#pacoima-history

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Mission District
fromMission Local
2 weeks ago

Excelsior Buzz: The Dark Horse returns as Pony Express

La Tiendita, a grocery-store style food bank in the Excelsior, opens Friday and will serve 750 people weekly by allowing residents to select their own groceries instead of receiving pre-packaged bags.
East Bay real estate
fromwww.housingwire.com
2 weeks ago

California transit agency land could support 240,000 homes

California transit agencies own 2,875 parcels totaling 7,827 acres that could accommodate nearly 240,000 housing units to address the state's housing shortage.
fromMetro Silicon Valley | Silicon Valley's Leading Weekly
2 weeks ago

Big Ave in San Jose | Metro Silicon Valley | Silicon Valley's Leading Weekly

At only 10-yes, 10-years old, this Vallejo artist is already taking the Yay by storm with her flow. She's already impressed LaRussell, who saw her singing along to every word of his track, "Sprinkle Me," four years ago when she was six. This kid has got T-A-L-E-N-T!
NYC music
California
fromTravel + Leisure
3 weeks ago

This Suburb Was Just Named the Best Place to Live in California for Its Parks, Schools, and Quality of Life

Elk Grove, a suburban city south of Sacramento, ranks as California's best place to live based on economy, housing, amenities, safety, education, and health metrics.
Silicon Valley real estate
fromwww.thesanjoseblog.com
3 weeks ago

San Jose Advances Plans for 272 Affordable Homes Along West San Carlos Street

A 272-unit fully affordable apartment building is under development at 860 West San Carlos Street, featuring diverse unit sizes and transit-oriented amenities near Diridon Station.
Mission District
fromLos Angeles Times
8 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Pacoima's lackluster is hiding some bargains

Pacoima developed from agricultural land into a diverse community founded by speculator Jouett Allen in 1887, becoming a refuge for marginalized groups due to its lack of racial housing covenants.
#los-angeles-history
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
39 years ago

A First-Class Dwelling : A New Owner Discovers the Lively History of His House--and Los Angeles--in a Search of the Public Records

A 1903 Los Angeles house serves as a historical record of the city's transformation from 100,000 residents to over 3 million, surviving earthquakes, fires, and urban development while facing modern gentrification pressures.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
39 years ago

A First-Class Dwelling : A New Owner Discovers the Lively History of His House--and Los Angeles--in a Search of the Public Records

A 1903 Los Angeles house serves as a historical record of the city's transformation from 100,000 residents to over 3 million, surviving earthquakes, fires, and urban development while facing modern gentrification pressures.
fromLos Angeles Times
9 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Pico-Robertson an evolving hub of Jewish culture

Boyle Heights was at the core of Jewish life in Los Angeles during the late 1800s and early 1900s, and the Fairfax District could claim that title until the 1980s. But the spiritual heartland of the Jewish community is now in Pico-Robertson.
Los Angeles
#real-estate-market
San Francisco
fromLos Angeles Times
23 years ago

San Pedro: Blue-collar soul with ocean views

San Pedro offers affordable oceanside living with dramatic Catalina Island views, rugged bluffs, and diverse neighborhoods ranging from $200,000 to $800,000, appealing to budget-conscious buyers seeking character over polish.
#real-estate
Renovation
fromLos Angeles Times
12 years ago

Architecture adds an upgrade to affordable housing in Santa Monica

Community Corp. of Santa Monica develops affordable housing that respects neighborhood character while incorporating sustainable design and community amenities like the Boys' & Girls' Club.
#historic-preservation
Boston real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
34 years ago

FULLERTON : Group Seeks to Save Victorian Home

Preservationists oppose demolition of a rare 1895 Victorian Queen Anne-style home, while the owner seeks a demolition permit to increase property value for sale.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
22 years ago

A Civic War Is Brewing Over 'Tara' Estate

West Hollywood plans to build a 35-unit affordable senior apartment complex on a historic 1994-designated estate, sparking resident opposition over preservation of the wooded cultural landmark.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
9 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Canoga Park rocketing on fewer engines

