a radio and television studio facility located at 5746 Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, on the southeastern corner of Sunset and Van Ness Avenue. For decades it was recognizable by the white, ladder-like snake on the building's roof. This work of art was called "Starsteps" and was dismantled when ownership of the building changed hands in 2000.
The site was first known as the Nassour Studio, built in 1946 and opened January 1, 1947. Over 100 independent films were shot there under the Nassour Studio banner.
Originally, there were four sound stages ranging in size from around 7,600 square feet (710 m²) to just over 13,000 square feet (Later, the Metromedia Corporation added two more as well as large office buildings).
Nassour's modern Art Deco-styled projection room and modern offices were located in the buildings fronting Sunset.
Dressing rooms were constructed adjacent to stages 1 and 2. An old converted two story apartment building located down the street on Van Ness housed producers and writers. The big stage (4) had removable panels that hid a water tank. It was used to film the jungle river scenes in "Africa Screams." The lot was very small (about four acres) so an underground facility for storage was necessary. A large freight elevator was installed for access.
In 1950 Nassour Studio was sold to the Times-Mirror Company, publisher of the Los Angeles Times. Times-Mirror was looking for a facility to permanently house KTTV (channel 11), its new television station (at the time, owned jointly with CBS) which commenced broadcasting the previous year. Metromedia purchased the property along with KTTV in 1963, and soon after the facility was renamed Metromedia Square. Los Angeles radio stations KLAC and KLAC-FM (later KMET and now KTWV), which Metromedia purchased in a separate 1963 transaction, moved there in 1976.
Television producer Norman Lear moved into the property in 1973 and headquartered his company, Tandem Productions, in the building. Lear started videotaping his television series here in the fall of 1975, including, but not limited to, All in the Family, Diff'rent Strokes, The Jeffersons, Maude, Good Times, One Day at a Time, and The Facts of Life. One of his other classic shows, Sanford and Son, remained taping its series at NBC Studios in Burbank, although its 1980 revival, Sanford, was videotaped at Metromedia. Shows such as Diff'rent Strokes, Facts of Life, and The Jeffersons later relocated to Universal City Studios by 1982.
In 1986 Metromedia sold KTTV to the Fox Broadcasting Company, and the studios became the Fox Television Center, even though Metromedia continued to own the building and the land on which it was situated, therefore leasing the property to Fox and KTTV. Shows like the Fox-produced Small Wonder and NBC's Saved by the Bell were among the last series to be taped at this complex, as well as the sketch comedy series, In Living Color, and the first season of MAD TV. Ironically, very few Fox television shows were actually taped at the Fox Television Center.
KTTV moved to its own new building (the new Fox Television Center) in West Los Angeles in 1996, which is the corporate home of the Fox Television Stations group. Meanwhile, the radio stations' studios had remained here, even long after they were no longer owned by Metromedia. KTWV, now owned by CBS Radio, and moved to new studios in Culver City in 1997, and then Miracle Mile neighborhood on L.A.'s Wilshire Boulevard on February 18, 2005. KLAC eventually became acquired by Clear Channel Communications and moved to studios shared with Clear Channel's other AM stations, which are now located in Burbank.
The Fox Broadcasting Company, which had maintained some business offices at the 20th Century Fox studios in Los Angeles' Century City neighborhood while at the Television Center, moved its complete base of operations to the Century City studio lot shortly after the KTTV move. This new facility, known as the Fox Network Center, is the home to the network's live studio productions, such as Fox NFL Sunday and Fox Saturday Baseball.
Metromedia sold the land to the Los Angeles Unified School District in 2000. The building was demolished by the School District in 2003, while a new high school is currently being built, which opened fot the 2008-09 school year.
The big question is this: where does the baseball team play?
1309 North Wilton Place
Los Angeles, CA 90028-8526
(323) 817-6400
hbdragons.com/
District: Los Angeles Unified School District
Helen Bernstein High School is a Public High School in the Hollywood area of Los Angeles, California. The school is named after educational reformer and former president of United Teachers Los Angeles, Helen Bernstein.
Bernstein High is a comprehensive school. Academic Performance Excellence (APEX) Academy, a program geared toward low income families in East Hollywood, and the Science, Technology, Engineering, and Medicine (STEM) Academy also operate independently within the school
The campus is home to the Dragons. Bernstein is home to sports including Football, Basketball, Track and Field, Soccer, Volleyball, Softball, Wrestling, Swimming, Cross Country, Cheerleading, and Drill Team.
