Ali’s House from “Pretty Little Liars”

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Pretty Little Liars will be returning to the small screen on January 12th and I could NOT be more excited!  Though I found the recent mid-season finale to be absolutely ridiculous, not to mention a total let-down (this was SO me and my mom while viewing it), to the point that I thought I might never watch again, I now find myself thrilled that new episodes are only a few days away!  As detailed in my February 2015 post titled “The Pretty Little Liars Guide to Warner Bros. Studio,” the ABC Family (soon to be re-named Freeform) series is shot pretty much in its entirety on the WB lot in Burbank.  The pilot, though, was lensed in Vancouver and last year I managed to track down most of the locales that appeared in the episode.  (There is one that remains unfound and a real thorn in my side, but more on that later.)  My good friend/fellow stalker Kerry lives in the Pacific Northwest and recently took a weekend trip up to Vancouver.  I asked if she wouldn’t mind stalking some PLL locations for me while she was in town and stalk them she did!  Every single one!  Thank you, Kerry!  So I figured what better time to blog about them than in the days leading up to the premiere – and what better locale to start with than the DiLaurentis family house, which played such a pivotal role in the pilot.

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For those not in the know, the pilot of Pretty Little Liars centers around the disappearance of a teenage girl named Alison DiLaurentis (Sasha Pieterse).  The mysterious details of her disappearance, which took place a year prior, are revealed in flashbacks.  In the episode, it is said that the DiLaurentis family, distraught over losing Ali, has chosen to sell their large Victorian-style residence and a new family is shown moving in.

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The home was actually the first locale I tracked down from the episode.  It was a snap to find thanks to its unique architecture and a “1995” number placard that I spotted above the front door in the scene in which Emily Fields (Shay Mitchell) welcomes the new girl, Maya St. Germain (Bianca Lawson), to the neighborhood.  Address number in hand, I did a Google search for “1995,” “Victorian house,” and “Vancouver,” and the first link to pop up was a real estate listing for a residence located at 1995 West 19th Avenue.  Sure enough, the images featured in the listing were a perfect match to Ali’s house.  Wahoo!

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The massive dwelling, which was originally built in the 1920s, is just as stunning in real life as it appeared onscreen (as least as evidenced by Kerry’s photos).  In actuality, though, the property is not a single-family home, but a multi-unit dwelling.

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The residence appears a couple of times in the pilot, most notably in the scene in which (spoiler alert!) Ali’s body is discovered buried in the side yard.

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The actual interior of the property was also featured in the episode.  Not only was one of the home’s bedrooms used as Maya’s bedroom . . .

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. . . but, in an odd twist, the dwelling’s ornate wood-paneled stairwell masked as a back area of the church where Ali’s funeral was held.  It is on those stairs that Ezra Fitzgerald (Ian Harding) and Aria Montgomery (Lucy Hale) share a passionate kiss.  You can check out some photographs of the stairway here.

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Once Pretty Little Liars got picked up, production moved from Vancouver to California and the DiLaurentis house was “re-created” in the Jungle area of the Warner Bros. Studio backlot.  I say “re-created” because the façade that was constructed looks absolutely nothing like the house that appeared in the pilot.

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Aside from a large set of entry steps, the two homes don’t resemble each other in the slightest, as you can see below.

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As for the location I mentioned earlier that remains a thorn in my side?  I cannot for the life of me seem to track down the interior of Hollis Bar & Grill, where Aria and Ezra met for the first time.

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My buddy Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, did manage to locate the building used in the establishing shot.  The exterior of Hollis Bar & Grill is actually that of Ashland City Hall, located at 20 East Main Street in Ashland, Oregon.  The image shown in the scene was likely stock footage, as no actual filming took place in the Beaver State.  The interior, though, remains a mystery.  If any of my fellow stalkers are familiar with the Vancouver area, please take a look at the above images and let me know if you can identify the watering hole pictured in them.

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Big THANK YOU to Kerry for stalking this location for me!  Smile

For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The DiLaurentis house from the pilot episode of Pretty Little Liars is located at 1995 West 19th Avenue in Vancouver.

The “Wicked City” Library

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I have one more Wicked City location up my sleeve (for the time being, at least – I did track down a couple of others after watching the recently-released final five episodes, but have yet to stalk them) – the former Second Church of Christ, Scientist in West Adams, which masked as an L.A. library in “Should I Stay or Should I Go.”  I have long been familiar with the stately, domed structure thanks to my many area stalkings (Fatty Arbuckle’s former house is located on the same street, as is the oft-filmed St. Vincent de Paul Church) and recognized it immediately upon viewing the episode.  I had never done a proper stalking of it, though, and promptly dragged the Grim Cheaper right on over there to remedy that a couple of weeks ago.

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Second Church of Christ, Scientist was designed by architect Alfred H. Rosenheim, who also designed the American Horror Story house.  The prolific Albert C. Martin, Sr. (of Million Dollar Theatre, Los Angeles City Hall and Thomas Higgins Building fame) acted as the engineer.  The massive Italian Renaissance-style structure, which was modeled after the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, aka the “Mother Church,” took more than two years to complete at a cost of $318,000.  Its doors were opened to the public on January 23rd, 1910.

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The property, which was built out of terracotta, brick, stucco and granite, was so grand that, according to the Big Orange Landmarks website, a 1908 Los Angeles Times article deemed it “the largest and most elaborate church west of Chicago.”

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At the time of its completion, the interior featured a pipe organ, mahogany woodwork, stained glass windows, wainscoting throughout, and seating for 1,200 churchgoers.

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The site’s most impressive feature, though, was – and still is – its 130-foot tall copper-clad, poured-concrete dome, which according to Big Orange Landmarks, measures 70 feet in diameter and weighs 1,400 tons.