Canoga Park embodied Space Age America's spirit through aerospace innovation, suburban development, and futuristic culture before experiencing decline.
fromLos Angeles Times
7 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Panorama City is slowly shaking off its postindustrial trauma

In its scope, scale and ambition, Panorama City outstripped Greater L.A.'s prewar attempts at creating master-planned neighborhoods. It was the brainchild of Henry Kaiser, a shipbuilder keen to put his formidable industrial might, which had manufactured the famous Liberty cargo ships that transported U.S. goods around the world during World War II, to equally lucrative peacetime uses.
Silicon Valley real estate
Real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
23 years ago

Downtrodden Downtown Builds a New, Upscale Identity in Ventura

Ventura's downtown is experiencing economic revival through new restaurants, theaters, boutiques, and residential development, transforming from a neglected seaside resort into a prosperous beach town destination.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
8 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Watts awaits those who are looking for opportunity

Watts developed as a working-class community founded on affordable housing and lack of racial land restrictions, distinguishing it from neighboring cities.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
8 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Woodland Hills is a power-shopper's mecca with outdoor delights

Victor Girard, a Persian rug merchant turned real estate developer, founded Woodland Hills through deceptive marketing practices, subdividing 3,000 acres into tiny lots and making false claims about proximity to the beach.
Renovation
A couple built a custom home on a challenging hillside lot in Silver Lake, requiring extensive foundation work and specialized architectural design to overcome geological constraints.
fromLos Angeles Times
24 years ago

Irvine Considers How It Can Grow Old Gracefully

The city is at a crossroads. Some areas of the town are 30, 35 years old and may need more attention than the newer areas. We have a dichotomy of needs in that we have to provide services to both the old and the new sides of town.
East Bay real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
11 years ago

Scene change complete for Paul Muni's onetime Encino home

Built in 1941 and expanded over the years, the Georgian-style residence is entered through a foyer with leaded-glass windows and a coffered ceiling. The single-story residence includes a den, a chef's kitchen, a breakfast room, nine bedrooms and nine bathrooms in 9,080 square feet.
SF real estate
Mission District
fromSan Jose Spotlight
1 month ago

Paz-Cedillos: Culture is civic infrastructure - San Jose Spotlight

Culture functions as civic infrastructure that anchors communities to place, builds intergenerational trust, and creates stability through belonging and visible history.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
7 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Baldwin Park a modest town with price tags to match

Elias Baldwin's gratitude after being caught falling in a grocery store led him to rename Vineland as Baldwin Park instead of establishing his competing town of Baldwinville.
California
fromTravel + Leisure
1 month ago

This Charming Southern California Town Is Home to the State's Oldest Street-and It's Less Than 2 Hours From L.A.

San Juan Capistrano preserves Orange County's agricultural heritage through thoughtfully curated development that honors its ranching and mission history while embracing modern attractions and dining.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
23 years ago

GHOSTS OF DOWNTOWN

A visitor returns to their father's former bankruptcy law office in downtown Los Angeles, finding the grand windows unchanged while everything else has been transformed or removed.
fromLos Angeles Times
9 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Mid-Wilshire is alive with culture and ancient history

He would buy up land on Wilshire Boulevard between La Brea and Fairfax avenues and build the retail hub of the future, one centered around the automobile. Though critics scoffed, he believed he could draw customers from Beverly Hills and Hollywood to what was then the unfashionable hinterland of the city simply by combining luxury department store shopping with plenty of free parking.
Los Angeles
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
34 years ago

Valley Should Welcome Local Jobs

The San Fernando Valley's opposition to commercial development contradicts residents' complaints about long commutes, as the region lacks local job centers despite having over one million residents.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
10 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Los Feliz

Los Feliz transformed from a Spanish land grant cursed by a mining tycoon's crime into a prestigious Hollywood neighborhood after Griffith Park's creation attracted wealthy residents and industry professionals.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
9 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Van Nuys

Van Nuys transformed from agricultural land to a post-WWII manufacturing hub and is now experiencing renewed development as an affordable housing destination with improved transit access.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
7 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Bell Gardens has modest home prices but is rich in California history

