From mid 1989 until nearly 2013, Campanile occupied a landmark building at 624 South La Brea Avenue in Los Angeles, California. Built by Charlie Chaplin in 1929, the neglected building was discovered by Silverton’s mother and bought by her father, then renovated according to the specifications of Campanile’s co-founders. Five months before launching Campanile, the founders openedLa Brea Bakery as part of the restaurant complex, to provide the quality breads they wanted to serve. “Like the bakery before it, the Campanile restaurant was a hit when it opened six months later. Silverton and Peel were well known from their stints at Spago and Michael's in Los Angeles. The press anticipated the opening. Customers waited weeks for a table. Annual sales exceeded $2 million right from the start.” According to the Los Angeles Times, “Campanile, which opened in 1989, helped to shape the culinary landscape of Los Angeles, influencing so many of today’s chefs.” “The storied restaurant, with its distinctly American approach using top-quality farmer's market ingredients, helped set the tone for Los Angeles dining in the 1990s,” wrote Betty Hallock. For more than two decades Peel served as Executive Chef at Campanile, where food criticJonathan Gold observed that “It is hard to overstate Campanile’s contributions to American cooking,“ and “… Peel is still the most exacting grill chef in the country, a master who plays his smoldering logs the way that Pinchas Zukerman does a Stradivarius.” In its November 1997issue, Los Angeles Magazine said, “Arguably the best restaurant in L.A., Campanile—home to Nancy Silverton’s La Brea Bakery and local shrine to Mark Peel’s urban-rustic cuisine—continues to be solid yet innovative, comforting yet startling. The cedar-smoked trout with fennel salad; rosemary-charred lamb with artichokes, fava beans and olives; and the sour-cherry brioche are classic selections from a menu that changes daily.” La Brea Bakery was sold in 2001 to Aryzta. In 2012, Campanile restaurant lost its lease and closed.
Tributes
Campanile in the Eighties : http://ruthreichl.com/2018/11/campanile-in-the-eighties.html/
An Elegy for Campanile: https://www.laweekly.com/restaurants/an-elegy-for-campanile-2381940
A last look at Campanile from kevinEats blog: http://www.kevineats.com/2012/10/campanile-los-angeles-ca.html
“Campanile—a restaurant so revered for its contributions to America’s culinary landscape that it spawned eulogies from food critics when it closed in 2012.”