Oceanwide Plaza

Oceanwide Plaza is an American residential and retail complex under construction composed of three towers in downtown Los Angeles, California, across the street from Staples Center and the Los Angeles Convention Center.[3] Oceanwide Holdings is the owner and developer. The CallisonRTKL-designed complex will feature a five-star Park Hyatt hotel with interiors by Studio Munge, as well as 504 residences and a collection of retailers and restaurants. It will also be home to the city's tallest residential tower, which commenced construction in 2015.[2]

Oceanwide Plaza
Location within Los Angeles
Former namesOceanwide
General information
TypeRetail and residential
Location844 S. Figueroa St.
Los Angeles, California
Coordinates34°02′33″N 118°15′55″W
Construction started2015
CompletedTBD
Cost$1 billion [1]
OwnerOceanwide Holdings
ManagementOceanwide Holdings [2]
Height
Architectural206.4 m (677 ft)
Top floor206.4 m (677 ft)
Technical details
Floor count49
4 below ground
Floor area2 million sq ft
Lifts/elevators49
Design and construction
ArchitectRTKL
DeveloperOceanwide Holdings [2]
Structural engineerEnglekirk Structural Engineers
Main contractorLendlease Group

The towers currently have no completion date. It is unknown when the complex will open as it is having financing issues, and work was suspended. Limited work resumed in early 2019. By the end of 2019, construction slowed again. Los Angeles and US national media reports the towers are currently on hold due to Chinese foreign real estate investment capital being pulled due to the China–United States trade war.[4] The scheduled 2020 opening date was pushed back to an unknown date.[5][6]

Design

Designed by CallisonRTKL. Tower one will feature a 184-room five star Park Hyatt hotel along with 164 Park Hyatt serviced condo residences; a live in hotel option. It will reach a total height of 675 ft, 49 floors. Towers two and three will have 504 residential condominiums.[5] They will reach a total of 530 ft; 40 floors in height. When completed, they will become the 11th and 21st tallest buildings in Los Angeles. The Park Hyatt project marks the luxury brand's first hotel and branded residences on the West Coast. That 49-story building will consist of a 184-room hotel topped by 164 serviced hotel residences. (The other 340 apartments will be housed in two 40-story towers, The Residences at Oceanwide Plaza.) [2]

Located adjacent to the Staples Center and L.A. Live near the Los Angeles Convention Center, project participants say the complex's design offers a departure from the standardized glass curtain and masonry architecture of the city's downtown. The developer, Beijing-based Oceanwide Holdings, enlisted CallisonRTKL as a consultant to design features such as the 700-ft. LED ribbon wrapping the perimeter of the building. Beyond that, the firm plans to create glass elevators with LED bands and landscaped retail paseos that incorporate local plant life.[2]

A retail mall named The Collection at Oceanwide Plaza is scheduled to open on the first three floors above ground with 153,000 square feet of retail space.[7] The mall will be open air and have deck views of L.A. Live.

The 9th floor will feature a two-acre private park. Features include private cantilevered deck pools, viewing platforms, basketball court, a dog park, green space and a running track.[8]

Celebrity fitness trainer and nutritionist Harley Pasternak has conceptualized the development's amenity spaces, including a two-acre sky park. Leisure offerings such as a fitness center, children's play area, basketball court and two dog parks will also be on-site.[2]

History

The site was a vacant parking lot used by Staples Center patrons in the South Park neighborhood of Downtown Los Angeles. The site is immediately west of the Los Angeles Metro Rail Station Pico/Chick Hearn.[9][10][11]

This development is part of a group of projects currently under construction on Figueroa allowed to add giant video advert screens facing Staples Center. Along with Circa Towers and the Luxe Development. Oceanwide renderings also feature large ribbon style video LED screens.[12][13]

In July 2018, FBI serves a search warrant on Google under money laundering and bribery statutes. The warrant asks for information contained in the Gmail account of Raymond Chan, the former head of the Los Angeles Dept. of Building and Safety (appointed by Mayor Eric Garcetti) until he retired in 2016 and served for a year as a Los Angeles deputy mayor for economic development until June 2017. Also named: Councilman Jose Huizar, family members and other city hall aides; Councilman Curren Price; Deron Williams, chief of staff to Herb Wesson; and Joel Jacinto, a member of the city's board of public works (appointed by Garcetti). The warrant mentions seeking records for information on "development projects in and around Los Angeles that relate to foreign investors." Oceanwide Holdings and other Chinese development companies are also found in the pages of the search warrant. (Oceanwide is responsible for a large, unfinished tower across from Staples Center.)[14][15]

The three luxury apartment towers topped off in April 2018. In January 2019, interior construction on the project was put on hold. The developer cited restructuring of capital and indicated work on the plaza would resume "shortly".[16][17][6] Contractor Lendlease suspended work until late March 2019 when it was announced construction resumed after nine active liens have been filed by subcontractors totaling US$98.6 million.[18] Due to the three month stop and restart of work, opening date was pushed back to an unknown date.[19] Work once again stopped in late 2019 due to delays. Media reports the towers are stuck in limbo over unpaid work and pending lawsuits. The towers are an example of Chinese pull back of capitol and investing in US real estate because of its ongoing trade dispute with the U.S. and a Beijing crackdown on credit and capital flight.[4] Completion of work is uncertain as of late 2019.[20]

See also

References

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  2. "DTLA Mixed-Use Complex Tops Off". Boutiquedesign.com. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  3. Fly Through DTLA's Oceanwide Plaza Urbanize.LA
  4. "Are you a robot?". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2019-10-30. Cite uses generic title (help)
  5. Christine Kilpatrick (2018-03-26). "Massive High-Rise Project Finds Room to Grow in LA | 2018-03-26". ENR. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  6. "Construction restarting at Oceanwide Plaza as debt soars to $98.6M - Curbed LA". La.curbed.com. 2019-03-21. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  7. "Oceanwide Plaza". CallisonRTKL. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2018-04-09. Retrieved 2018-04-08.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "Press". Oceanwide Plaza. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  10. Kim, Eddie. "Two-Tower Circa Project Tops Out | Development". ladowntownnews.com. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  11. "LA's Largest Mixed-Use Development Releases Never-Before-Seen Offerings | Unique Homes". Blog.uniquehomes.com. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  12. Maile Pingel. "3 Development Projects Rising In Los Angeles - Luxe Interiors + Design". Luxedaily.luxesource.com. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  13. Hendrickson, V. L. "Towers that Wow: New Buildings in Los Angeles, Toronto and Dubai". www.mansionglobal.com.
  14. Denkmann, Libby. "Timeline: Follow The FBI's Sweeping LA City Hall Corruption Investigation Through The Years". LAist. Retrieved 2020-07-10.
  15. Times), Jack Leonard (Los Angeles. "Search Warrant". www.documentcloud.org. Retrieved 2020-07-10.
  16. Vincent, Roger; Alpert Reyes, Emily; Zahniser, David (25 January 2019). "Construction halts on $1-billion mixed-use complex in downtown L.A." The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
  17. "Construction at massive Oceanwide Plaza in downtown L.A. remains stalled". Los Angeles Times. February 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  18. Sargent, Joe (2019-03-26). "US$1 billion LA plaza work restarts | Article". KHL. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  19. "After Financial Challenges, Construction For Oceanwide Plaza Restarts". Bisnow.
  20. "L.A.'s $1 billion trophy tower halted as china pulls back". Bloomberg News. 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-31 via Finance & Commerce.
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