Bell Gardens evolved from a Spanish land grant rancho through Californio and American ownership to a post-WWII suburban city, preserving its oldest adobe mansion as a landmark.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
9 years ago

Early Craftsman holds fast to its roots in Montecito Heights

A 1910 Craftsman house in Los Angeles's Montecito Heights neighborhood is listed for $849,000, featuring period-inspired updates while maintaining original architectural details and modern amenities.
fromLos Angeles Times
38 years ago

Longtime Residents of Canoga Park Say They Stand by Their Community Despite the Stinging Defection of Affluent West Hills : Pride and Prejudice

I'm proud to live in Canoga Park. What's wrong with it? Perhaps it's not as elegant as Woodland Hills or Sherman Oaks, but I've produced two wonderful children from Canoga Park. The markets have fed my family. The shops have clothed my children. It will always be Canoga Park to me.
Los Angeles
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
38 years ago

Pozzo Firm Nearing 90th Year

Pozzo Construction Co., founded in 1898, became a major Los Angeles builder across four generations, constructing landmark buildings including Los Angeles City Hall's foundation before becoming a subsidiary of Blount Bros. Corp.
Non-profit organizations
fromMission Local
1 month ago

How to save the Mission Cultural Center? Residents and leaders meet

Community mobilizes to save the Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts after financial collapse, seeking $500,000 to stabilize operations and preserve its programs.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
7 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Porter Ranch a scenic Valley community under a lingering cloud of unease

Porter Ranch developed from a 19th-century ranching property into a modern Los Angeles neighborhood through gradual land sales and suburban expansion beginning in the 1960s.
SF food
fromwww.7x7.com
2 months ago

What Not to Miss in San Francisco and San Jose's Historic Japantowns, Two of Only Three Left in the U.S.

Sora Soba in San Francisco Japantown serves 100 percent buckwheat soba—silky, chewy, recommended cold—with Kamu Zaro duck dipping and nourishing sobayu.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
29 years ago

Canoga Park Chapel Closes Romantic Era

Chapel in the Canyon, a historic wedding venue on Topanga Canyon Boulevard, has been sold to Chatsworth Christian Church for $3.2 million after four decades of hosting tens of thousands of weddings.
#san-francisco-history
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
2 months ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Planet Circus: Paco Pomet @ Richard Heller Gallery, Santa Monica

Paco Pomet's paintings fuse realist precision with dark humor and surreal transformations that anthropomorphize nature and expose cyclical, self-consuming human behaviors.
US politics
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

Commentary: A walk through promising, problem-plagued MacArthur Park with its council member

MacArthur Park displays concentrated urban distress—homelessness, neglect, and symbolic improvements that struggle to counter deep structural and political challenges.
fromMission Local
2 months ago

S.F. Mayor Lurie is 'committed to the future' of Mission Cultural Center site but offers few details

For 50 years, the non-profit MCCLA at 25th and Mission has run arts programming from the four-story building it leased from the city for a dollar a year. The Arts Commission has also given them funding, with the expectation that they will raise more funds from donors, classes and events. This month, however, the Mission Cultural Center ran out of money and on Jan. 26 it closed indefinitely.
SF politics
fromThesanjoseblog
1 month ago

San Jose Evolves Housing Policies to Unlock Fresh Neighborhood Possibilities

City leaders have adjusted the Inclusionary Housing Ordinance to breathe life into dormant projects. The update shifts affordability tiers for rental units from 50, 60, and 100 percent of area median income to 60, 80, and 110 percent, easing the path for developers to move forward. This pivot aims at households caught between subsidized options and soaring market rates, fostering a broader mix of homes that reflect the city's diverse rhythms and needs.
Real estate
fromSan Jose Spotlight
2 months ago

Lopez: Evergreen Valley College's 50-year impact in San Jose - San Jose Spotlight

When I think of 50 years, I think of accomplishments, impact and stories EVC has written. I also consider possibilities and an opportunity to imagine the next 50 years. San Jose residents cannot travel in this city without knowing someone who has a family member, colleague or friend who attended EVC. We are in the community to serve the community, 50 years strong.
Higher education
US news
fromSan Jose Spotlight
2 months ago

