The location was previously home to the Olympic Hotel and other buildings of the city's 19th-century downtown. Groundbreaking for the center began on December 30, 1952, and construction was completed in 1955. On July 16, 1966, Parker suffered a fatal heart attack after a testimonial dinner. The
Los Angeles City Council renamed the building the "Parker Center" in his honor on January 25, 1967. The architect was
Welton Becket & Associates and J.E. Stanton, associated architect. Maynard Woodard was director of design and Francis Runcy was the project architect. The eight-story building was of reinforced concrete with aluminum sash windows covered by louvers. Ceramic tile by
Gladding, McBean covered the west elevation. The building combined police facilities that had been located throughout the
Civic Center area. The jail area was built without window bars, utilizing non-breakable tempered glass, and
neoprene floors to reduce self-injuries. A special control board in the lineup room could simulate different lighting conditions and a wire screen that acted like a one-way mirror. The Statistical Unit made the LAPD the first police department to install
IBM computer equipment. The laboratories of the Scientific Investigation Division took up the entire fourth floor and included early versions of a breath-based alcohol impairment test. The new building was called "ultramodern in all respects" and "the jail that modern science built" by
Popular Mechanics in 1956. Two prominent artworks were commissioned for the building, a large bronze modernist sculpture by Bernard Rosenthal mounted at the entrance titled "The American Family" and a mosaic work in the lobby depicting architectural landmarks of Los Angeles by Joseph Young. The mural, mounted a few feet off the ground, was six feet high and 36 feet long, was Young's first public work.
American Artist magazine called it "six tons of steel, copper, aluminum and glass, fused into a monolithic mosaic panel of beauty and permanence that seems to float on air." Both artworks were removed in 2018. The building was one of the sites of unrest during the
1992 Los Angeles riots that followed a not guilty verdict for the four police officers involved in the
Rodney King incident. ==Redevelopment==