The Abraham Gore Residence
HCM #1061. A conical-towered landmark on North Catalina Street, designed by Harry B. Aarens for one of the founders of the theater chain that became Fox West Coast.
What is the Abraham Gore Residence?
The Abraham Gore Residence at 2208 North Catalina Street is a two-story Los Feliz home built in the late 1920s and designed by architect Harry B. Aarens in a blend of Spanish Colonial Revival and Mediterranean Revival styles. It was the home of Abraham Louis Gore, an early movie exhibitor who co-founded the West Coast Theatres chain, and his wife Ruth, who owned the property from about 1929 to 1952. The City of Los Angeles designated it Historic-Cultural Monument No. 1061 on February 5, 2014, recognizing its distinctive period architecture, and the house is a familiar visual landmark of the neighborhood, instantly recognizable for the conical tower over its entrance. Debbie Pisaro of Coastline 840 (California DRE #01369110) is a Los Feliz real estate agent specializing in architectural and historic homes, and covers the Abraham Gore Residence as part of the Los Feliz HCM series.
Some Los Feliz landmarks announce themselves with a famous architect's name. This one announces itself with a tower. The Abraham Gore Residence sits on a corner of North Catalina Street under a tall conical roof that you notice before you know anything else about the house, and once you have seen it, you start spotting it in photographs of the neighborhood without realizing why it looks so familiar.
Behind that tower is a better story than the home's quiet street presence suggests: a designed-to-impress 1920s residence by an architect worth knowing, built for a man who helped wire Los Angeles for the movies. It is one of the Los Feliz Historic-Cultural Monuments Debbie Pisaro points out to buyers who think they already know which houses on the hill matter. Start with the architecture.
Harry B. Aarens and the tower
The house was designed by architect Harry B. Aarens and built in the late 1920s, during the height of the era when Southern California was inventing its own romantic vocabulary out of Spain, Italy, and the Mediterranean coast. The Abraham Gore Residence is a confident example of that moment, and the City of Los Angeles, in designating it, described it as an architectural-type specimen valuable for the study of its period, a mix of Spanish Colonial Revival and Mediterranean Revival.
The signature is the entrance. The main door sits beneath a large conical-roofed tower, flanked by two projecting wings, with a smaller octagonal tower set directly behind the main one, a composition far more theatrical than the typical center-hall Spanish house of the period. Inside, the architecture keeps its nerve: the significant interior spaces include a rotunda lit by stained-glass windows. The familiar Revival vocabulary is all present, the red clay tile roof, the stucco walls, the wrought iron, the arched openings, but it is the towers and the rotunda that lift the house from handsome to designated, and that explain why it reads as a landmark from the street rather than just another good 1920s home.
The man who helped wire LA for the movies
Abraham Louis Gore, who lived from 1884 to 1951, was a movie exhibitor and real estate investor at the exact moment Los Angeles was becoming the capital of the film business. In 1920, Gore and his brother Michael, together with the producer Sol Lesser, founded West Coast Theatres. The chain expanded with astonishing speed: by 1926 it operated roughly 169 theaters across the Pacific states with more than twenty more under construction, making it the dominant first-run exhibitor in the West before it was eventually absorbed by William Fox into what became Fox West Coast Theatres.
Gore wore several hats at once in the 1920s. He was secretary-treasurer of Gore Brothers, Incorporated, the real estate firm he ran with Michael; secretary of West Coast Theatres; and proprietor of Gore's Regent Theatre. His brother Mike Gore would later receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his work in motion pictures. Abraham and his wife, Ruth Ringer Gore, owned the Catalina Street house from about 1929 until 1952, raising the home's profile as one of the residences where the people building Hollywood actually lived. For a neighborhood whose identity is bound up with Old Hollywood, the Abraham Gore Residence is a rare case where the architecture and the owner tell the same story.
Spanish Colonial Revival vs. Mediterranean Revival, explained
Buyers drawn to the Revival homes of Los Feliz often use Spanish Colonial Revival and Mediterranean Revival interchangeably, and the Abraham Gore Residence is a useful place to learn the difference, because it draws on both. Spanish Colonial Revival, which swept Southern California after the 1915 Panama-California Exposition in San Diego, looks to the missions and to colonial Mexico: white stucco walls, low-pitched red clay tile roofs, arched openings, wrought iron, carved wood, and a restrained, hand-crafted simplicity.
Mediterranean Revival reaches a little further around the sea, to Italian and broader Mediterranean villa traditions, and tends to be grander and more formal, fond of towers, symmetry, and a sense of theater. The Gore house leans on both: the tile, stucco, and iron belong to the Spanish Colonial vocabulary, while the conical entrance tower, the secondary octagonal tower, and the stained-glass rotunda push it toward the more dramatic Mediterranean register. That blend is exactly what the City cited in its designation, and it is why the house feels both at home among its Spanish neighbors and conspicuously more ambitious than most of them. Los Feliz is full of this conversation, from the Spanish Colonial Revival of Paul Williams's Blackburn Residence to the modernism of Richard Neutra's Lovell Health House.
What HCM status means if you own one
A home like the Abraham Gore Residence raises the question every buyer of a designated property eventually asks: what does Historic-Cultural Monument status actually mean to live with? In practice, HCM status, granted by the City of Los Angeles, mainly protects a property's exterior and character-defining features. Significant changes to the facade, demolition, or alterations that would affect the historic character, on this house, that would mean the towers, the rotunda, the tile and iron, require review by the City's Cultural Heritage Commission. Interior updates that do not touch protected features, along with routine maintenance, repairs, and landscaping, generally fall outside the process.