Historical Information of this site:
Metromedia Square-Nassour Studios
5746 Sunset at Van Ness.
Metromedia Square (also known as Fox Television Center from 1986 to 1996) was a radio and television studio facility located at 5746 Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, on the southeastern corner of Sunset and Van Ness Avenue. For decades it was recognizable by the white, ladder-like snake on the building's roof. This work of art was called "Starsteps" and was dismantled when ownership of the building changed hands in 2000.
The site was first known as the Nassour Studio, built in 1946 and opened January 1, 1947. Over 100 independent films were shot there under the Nassour Studio banner.
Originally, there were four sound stages ranging in size from around 7,600 square feet (710 m²) to just over 13,000 square feet (Later, the Metromedia Corporation added two more as well as large office buildings).
Nassour's modern Art Deco-styled projection room and modern offices were located in the buildings fronting Sunset.
Dressing rooms were constructed adjacent to stages 1 and 2. An old converted two story apartment building located down the street on Van Ness housed producers and writers. The big stage (4) had removable panels that hid a water tank. It was used to film the jungle river scenes in "Africa Screams." The lot was very small (about four acres) so an underground facility for storage was necessary. A large freight elevator was installed for access.
In 1950 Nassour Studio was sold to the Times-Mirror Company, publisher of the Los Angeles Times. Times-Mirror was looking for a facility to permanently house KTTV (channel 11), its new television station (at the time, owned jointly with CBS) which commenced broadcasting the previous year. Metromedia purchased the property along with KTTV in 1963, and soon after the facility was renamed Metromedia Square. Los Angeles radio stations KLAC and KLAC-FM (later KMET and now KTWV), which Metromedia purchased in a separate 1963 transaction, moved there in 1976.
Television producer Norman Lear moved into the property in 1973 and headquartered his company, Tandem Productions, in the building. Lear started videotaping his television series here in the fall of 1975, including, but not limited to, All in the Family, Diff'rent Strokes, The Jeffersons, Maude, Good Times, One Day at a Time, and The Facts of Life. One of his other classic shows, Sanford and Son, remained taping its series at NBC Studios in Burbank, although its 1980 revival, Sanford, was videotaped at Metromedia. Shows such as Diff'rent Strokes, Facts of Life, and The Jeffersons later relocated to Universal City Studios by 1982.
In 1986 Metromedia sold KTTV to the Fox Broadcasting Company, and the studios became the Fox Television Center, even though Metromedia continued to own the building and the land on which it was situated, therefore leasing the property to Fox and KTTV. Shows like the Fox-produced Small Wonder and NBC's Saved by the Bell were among the last series to be taped at this complex, as well as the sketch comedy series, In Living Color, and the first season of MAD TV. Ironically, very few Fox television shows were actually taped at the Fox Television Center.
KTTV moved to its own new building (the new Fox Television Center) in West Los Angeles in 1996, which is the corporate home of the Fox Television Stations group. Meanwhile, the radio stations' studios had remained here, even long after they were no longer owned by Metromedia. KTWV, now owned by CBS Radio, and moved to new studios in Culver City in 1997, and then Miracle Mile neighborhood on L.A.'s Wilshire Boulevard on February 18, 2005. KLAC eventually became acquired by Clear Channel Communications and moved to studios shared with Clear Channel's other AM stations, which are now located in Burbank.
The Fox Broadcasting Company, which had maintained some business offices at the 20th Century Fox studios in Los Angeles' Century City neighborhood while at the Television Center, moved its complete base of operations to the Century City studio lot shortly after the KTTV move. This new facility, known as the Fox Network Center, is the home to the network's live studio productions, such as Fox NFL Sunday and Fox Saturday Baseball.
Metromedia sold the land to the Los Angeles Unified School District in 2000. The building was demolished by the School District in 2003, while a new high school is currently being built, which opened fot the 2008-09 school year.
The big question is this: where does the baseball team play?
Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Bernstein_High_School
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 34°5'46"N 118°18'52"W
- Where "Hollywood" began 1.2 km
- Hancock Park HPOZ 2.7 km
- Hollywood Walk of Fame 2.9 km
- Brookside 4.5 km
- Carthay Circle HPOZ 6.7 km
- First National Pictures Studios 6.7 km
- West Adams Terrace HPOZ 6.9 km
- Columbia Ranch-historic location 7.9 km
- Historical 20th Century-Fox studio and back lot 11 km
- Getty Center 15 km
- Hollywood Forever Cemetery 0.9 km
- Little Armenia 1 km
- Thai Town 1.1 km
- Laughlin Park 1.6 km
- East Hollywood 1.8 km
- Hollywood Walk of Fame 1.8 km
- Hollywood Dell 2.2 km
- Los Feliz 2.7 km
- Hollywood 3.1 km
- Griffith Park 4.2 km