4th Street Corridor

4th Street Corridor
Neighborhood of Long Beach

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Nickname(s): Retro Row, Funky Fourth Street
4th Street Corridor

Location within Long Beach

Coordinates: 33°46′18″N 118°10′06″W / 33.7717°N 118.1682°W / 33.7717; -118.1682Coordinates: 33°46′18″N 118°10′06″W / 33.7717°N 118.1682°W / 33.7717; -118.1682
Country United States
State California
County County of Los Angeles
City City of Long Beach

The 4th Street Corridor, also known as Retro Row, is a small business district in the city of Long Beach, California, along 4th Street from Walnut Avenue to Junipero Avenue.

Located east of Downtown Long Beach, this section of streets is the place for Long Beach visitors who enjoy vintage and kitschy shopping. Furniture and clothing from bygone eras is available in good condition at antique and used clothing stores.[1] There are also a number of bars and restaurants.

Location

The 4th Street Corridor, centered on Cherry Avenue, passes between four neighborhoods: Alamitos Beach is to the south, North Alamitos Beach to the north-west, with Rose Park South on the north-east. Carroll Park is beyond the south-east end of the business district.

Attractions and characteristics

4th Street is a unique showcase of Long Beach culture, with a collection of independent local businesses. Portfolio Coffeehouse has served as the street's de facto anchor since its establishment in September 1990,[2] when it became the first coffeehouse in Long Beach to present poetry readings. 4th Street also features a number vintage clothing boutiques, antique furniture stores, restaurants, and coffee shops.

4th Street is also home to The Art Theater,[3] the oldest operating single screen house in Long Beach. The Art originally opened in 1924 as The Carter Theatre with 636 seats, an orchestra pit and pipe organ. It was constructed in a modest vernacular style with "orientalizing" touches reminiscent of Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. Two storefronts flanked the theater. In 1934, the theater was remodeled in art deco streamline "moderne" style by Schilling & Schilling after the 1933 Long Beach earthquake and renamed The Lee Theatre. Additions included the ticket booth, terrazzo floor and zigzag elements like the stepped piers, vertical fluting, and the central-stepped vertical tower that unfolds as a fern. This tower has also been likened to the bow of a ship cutting through the water. In 1947, the theatre was remodeled again with a larger marquee and renamed The Art Theatre. In 2008, the theater was updated using the original blueprints, but with new interior, new sound and vision upgrades and restored exterior including a replica of the 1934 marquee and art deco trademark symmetrical storefronts. Named Retro-Row by Christopher Reece in his Antique & Retro Shoppers Map, a guide to So. Calif. antiques shopping.

References

  1. Moon, Freda (March 15, 2012). "36 Hours: Long Beach, Calif.". The New York Times.
  2. Everything Long Beach article
  3. The Art Theatre website

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.