The meaningful upside is the California Mills Act, a property-tax program that can reduce a qualifying historic property's assessment substantially, often in the range of 40 to 70 percent, in exchange for a long-term preservation plan the City reviews periodically. For a Los Feliz HCM in the multimillion-dollar range, that can translate to tens of thousands of dollars a year, and over a long hold it can recover a real share of the purchase price. Not every HCM is automatically enrolled, the eligibility and the actual numbers have to be modeled for the specific property, and that modeling is part of the diligence Debbie Pisaro runs with buyers of architectural and historic homes. The Los Feliz HCM guide walks through how designation and the Mills Act work together.
On a house defined by its towers and rotunda, HCM review focuses on exactly those character-defining features. The tradeoff is less freedom to alter the facade in exchange for demolition protection and a potential Mills Act tax reduction that can run tens of thousands a year.
Why a house like this matters in the Los Feliz market
The Abraham Gore Residence is not a marquee architect's house in the way the Ennis House or the Lovell Health House are, and that is exactly what makes it instructive. Most of the architectural value in Los Feliz does not sit in the half-dozen world-famous landmarks; it sits in the deep bench of designated and design-significant homes like this one, scattered across Catalina Street, the Oaks, and the streets below Griffith Park, that give the neighborhood its texture and hold their value through cycles because they cannot be replaced.
For a buyer, a home of this kind is often the sweet spot: genuine period architecture, a documented history, frequently an HCM designation with Mills Act potential, at a price below the ceremonial trophies. For a seller, the story is the asset, an Aarens-designed, tower-topped residence built for a founder of West Coast Theatres prices and markets very differently from a comparable home with no record behind it, provided the history is told accurately and the designation is understood. That is the difference between listing a house and listing a landmark, and it is the conversation worth having before a price is set. The full roster of the neighborhood's monuments lives in the Los Feliz HCM collection.
See the Abraham Gore Residence on the Los Feliz MapThe Abraham Gore Residence, answered
Where is the Abraham Gore Residence?
The Abraham Gore Residence is at 2208 North Catalina Street in the Los Feliz neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, 90027. The corner property is also associated with the address 4821 Los Feliz Boulevard. It is a private residence and is not open to the public.
Who designed the Abraham Gore Residence?
It was designed by architect Harry B. Aarens in a blend of Spanish Colonial Revival and Mediterranean Revival styles. Its most distinctive features are a tall conical-roofed entrance tower, a smaller octagonal tower behind it, and an interior rotunda with stained-glass windows.
When was the Abraham Gore Residence built?
Sources place its construction in the late 1920s. The architectural record dates the design to around 1927, and the Gore family took ownership about 1929, holding the home until roughly 1952. It cost about $40,000 to build, around five times the price of an average middle-class house of the era.
Who was Abraham Gore?
Abraham Louis Gore (1884 to 1951) was a movie exhibitor and real estate investor who, with his brother Michael Gore and the producer Sol Lesser, co-founded West Coast Theatres in 1920. The chain became the dominant first-run movie theater operator in the Pacific states and was later absorbed by William Fox into Fox West Coast Theatres.
Is the Abraham Gore Residence a Historic-Cultural Monument?
Yes. The City of Los Angeles designated it Historic-Cultural Monument No. 1061 on February 5, 2014, recognizing it as an architectural-type specimen valuable for the study of its period style, a mix of Spanish Colonial Revival and Mediterranean Revival.
What is the difference between Spanish Colonial Revival and Mediterranean Revival?
Spanish Colonial Revival draws on the California missions and colonial Mexico, with white stucco, low red-tile roofs, arches, and wrought iron. Mediterranean Revival reaches toward Italian and broader Mediterranean villa traditions and tends to be grander and more formal, fond of towers and symmetry. The Abraham Gore Residence blends both, with Spanish Colonial materials and a more theatrical Mediterranean tower composition.
Can you tour or visit the Abraham Gore Residence?
No. It is a private single-family residence and is not open for tours. It can be seen from the public street, where the conical entrance tower makes it easy to recognize, but the property itself is private.
Does HCM status affect property taxes in Los Angeles?
HCM status itself does not change property taxes, but it makes a property eligible for the California Mills Act, which can reduce property taxes substantially, often 40 to 70 percent, in exchange for a long-term preservation commitment. For a Los Feliz HCM, the savings can total tens of thousands of dollars per year, though the figures must be modeled for the specific home.
How do you buy a historic or architectural home in Los Feliz?
Designated and design-significant homes in Los Feliz trade across a wide price range and often quietly, so buying one usually rewards representation and local knowledge over portal alerts. Debbie Pisaro has worked the Los Feliz market for 24 years and handles designation status, Mills Act eligibility, and preservation obligations as part of due diligence on every architectural and historic purchase.
Talk to Debbie
For buying or selling a Revival-era or designated home in Los Feliz, with the history told right and the Mills Act modeled before you commit, Debbie Pisaro knows these streets block by block.
Get in touchAbout the author. Debbie Pisaro is a Los Feliz real estate specialist with 24 years of experience and the founder of Coastline 840 (California DRE #01369110), an independent California brokerage focused on architectural, historic, and design forward homes. She documents the Los Feliz Historic-Cultural Monument series, works the Oaks, Laughlin Park, Franklin Hills, and the greater Los Feliz market, and lives in a 1907 Craftsman in Silver Lake with her Doberman, Lennon. Reach Debbie Pisaro at debbie@coastline840.com or (310) 362-6429. More at DebbiePisaro.com and Coastline840.com.
The Abraham Gore Residence is one of the neighborhood's revival-era monuments. It is one of more than fifty Historic-Cultural Monuments in Los Feliz. For the full overview, see the Los Feliz HCM guide, browse the complete collection of Los Feliz monuments, and if you are weighing designation for your own home, here is how to get a home designated.