


When Long’s Drugs took over the location at the corner of Laurel Canyon and Ventura a few years ago, it seemed hopeful that something nice would adorn one of the Valley’s most prominent corners.
Alas, it was not to be. Long’s is one of the ugliest stores around. The interior could not legally be photographed for this article, but it embodies the worst aspects of 1960’s fluorescent-lit banality. The space is a cluttered and junky collection of cheap wines, macaroni and cheese displays, canned olives and tuna fish pyramids, aisles of plastic chairs, t-shirts, baseball caps, and generic cleaning products. Many of the standard products—shampoos, deodorants and painkillers—are way overpriced.
Lost was a great opportunity to place glass windows and an attractive retail display along Ventura. This is the gateway to Studio City and it has geographic prestige. But Long’s has no sense of its place on Ventura.
The windows are covered with beige plastic, and planters hide litter and the scent of urine near a littered bus stop. An aesthetically (and business minded) company might have opened up the store with a lunch or ice cream counter where customers could see Ventura Boulevard while seated at lunch. Pedestrians would have a view inside Longs, increasing business and a connection to Studio City.
The red plastic exterior sign is appalling, with the little “Long’s Drugs” lost on the trapezoidal shaped ,vertical rooftop bisect. The building, which curves aerodynamically along the corner, was meant to signify the presence of an important retailer. But the peeling paint, garbage and helter-skelter disarray inside show that Long’s could care less.
Is it a small matter to pick on Long’s? I don’t think so. These retail stores, which come into our communities and create an ugly and ill planned presence, are not worthy of protection. They merely take money from us without contributing to the beauty or enjoyment of Los Angeles.
What would Santa Barbara do with a place like Long’s?
Why haven’t any of our drugstore chains: Sav-on, Rite Aid, Walgreen’s, Longs, etc, moved away from that standard flourescent lit store model. It doesn’t matter what chain you are in, they all look exactly the same inside, except for Rite-Aids annoying diagonal aisle layout.
Why has no one improved upon this design? Surely we can improve upon it.
Note to aspiring young store designers out there….help!!!!
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Long’s took over that site from Thrifty Drug, as it did the site where the Rexall Drug store is adjacent to and part of the Beverly Connection across from Bev. Center.
Long’s may not have that much more time remaining on its lease and thus cannot justify spending much $$, as there may not be sufficient time to recover it, either in sales or goodwill.
And likewise, the former camera store across from Starbux at the other end of the block – sure hope the tenant that grabs that choice spot knows how to fix it up as it is ugly beyond imagination.
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And I remember when Curries Ice Cream store was on the North/West Corner of Laurel and Ventura and that is where my GrandDad took me for my Ice Cream cones.(1940’s) Bye the way they had a huge Ice Cream Cone on the top of their building.
I lived in the valley for 70 years and just moved to Valencia. I just love it here and wish I had moved sooner.
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