The Jastro Building a two-story structure in downtown Bakersfield, California.
Built in the late-Second Renaissance Revival architecture style, it was constructed in two sections in 1917 and 1921; the latter added a 10,000 square feet (930 m2) wing.
The structure has a flat roof with boxed cornice bracketed parapet.
With the construction of the Jastro Building, the company moved its Central California operations to Bakersfield.
It is one of the finest examples of its type of architecture to survive the devastating 1952 Kern County earthquake relatively unscathed.