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The green-tinted dome seems to sparkle in the sunlight and only adds to the grandeur and beauty of the already picturesque church, which was named a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1968.

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Due to declining membership and the high cost of maintaining the property, Christian Science Church vacated the building in 2008.  The empty structure proved attractive to vandals, who spray painted the once stately structure with graffiti and broke many of its stained glass windows.

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In December 2009, the site was sold to The Art of Living Foundation, a non-profit organization that teaches meditation, yoga, breathing, and emotional balance.  The group lovingly repaired the damage done to the property and today use it as their main headquarters.

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The former Second Church of Christ, Scientist played a significant role in Wicked City’s “Should I Stay or Should I Go.”

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Masking as a local library, it is there that Kent Grainger (Ed Westwick) leaves the head of one of his murder victims among the stacks of books for detectives Jack Roth (Jeremy Sisto) and Paco Contreras (Gabriel Luna) to find.

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I initially thought that the actual inside of the former church had also been used in the filming of the library scenes, but as soon as I looked through these interior photographs of the place I realized that was not the case.

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As it turns out, interior filming took place at DC Stages, a downtown Los Angeles studio that has been around since 1988.  The facility, which was originally called Dos Carlos Stages, is situated inside of a a former perishable food storage center and boasts several standing sets including that of a police station, a city hall, a courthouse, political offices, a hospital, a jail, apartments, hotel rooms, a restaurant, and, of course, a library.  You can check out a drone video shot of the various sets here and some some photographs here.  What I wouldn’t give to see the inside of that place in person!

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Many sources state that the Second Church of Christ, Scientist was used regularly as the Fulton County Courthouse on the television series Matlock, but I have not been able to verify that.  I downloaded a couple of episodes to scan through and in each of them a different building masked as the courthouse, neither of which was the Second Church of Christ, Scientist, as you can see below.  The series aired for nine seasons, though, so it is quite possible the West Adams church did make an appearance (or several appearances) at some point during that run.

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The locale also pops up as the Radiant Assembly of God church on the HBO series Perry Mason.

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Only the exterior of the building is utilized on the series.  Interior church scenes were shot at the Trinity Auditorium, located at 851 South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Second Church of Christ, Scientist, aka the Wicked City library, is located at 948 West Adams Boulevard in University ParkDC Stages, which was used for the interior library scenes, is located at 1360 East 6th Street in downtown L.A.  Be advised that the studio facility is not open to the public.

Edgeway Auto Upholstery from “Wicked City”

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ABC finally released the remaining five episodes of Wicked City on both ABC.com and Hulu.  Watching them proved to be a bit of a double-edged sword because the show got really good.  And I already thought it was great!  By episode 8, I realized what a real contender it could have been, with a long life on the small screen, but, sadly, that was not to be.  I was thrilled, though, that producers were given a bit of a heads-up about the cancellation which allowed them to grant the story some closure.  But seeing that closure only made me wonder what the original ending was intended to be, as I am sure it was vastly different from what did make it to the airwaves.   My guess is that (spoiler alert!) the death of Karen McClaren (Taissa Farmiga) was a last-minute departure from the planned storyline, but who knows?  Here’s hoping a DVD with behind-the-scenes info will be released at some point.  (If I don’t eventually find out what was up with the Fly Brand cocaine, I may go crazy!)  For those who have yet to see the final five episodes, I highly recommend watching.  As fate would have it, Edgeway Auto Upholstery, where Kent Grainger (Ed Westwick) worked on the series – a spot I had previously stalked, but had yet to blog about – figured prominently in one of them.

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Edgeway Auto Upholstery first popped up in the episode titled “Running with the Devil,” in the scene in which Kent pretended to be a Hollywood producer while making a phone call to a production company in order to try to track down an actress he wanted to kill.  (The storyline was dark, but oh so enthralling!)

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Edgeway turned out to be an easy find.  I figured filming had most likely taken place at a real auto upholstery facility, one that was most likely located somewhere in the San Fernando Valley.  Besides the fact that the shop had a very Valley look to it, many of the spots featured in the series, such as Kent’s house and Valli Tropics, where Betty Beaumontaine (Erika Christensen) lived, were located in the area and producers often pick places to film that are in close proximity to each other.  So I started searching for upholstery shops in the SFV and came across Nacho’s Auto Upholstery at 12443 Victory Boulevard in Valley Glen within minutes.  Sure enough, it matched what had appeared on Wicked City.

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Nacho’s looks exactly the same in person as it did onscreen.  I love the fact that although the name was changed for the filming, producers used the shop’s actual lettering style for the fake signage.

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Besides “Running with the Devil,” Nacho’s also popped up in “Heat Wave.”  In the episode, detectives Jack Roth (Jeremy Sisto) and Paco Contreras (Gabriel Luna) figure out that the serial killer they’ve been chasing works at an upholstery shop.  While hunting down leads, they spot a vintage red Corvette similar to one that the killer had been seen driving, parked at Edgeway Auto Upholstery and they break into the shop to investigate.

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Quite a bit of the location was shown in “Heat Wave.”

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A sign reading “Nacho’s Auto Upholstery” was even visible in the background at one point.  Whoops!  Winking smile

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The shop’s small office area, which Roth and Contreras search through, was actually just a set, though.

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And not even a full one, at that, as I learned thanks to a photograph that executive producer Jon Cassar tweeted along with the caption, “Sometimes 2 walls is all you need.”  Ah, the magic of filmmaking.

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Only the rear side of Nacho’s, which is reached via a back alley, appeared in Wicked City.  The front of the shop, pictured below, was never shown onscreen.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Nacho’s Auto Upholstery, aka Edgeway Auto Upholstery from Wicked City, is located at 12443 Victory Boulevard in Valley Glen.