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All the United States California Los Angeles Robinson's Liberty Bells
Robinson's Liberty Bells is permanently closed.

This entry remains in the Atlas as a record of its history, but it is no longer accessible to visitors.

Robinson's Liberty Bells

Large but largely ignored, these 42 life-size Liberty Bell replicas were a peculiar, unexplained feature on the facade of a Macy's department store.

Los Angeles, California

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Macy’s, now closed, with bells removed (circa 2015)   Avoiding Regret
The bell tower without its bells at the now-closed Macy’s (circa 2015)   Avoiding Regret
Two of the bells were rescued by and now reside in Valley Relics Museum (Chatsworth, CA)   Avoiding Regret
The bells’ new home is Valley Relics Museum (Chatsworth, CA)   Avoiding Regret
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About

When the wind blows, the columns of bells sound against one another, further aural intrigue created by the more highly pitched wind chimes substituted for the the bells' central strikers. A mysterious plaque, lacking in any artists' marks, only reveals that the bells are exactly to scale, hand-lettered, and include cracks modeled directly from the Real McCoy.

It is only through much digging and inquiry that one finds the name of the building's designers: Welton Becket & Associates. Becket, remarkably, is the same man responsible for such iconic architecture as the Capitol Records Building, the Pan-Pacific Auditorium, and the Cinerama Dome, among many other noteworthy structures.

The Macy's in question was built between 1972 and 1973, and first operated as a Robinson's department store. It is a mystery still as to the artist responsible for the bells. They are similar in appearance to the bells on other Robinson's department store buildings designed by Becket's sometimes-commission partner, William Pereira. However, none of Pereira's buildings' bells are Liberty Bell facsimiles, rendering this monument unique.

In January 2015, it was announced that Macy's would close this location in the spring, and the bells were subsequently removed from the building and dispersed to various beneficiaries, including the San Fernando Valley Relics Museum in Van Nuys, which proudly displays two of them, hanging from the ceiling.

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Elise

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Avoiding Regret, Craig Baker, Atomic Redhead

  • Avoiding Regret
  • Craig Baker
  • Atomic Redhead

Published

June 6, 2013

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Sources
  • http://www.sanfernandovalleyblog.blogspot.com/2011/05/bttf-series-5-promenade-mall-at.html
  • http://www.dailynews.com/business/20150108/macys-closing-two-woodland-hills-stores
Robinson's Liberty Bells
6100 Topanga Canyon Blvd.
Los Angeles, California, 91367
United States
34.181445, -118.604959
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