Everything about Highland Park Los Angeles California totally explained
Highland Park is a district of North East
Los Angeles. It includes the
Garvanza and
San Pasqual neighborhoods, and some would argue,
Mt. Washington.
Geography and Transportation
Highland Park is located along the
Arroyo Seco. It is situated within what was once
Rancho San Rafael of the Spanish / Mexican era. Its boundaries are roughly the
Pasadena Freeway (
SR 110) and the city limits of
South Pasadena on the southeast, the city limits of
Pasadena on the east, Oak Grove Drive on the north, and Avenue 50/51 on the west. The district's neighbors include
Mt. Washington on the southwest,
Montecito Heights on the south,
Hermon and
Monterey Hills on the southeast, South Pasadena on the east, Pasadena on the northeast,
Eagle Rock on the north, and
Glassell Park on the west. Primary thoroughfares include York Boulevard, Avenues 50, 54, and 64, Monte Vista Street, and
Figueroa Street. Highland Park is served by the
Gold Line, a
light rail system that largely runs at street grade parallel to
Figueroa Street until turning east into South Pasadena at Avenue 61. The district's
ZIP code is 90042.
A look from Highland Park to Downtown. Taken from Ave 65 & Elder torwards Figueroa & York. You can see the 99cent store sign.
The neighborhood
One of the oldest settled areas of Los Angeles, Highland Park is also one of the most scenic due to its architecture and location between the Mt. Washington hills, the San Rafael hills and the Monterey Hills, Los Angeles, California. There are large sprawling parks in the area, including the
Arroyo Seco Park and the Ernest E. Debs Regional Park. The
Southwest Museum, with one of the largest and most significant collections of Native American artifacts in the country, is located in adjacent Mt. Washington. The light rail Metro Gold Line from Union Station to Pasadena (traversing all of Highland Park) is one of the most enjoyable and dynamic public transportation journeys in the city, because of views offered by the parks, hills and valleys along the meandering route.
Despite these advantages, Highland Park experienced an exodus of white residents beginning with the development of
Mid-Wilshire district beginning in the 1920s. By the mid 1960s, it was becoming a largely
Latino enclave as the phenomenon of
white flight, coupled with relentless over-development, caused land prices to drop. By the mid 1970s, it had emerged as a predominantly Latino area. But in keeping with its tradition of being a haven for immigrants, the shift in demographics never fully homogenized as it did in
East L.A., leaving room for many races and ethnicities to find a place in Highland Park. Indeed, some residents find the mix of people to be one of the most appealing aspects of the community.
During the 1950s and continuing into the 1960s, many of Highland Park's grandest and oldest homes were razed. Witness, for example, Heritage Square: a Highland Park museum started by local Los Angeles activists hoping to save some of the Victorian homes which were scheduled for demolition to make room for gas stations and parking lots. One of the fine and architecturally significant homes was the only one saved from this era. A hint of
gentrification sprouted in Highland Park in 1984 when large tracts of the district were set aside for
historic preservation under Los Angeles' pioneering Historic Preservation Overlay Zone ordinance.
Before the skyrocketing of Southern California housing prices from
2002 -
2005, many arrived to Highland Park to seek out, buy, and revitalize
Craftsman homes that had suffered neglect over the decades. Although this quiet movement continues, Highland Park has largely been spared the dramatic changes that
Silver Lake,
Echo Park and
Eagle Rock have experienced. The district's proximity to those neighborhoods (coupled with low rents), have made it increasingly popular among
hipsters. Local dive bars have become fashionable nightclubs, with doormen and chi-chi velvet ropes, including Mr. T's, a Highland Park
bowling alley partially renovated as a performance venue and tavern, that has been host to local bands since the mid-90's. In another sign of neighborhood change, the
Old LA Certified Farmers Market opened in 2006, operating adjacent to the Highland Park Gold Line Station and providing a new nexus of community activity. It remains to be seen whether gentrification in the area will continue, as it lacks the high-quality schools that have made Mt. Washington, Eagle Rock and South Pasadena attractive destinations for upper middle-class to lower upper-class Angelenos seeking alternatives to suburbia.
The area is also served by the
Arroyo Seco Journal [www.asjournal.net], a hip and smart, politically-oriented monthly publication, founded in
1999 by Edward Rivera, a local journalist/activist.
