| Built: |
1933-1935
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| Type: |
Scientific installation |
| Observation
deck: |
Many |
| Location: |
2800
East Observatory Road |
A
beautiful building that brings the beauty of the stars
to Earth. Every year millions of people make the trip
up Mount Hollywood to visit the Griffith Observatory.
From here there is a stunning view of Los Angeles
which has been used in a number of films. If you'd
like to make a film of your own here, you can rent
the observatory for about $3,000.00 but there are
some major restrictions. Griffith Observatory is named
after Colonel Griffith J. Griffith who donated the
money for the observatory. He did so after getting
a chance to glimpse the heavens through the telescope
at the Mount Wilson Observatory. After his death,
Griffith Park and the Greek Theatre were donated to
the city, and as specified in his will, an observatory
was built atop a great science museum. All are run
as free services for the public. The main attraction
here is the Zeiss planetarium projector. It weighs
one ton and was built in 1964 in what was then West
Germany. The Zeiss is able to project 9,000 stellar
objects onto the observatory's 75-foot dome. There
is also a 12-inch Zeiss refracting telescope (which
cost $14,900.00 in 1931), and two solar telescopes.
The Zeiss factory in Jena was destroyed by Allied
bombs during the second World War. But the telescopes
live on, housed under large the copper domes of the
Griffith Observatory. Another piece of science presents
itself in the building's architecture: The center
cupola is home to the 40-foot-tall Foucault pendulum.
Inside, the cupola is decorated with murals depicting
great figures and moments in science. The best views
of Los Angeles are from the roof, and unlike most
buildings, to get there you have to climb the stairs
outside.
-
There is a bronze bust of James Dean on the western
lawn because part of Rebel Without a Cause
was filmed at the observatory.
- A
World War II periscope donated by the U.S Navy pokes
22 feet out of the top of the science center.
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|
Griffith
Observatory
Courtesy: Arnesen Photography/LACVB, PictureLA.com
Photo Credit: © Erik Arnesen
|
Griffith
Observatory
Courtesy: LACVB, PictureLA.com
By: Michele & Tom Grimm
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