This photograph captures Beverly Hills City Hall in 1972, framed by the palm trees, street signs, and wide boulevards that define the city’s streetscape. Built in 1932 and designed by architects William J. Gage and Harry G. Koerner, the eight-story Spanish Colonial Revival tower—topped with its gold-leaf cupola—was once described as “the most beautiful public building in America,” and it quickly became one of Beverly Hills’ most recognisable landmarks.
In this era, City Hall still stood largely alone in a broad civic campus, surrounded by parking lots, open lawn areas, and low landscaping. Much of the surrounding Beverly Hills Civic Center complex—including the police station, library, and later postmodern additions—had yet to be built. The building’s tower, visible from blocks away, served as a navigational marker long before GPS or skyline development diluted its visual dominance.
The traffic scene in the foreground reflects everyday life rather than glamour: American sedans, a station wagon, and a weathered pickup share Santa Monica Boulevard. The striped pedestrian crosswalk, trolley-style traffic lights, and the Crescent Dr. street sign help anchor the location within the city’s civic grid. Despite the formality of the building, the relaxed spacing and low density of nearby development evoke a slower, quieter Beverly Hills than the one visitors encounter today.
Over the decades, Beverly Hills City Hall has undergone seismic strengthening and interior modernization, but its exterior remains largely unchanged. Where parking lots once stretched outward, cultural institutions and landscaped plazas now fill the space—yet the cupola, elegant façade reliefs, and palm-lined frontage still look much as they did in 1972.
This image captures the building during a pivotal period—historic yet modern, iconic yet surprisingly humble—before Beverly Hills grew into the denser civic and commercial district recognized today.




