Density
Almost all of the buildings within the Jewelry District were designed for general office use with retail spaces on the street level, with some internet venues, such as the historic Loew’s State Theaters on 703 S. Broadway, which was built in 1923. In the early twentieth-century, downtown was rapidly developing but it did not feature skyscrapers as tall as Chicago and New York. The buildings were limited to 150 feet by law, which was favored by architects and planners who saw the towering skyscrapers of the east coast metropolises as unsustainable and not conducive to the Southern California lifestyle. Although many residents were living in apartment buildings at the time, the architects and planners argued that excessive vertical expansion would lead to inhumane overconcentration and congestion.
Read more about this topic: Jewelry District (Los Angeles)