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The Crossroads of the World, a Unique Former Los Angeles Mall, Has Blood in Its Foundation

 

Crossroads of the World is one of those LA landmarks that everyone recognizes but very few have visited. There’s not really much to see there these days outside of the beautiful architecture. But that wasn’t always the case. In the late 1930s and into the 1940s, this Los Angeles mall redefined how a shopping center could be designed… even if the end result wasn’t a wild success. It’s also the site of a double murder. In fact, it might not even exist if it weren’t for the blood shed on the grounds. 

What is the Crossroads of the World?

Photo credit: donkeyhody

Motorists caught in Sunset Boulevard’s traffic jams will be painfully familiar with the Crossroads of the World. Its tower proudly raises a miniature planet Earth to the sky above, extending from a Streamline Moderne reference to an ocean liner. For a moment, your bumper-to-bumper frustration might have melted away as you asked yourself, “What is the Crossroads of the World anyway?” You could have passed by it hundreds of times without knowing. 

The most recognizable portion of the design is the steamship that bisects the entry of the former shopping center. It once housed a restaurant called the Continental Cafe where shoppers could enjoy a meal with a view from the “upper deck.” A tiny town of bungalows surrounded this “ocean liner”, each employing architecture distinctive of another country. And fittingly enough, Crossroads of the World promised shoppers items from around the world. 

The Short Life of the the First Los Angeles Mall to Go Open-Air

Leading Streamline Moderne architect Robert V. Derrah was commissioned to design Crossroads of the World, hot off of completing the iconic Coca-Cola Building. His Crossroads of the World design was so memorable, it inspired Disney to recreate the entry tower for their Hollywood Studios in Orlando, Florida. In addition to the central oceanliner and the surrounding cottages, Derrah worked in 36 units of office space in the upper levels of the mall. Despite its ambition, Crossroads of the World was not a resounding success as a Los Angeles mall. 

In 1977, a real estate investor named Mort La Kretz purchased and restored the Crossroads of the World but continued to lease it out as office space. Just a few years later in 1980, the National Park Service added the mall-turned-office space to the National Register of Historic Places, preserving it so that future generations could also be perplexed by it when driving up Sunset.

What About That Double Murder?

You’re wondering about that double murder. It all starts with a man named Charles H. Crawford whose wife, Ella, would oversee the building of Crossroads of the World… at the site where he was shot to death. Before moving to LA, Crawford was a mover and shaker with heavy business dealings in dance halls and saloons catering to clientele with an appetite for gambling, prostitution, and all manners of debauchery. Possessing a knack for political networking, Crawford was able to keep his head above water for a time. But when the tide turned against him, he turned his sights toward LA.

After the smoke more or less cleared, Crawford returned to LA a new, reformed man. Or so he claimed. He teamed up with journalist Herbert Spencer to release a regular publication entitled Critic of Critics in which the duo lambasted LA lawmakers. But the new holier-than-thou Crawford wasn’t any more endearing than the man in his crime boss heyday.

“See You at the Crossroads”

Photo credit: Los Angeles Times

On May 20, 1931, while at the Critic of Critics office at what would soon become the Crossroads of the World, both Crawford and Spencer were shot by an unknown assailant. Spencer died at the site, but Crawford survived long enough to be interviewed by police… not that it did any good. He refused to divulge the identity of the shooter and died mere moments later.  

According to Clark’s story, Crawford had attempted to bribe him with political favors. When the former deputy district attorney refused the bait, he alleged that Crawford produced a gun, leading to the shootout that claimed the lives of Crawford and Spencer. Despite investigators finding no firearms in Crawford’s office, a jury exonerated Clark. The lone dissenter who found Clark “guilty” was greeted with a live bomb on the front lawn of his home the next day. It’s worth noting that Clark would continue to rely on murder as a solution to his problems. In the mid-1950s, he pleaded guilty to the murder of an associate’s wife and later died in prison. 

The Crossroads of the World from the Start to the Future

Photo credit: John Margolies

As we mentioned, Crawford’s wife built Crossroads of the World on the ground where he was taken out of this world. Perhaps she intended it to pave over what she no doubt viewed as a tragedy. Admittedly, it’s a pretty riveting origin story for a Los Angeles mall. 

Today, the ghosts of that time have long since dissipated and the Crossroads of the World is an architectural curiosity that motorists momentarily consider as they travel to more relevant locations. That’s not to say the former mall is stagnating. In 2019, LA’s City Council approved an ambitious renovation that would convert the Crossroads of the World into a mixed-use commercial space. In addition to 190,000 square feet of retail space, the project will add 950 apartments and condos (including 100 units reserved for low-income housing) and a 308-room hotel. So, maybe Crossroads of Residential and Commercial Real Estate is more accurate at this point?


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