Adam's Dome

Historic 21,000 sq ft landmark building in Los Angeles with 90-foot copper dome.

Adam's Dome is one of Los Angeles's most architecturally commanding and historically significant filming locations, a Classical Revival landmark built in the early twentieth century that has served as a recurring backdrop for major film and television productions requiring institutional authority, sacred grandeur, or civic monumentality. The copper-clad dome — approximately 70 feet in diameter and rising 90 feet above the main hall floor — defines the property's visual identity from the exterior and gives productions an on-screen presence that no purpose-built stage can approximate. Spanning approximately 21,000 square feet across four distinct interior levels, the building offers a rare range of spatial environments within a single location: a formal columned exterior facade, a Gothic-style entry vestibule, a vaulted foyer with dual staircases, stained glass accents, a main hall seating up to 1,000, a second hall with original hardwood floors, and a series of ancillary rooms suited for breakout, production support, and back-of-house operations. A separate support building with a commercial kitchen extends the property's event and production functionality further. Set on an over-one-acre parcel with landscaped grounds, Adam's Dome delivers monumental scale, genuine historical character, and the kind of multi-environment versatility that makes a company move unnecessary. It is a Los Angeles landmark that performs as reliably on camera as it does in person.