In 2014, the freemasons moved out of the building[2] and it was turned into an event space.[5] In 2022, the masons officially marked the move as permanent.[6]
In 2015, the City of Los Angeles designated the building Los Angeles Cultural-Historic Monument #1078. Only the exterior was included in this designation, as the interior has been irreversibly altered and no longer contributes to the historical significance of the building.[2]
Architecture and design
North Hollywood Masonic Temple features a Mesoamerican-inspired motif combined with Art Moderne to create a “thoroughly modern presence” and “a grandly scaled example of a Masonic lodge.” The building features a simple rectilinear plan with an elaborate front façade that consists of smooth white stucco walls punctuated by blue horizontal accents, a style that wraps around to the sides of the building. The main entrance features tall vertical elements and geometric motifs, all topped by a streamlined blue pyramid that evokes the temples of Palenque in Chiapas, Mexico. Integrity of the building exterior is considered excellent, while the interior has undergone irreversible alterations and is no longer considered historically significant.[2][3]
Additional character-defining features of the building include: a centered and elevated entrance accessed by a flight of stairs, a faux-corbeledarch over the entrance, two colored friezes above the arch, geometric balustrade at the entrance stairs, fluted columns, repeating Mayan hieroglyph imprints, and a parapet wall running the circumference of the structure.[2]