San Jose Vietnam Town management shrugs at complaints - San Jose Spotlight

San Jose code enforcement ordered Vietnam Town plaza to fix multiple violations, including a parking-blocking barricade, but plaza landlords have not complied.
fromSan Jose Spotlight
1 month ago

Mountain View wants to add more parks - but it won't be cheap - San Jose Spotlight

City staff estimate it would cost approximately $1.2 billion to meet its goal of adding 87 more acres of parkland. That figure is based on Mountain View's current population, and does not account for future growth. "Significant funding would be needed to develop new parks or to update our parks," Assistant Community Services Director Kristine Crosby said at the Jan. 27 council meeting.
Environment
fromSFGATE
2 months ago

As a Bay Area highway landmark decays, new owners take over property

If, while driving between San Francisco and Sacramento in 1930, you were suddenly struck by a powerful hankering for dairy, there was only one place on your mind: the Milk Farm. Its reputation was legendary. Pony rides, apple pies and 10 cents for all the milk you could drink. In the early days of the American highway system, there were few places like the Dixon roadside stop.
Food & drink
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
26 years ago

Principal Interest in Montecito

Priscilla Presley sold three acres in Montecito to Victoria Principal for approximately $3 million, abandoning her original development plans for the property.
Los Angeles
fromLos Angeles Times
7 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Chatsworth keeps one foot in the Old West

Chatsworth evolved from a remote agricultural area served by stagecoach routes into a semirural community that became a popular western filming location.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
27 years ago

Stepping Back in Time in California Heights

California Heights in Long Beach offers historic charm, family-friendly atmosphere, and convenient commuter access via Metro Rail and freeways at affordable prices.
#urban-redevelopment
#affordable-housing
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
8 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Close-knit Leimert Park is primed to be well-connected again

Leimert Park transformed from a segregated white planned community in 1923 to a major African-American cultural center by the 1960s despite violent white resistance to integration.
SF politics
fromMission Local
2 months ago

Mission Buzz: Latino Democratic Club gets new leadership, and restaurant will fill space empty since 2009

Kevin Ortiz stepped down as president of the San Francisco Latino Democratic Club; Gabriela Lozano will succeed him after his reinstatement amid misconduct allegations.
Arts
fromDaily News
2 months ago

Things to do in the San Fernando Valley, LA area, Jan. 8-16

San Fernando Valley and greater Los Angeles offer museums, cultural exhibitions, community festivals, farmers markets, and author signings with dates, hours, locations, and admission details.
California
fromSan Jose Spotlight
1 month ago

Fact Brief: Did San Jose's Willow Glen neighborhood used to be its own town? - San Jose Spotlight

Willow Glen incorporated as a city in the 1920s and was annexed by San Jose in 1936 to connect to the city's sewage system.
US politics
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

Immigration sweep rattles L.A.'s Fashion District, deepening fears and slumping sales

Federal immigration sweeps in Los Angeles' Fashion District disrupted vendors and shoppers, deepening severe economic losses for predominantly Latino businesses.
East Bay real estate
fromThe Mercury News
2 months ago

Antioch to update its General Plan, welcomes community input

Antioch will comprehensively update its General Plan to reflect growth and evolving community needs, with public input and a roughly 24-month completion timeline.
fromLos Angeles Times
1 month ago

In the Midnight Hour, the San Fernando record shop at the center of the Valley's ICE resistance

It's times like these that make you realize, this is community. You know, this is having each other's back when we are all struggling. Every decade or so, it pops up again and they start kind of questioning our belonging. It's more important than ever to express yourself ... that you're not assimilating, you're not going to give up on your culture.
Los Angeles
fromSan Jose Spotlight
1 month ago

Fact Brief: Is San Jose's Japantown one of only three left in the U.S.? - San Jose Spotlight

San Jose is home to one of three surviving Japantowns in the country. The other remaining Japanese communities are also in California cities: San Francisco and Los Angeles. Japanese immigrants came to San Jose in the late 1890s in search of farm work, originally settling in Chinatown before establishing their own cultural community in the region.
California
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
7 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Aerospace and water make up what Lancaster is today

