Hollywood location The Velaslavasay Panorama was originally located in a 1968
Googie-style building on Hollywood Boulevard until it was demolished in 2004. The building formerly housed the Chu Chu Chinese Restaurant. The panorama exhibit displayed at the Hollywood Boulevard location, painted by Velas, was entitled The Panorama of the Valley of the Smokes, depicting a view of the Los Angeles area as it may have appeared in 1792, the year that Robert Barker's very first panorama was unveiled. Velas envisioned the panorama's design from photographs and histories collected from the Los Angeles Public Library.
West Adams re-location After being displaced from the Hollywood location in 2004 because of planned development, the Velaslavasay relocated to the historical West Adams neighborhood. The second panorama installation, Effulgence of the North, which depicts scenes of the Arctic from the era of its 19th-century exploration, debuted at the new Union Theatre location in July 2007 and remained on display until September 2017. The Union Theatre was originally built in 1910 as a motion picture hall and was named for the nearby Union Square, once a bustling hub along LA's past Red Car trolley system. The Union Theatre has been home to a variety of organizations prior to the Velaslavasay Panorama. Notably, it served as a meeting hall for the Tile Layers Union Local #18 throughout the mid-late 20th century. Prior to that, in 1935, former screen vamp Louise Glaum opened an acting school and playhouse here, calling it Louise Glaum's Little Theater at Union Square. Then in 1939, it was reconfigured back into a film venue, the Union, and operated under that name until it closed in 1953. For a time in the 1970s, while serving as the headquarters for the Tile Layers, a student organization from nearby USC operated an after-hours weekly film series, showing cult and underground films and Saturday cartoon matinees for the neighborhood children. This K-Bel Theatre Film Society operated until 1975. ==Exhibitions==