Lincoln Heights Jail was originally built in 1927 at a cost of $5 million and opened in 1931.[2][4] A police station was built next to the jail.[5] The initial five-story building was constructed to accommodate 625 prisoners.[2] The jail was expanded in the early 1950s to accommodate 2,800 prisoners.[2] Notable detainees included Al Capone and individuals arrested during the Zoot Suit Riots and the Watts riots.[2] In 1951, the unprovoked beating of seven prisoners occurred in the prison on what came to be known as "Bloody Christmas".[6] The jail was decommissioned in 1965,[6] after the Los Angeles City Council and the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors agreed to consolidate inmates in a nearby county jail as a cost-efficiency measure.[2]
From 1979 until 2014, the building was the home of the Bilingual Foundation of the Arts.[7][8]
Redevelopment
In 2016, the City of Los Angeles issued a Request for Interest to garner development ideas to revitalize the sprawling 229,000 square feet (21,300 m2) jail complex.[9][10] In 2017, Lincoln Property Company and Fifteen Group were selected to redevelop the Lincoln Heights Jail complex into the Lincoln Heights Makers District, which will feature a commercial and manufacturing spaces, a public market, creative office space, live-work housing, an amphitheater with green space, recreation areas and a communal rooftop deck.[11] As of March 2020, the project has been delayed due to environmental issues with the site.[12]
In popular culture
The novel L.A. Confidential and subsequent film, part of which was filmed there, was inspired by the Bloody Christmas incident.[6] The 1984 horror movie Nightmare on Elm Street filmed the boiler room scenes here and the 1983 exploitation
women in prison filmChained Heat was also filmed at the prison.[13] Some prison scenes in American History X were shot on the roof.[14] The television series Cagney & Lacey used it as a filming location. The scene in Iron Man 2 where main antagonist Ivan Vanko breaks out of prison was also filmed at this location.[15] It is featured in the "Jailbreak" episode of the Jack Palance series Bronk.