Lancaster's founding and development depended on underground aquifers and railroad water needs, later sustained by the Los Angeles Aqueduct and aerospace industry growth.
East Bay real estate
fromwww.mercurynews.com
2 months ago

Planning Commission backs industrial project in Oakley despite fears over data centers

Oakley planning commission approved a large industrial development plan with data centers allowed only via conditional use permits amid environmental and infrastructure concerns.
California
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

California population flattens amid Trump immigration crackdown

California's population remained essentially flat from July 2024 to July 2025 due to decreased immigration, out-migration, an aging population, and lower birth rates.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
8 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Granada Hills is satisfied with its suburban status, thank you very much

Granada Hills evolved from an agricultural area marketed as a rabbit-raising community in the 1920s to a residential neighborhood after the Los Angeles Aqueduct brought abundant water in 1913.
Real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

In pricey Santa Monica neighborhood, a battle rages over supportive housing

An unpermitted sober-living operation placed about 50 residents in vacant Ocean Avenue buildings leased by developer Leo Pustilnikov, sparking neighbor outrage and regulatory conflict.
fromLos Angeles Times
26 years ago

Ahmanson Ranch

Formal groundbreaking for the Ahmanson Ranch project, a town-style development on 2,800 acres in the Simi Hills in southeastern Ventura County, will not take place until 2001. However, the project has already achieved historic status for the size of the private-to-public land transfer it produced and for reviving a design concept that marks a major departure from the car-dependent suburban enclave typical of the postwar era.
LA real estate
Real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

Torrance shopping center sells for record price on strong demand for humble neighborhood locations

Village Del Amo in Torrance sold for $108.5 million as investors target grocery-anchored, e-commerce-proof neighborhood shopping centers serving everyday needs.
California
fromThe Mercury News
2 months ago

Forget California's exodus. Why do so few move here?

California's population stagnation stems from few inbound migrants, not widespread resident departures, as Californians leave at below-average rates.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
14 years ago

Home of the Week: South Pasadena's Paxton House

A 1920 Spanish-Mediterranean mansion designed by renowned architect Reginald Johnson was relocated from Pasadena to South Pasadena to prevent demolition and now features modern upgrades while preserving original architectural details.
fromLos Angeles Times
9 years ago

1930s home in Highland Park gets a revival of its own

Updated for modern living, this remodeled home in Highland Park has stayed true to its 1930s Spanish Revival beginnings. The open living and dining room features a brick fireplace and the original hardwood floors. A courtyard sits off the master bedroom.
LA real estate
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
8 years ago

Neighborhood Spotlight: Glassell Park's future looks greener and livelier

Rancho San Rafael, a 36,000-acre Spanish land grant from 1784, became the foundation for Northeast Los Angeles neighborhoods including Atwater Village, Highland Park, Eagle Rock, and Glassell Park after being partitioned in 1871.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
35 years ago

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO : Builder, City Locked in Battle Over House

Developer Robert Maurer battles a city's ridgeline protection law to build on a hilltop, now seeking permission for a barn after his mansion plans were denied.
LA real estate
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

Pico Rivera aims to buy L.A.'s last slaughterhouse to keep other meat processors from moving in

Pico Rivera seeks to acquire the 3.74-acre former Manning Beef slaughterhouse to prevent another meatpacker and repurpose the land for housing or public open space.
fromLos Angeles Times
2 months ago

The Valley, the South Bay and beyond: These are L.A.'s newest million-dollar neighborhoods

In 2021, during the peak of the pandemic housing market that saw L.A. home prices skyrocket, The Times compiled a list of the newest neighborhoods to join the proverbial "million-dollar club," where the typical single-family home value is above $1 million. Five years later, plenty more have made the cut. Whereas the previous group featured trendy L.A. neighborhoods (Echo Park, Highland Park), South L.A. enclaves (Crenshaw, Leimert Park) and slices of the San Fernando Valley (Porter Ranch, Woodland Hills),
LA real estate
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