From the late 1950s until around the early 80s, Highland Park and neighboring Eagle Rock were known as a haven for Hot Rod builders. While most of the original hot rod shops have now disappeared, McGibbons Auto Body still exists at 5251 York Blvd. McGibbons shop was the creator of many of the hot rodder and low-rider graphics and paints from the 1970s onward.
Highland Park is home to
NELA bikes, a more genteel and law-abiding version of Echo Park's
Midnight Ridazz.
One of the last typewriter shops in the City of Los Angeles, the
U.S. Office Machine Company, is located in Highland Park at 5722 N. Figueroa. They specialize in repairing antique
typewriters, and have restored a few for movie studios. It is one of three businesess located in the old Sunbeam Theatre, one of the earliest in the area, much older than the Highland Theater.
The clothing retail chain
Forever 21 was founded in Highland Park in 1984. The first store is still located in its original location at 5637 N. Figueroa and bears the original name of the company, Fashion 21.
In the media
Because of the picturesque neighborhoods in and around Highland Park, many movies are filmed here.
Resevoir Dogs was filmed largely in Highland Park.
Cutter's Way, starring
Jeff Bridges was filmed for the most part, on Aldama Street. The dance hall scene in
La Bamba was filmed at the VFW hall on Avenue 57.
An illustration in the booklet for
Quasimoto's album
The Further Adventures of Lord Quas depicts the area of Highland Park on Figueroa St. between Aves 26th and 56th.
Tuff Turf starring
James Spader was shot in Highland Park.
Notable residents
- Philip Ahn, Korean-American actor from the Kung Fu TV series
- Ricardo Cruz, attorney, activist
- Daryl Gates, former LAPD chief (currently lives in South Pasadena)
- Steve Sax, former Dodger baseball player
- Sharon Tay, newscaster
- Alan Arkin, Academy Award-winning actor
- Gene Roddenberry, writer and creator of Star Trek
- Bobby Riggs, athlete, tennis
- Rocky Delgadillo, Los Angeles City attorney
- Porntip Nakhirunkanok, 1988 Miss Universe (representing Thailand)
- Diane Keaton, Oscar-winning actress, was born in Highland Park.
- Mike Kelley, artist
- Jackson Browne, singer and songwriter
- Beck, performer song writer
- Zack de la Rocha, activist performer
- Carlos Almaraz, (Though he made his home in Echo Park, he lived in HP for one summer) painter
- Quetzal, band, formerly of legendary folk label Vanguard Records
- Clyde Browne, grandfather of Jackson Browne and Arts and Crafts movement era printer who built the "Abbey San Encino," a smaller-scaled replica of a California Mission building, which still stands, serving as one of the Browne family homes.
- Edward Furlong, actor (was growing up in the San Pascual neighborhood of Highland Park when he was "discovered" by a casting agent searching for a boy to play John Connor in ).
- Sonny Moore, ex vocalist for post-hardcore band From First to Last
- Carlos. R. Lopez, Jr., World Famous Black Belt Muay Thai Fighter
- Devin Neil Oatway, Actor, Artist
- Mary Lopez poet/writer, activist, plus-size model. (Sister of World Famous Black Belt Muay Thai Fighter Carlos R. Lopez, Jr.)
- Wyatt Earp
- Robinson Jeffers
Fire service
Los Angeles Fire Department Station 12
is in the area.
Transportation
Highland Park has a train station,
Highland Park (LACMTA station), along the
Metro's Gold Line. The station is an
island platform located near the intersection of North Avenue 57 at Marmion Way, (one block north of North Figueroa Street).
Education
Highland Park is zoned to schools in the
Los Angeles USD .
Zoned elementary schools include:
Aldama Elementary School
Annandale Elementary School
Buchanan Elementary School
Bushnell Way Elementary School
Garvanza Elementary School
San Pascual Elementary School
Saint Ignatius School
Toland Way Elementary School
Yorkdale Elementary School
Monte Vista Elementary School
Residents are zoned to Burbank Middle School
and Franklin High School.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Highland Park Los Angeles California'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://highland_park__los_angeles__california.totallyexplained.com">Highland Park, Los Angeles, California Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |