The Frank Gehry-designed Conrad Hotel faces his famed concert hall on Grand Avenue

Exterior view of the San Laurel patio with the Disney Hall in the background.Courtesy of Conrad Los Angeles

Since the 1970s, Frank Gehry has designed iconic buildings throughout Los Angeles. In 1989, he won the Pritzker Architecture Prize. From the Binoculars Building and private homes, to Loyola’s Law School and the Air and Space exhibit building at the California Museum of Science and Industry, each Gehry design tells a story of how he creates spaces with imaginative shapes and materials. Gehry, along with other contemporary architects, designs visionary modern structures that exist among the iocnic landmarks that form the downtown LA of today.

A guestroom at the Conrad Hotel.Courtesy of Conrad Los Angeles

When the Conrad Hotel Los Angeles, designed by Gehry on Bunker Hill, opened on Grand Avenue in 2022, it replaced what was widely considered an unattractive multilevel parking lot structure. Now, west-facing views from the hotel look out over Disney Hall, the silver swirled marvel he designed for the Los Angeles Philharmonic (LA Phil) that opened in 2003. With The Broad, MOCA, The Colburn School and the Music Center nearby, the hotel provides a central gathering space for attending performances and museum exhibits just steps away. 

A detail of curved ceramic wall tiles at The Conrad Hotel.Photo by Julie Wolfson

This collection of visual and performing arts spaces, nestled among contemporary and historic LA architecture, make the Conrad an ideal homebase location for experiencing the city. An elevator to the lobby opens out to a wall of curved tiles by ceramic artist Ben Medansky, while the interior design by Tara Bernerd & Partners features warm colors and lush textures, combining Gehry’s use of industrial materials with natural-toned fabrics and wood. Light streams throughout the building, while the Conrad spa offers a meditative calm oasis.

An exterior view of The Conrad Hotel.Photo by Julie Wolfson

For the 28-story hotel tower, Gehry composed layers of geometric cubes that contrast the dynamic curves of Disney Hall. Inside, the 305 guest rooms feature city views in every direction. At the Conrad, San Laurel restaurant and The Beaudry Room have become popular for locals working and visiting downtown as well as for museum-, concert- and play-goers. Sip classic cocktails from a Ford Gin Corpse Reviver #2 or a Sazerac with Pierre Ferrand Ambre Cognac at The Beaudry Room’s dramatic bar, while taking in the views of Disney Hall. Chef Jose Andres’ menu pairs the bounty of California ingredients with Spanish flavors. 

The Beaudry Room at The Conrad HotelCourtesy of Conrad Los Angeles

Looking out over Disney Hall might be entertaining enough, but there’s other ways to interact with Gehry’s marvel of shape and form. This fall, Gustavo Dudamel’s last as Music & Artistic Director of LA Phil, will be filled with enthusiasm and bittersweet goodbyes. For contemporary music, Disney Hall will host performances by Faye Webster, Patti Smith, Ichiko Aoba and The Roots, and it has self-guided tours during the day. On the 2nd Street side of Disney Hall, under swoops of neon, CalArts’ downtown contemporary arts space Redcat (about 30 miles southeast of their Valencia campus) features innovative multidisciplinary work with performances, exhibitions, screenings and events. In October, LA-based composer, musician and performance artist San Cha presents a new experimental opera, “Inebriated Me.” Also, in-house Chef Ray Garcia’s restaurant Asterid features modern California cuisine with Mexican and global ingredients.

Interior view of the Walt Disney Concert Hall.Photo by Mario De Lopez for The Music Center

The architectural sites of the neighborhood extend in each direction. Across the street to the north, the Music Center large open plaza connects the Ahmanson, Doolittle and Mark Taper Forum. To the east of the plaza, Grand Park leads to City Hall. On a clear day, visit City Hall to see the light stream across the rotunda on the third floor and take three sets of elevators to the top-floor observation deck for 360-degree views of the city. The Our Lady of the Angels Cathedral is well worth a visit to see the work of Spanish architect and Professor José Rafael Moneo, and artist John Nava’s series of tapestries depicting saints and historic figures with contemporary worshipers.

A suite at The Conrad Hotel with a soaking tub by a window.Photo by Julie Wolfson

Back by the Conrad, the Colburn School features a wide array of public performances next to MOCA’s main campus and across the street from The Broad. The adventure continues with the Robert Graham Garden at the Halo Building Wells Fargo Center, where locals know to stop in at Danny Boy’s for a slice of pizza crafted with 3-day cold-fermented dough. 

A sculpture in a building's garden space.Photo by Julie Wolfson

Walk south on Grand to have coffee at Silverback Coffee of Rwanda, featured in Rene Redzepi’s show “Omnivore.” A few more blocks south is LA’s most beautiful coffee shop, Aquarela, to sip coffee inside the lobby of the iconic art deco Cal Edison Building. More iconic LA sites nearby include The Central Library, Angel’s Gate to Grand Central Market and the Bradbury Building.

The lobby at Cal Edison.Photo by Julie Wolfson

The Conrad Hotel is one element of The Grand LA, a development that Gehry and his team envision for Los Angeles with both residences and retail concepts within the space. Refik Anadol and Efsun Erkilic will soon open Dataland to unite pioneers in the arts, science, AI research and technology there. And each day at the hotel, the day’s shifting light reflects across the swimming pool, throughout the interior and out to the views of Bunker Hill’s cultural corridor. 

A spiral staircase shot from above.Photo by Julie Wolfson

For more info, visit Conrad Hotel Los Angeles’s website and Instagram.

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