LIST OF DISTRICTS AND NEIGHBORHOODS OF LOS ANGELES

Downtown Los Angeles skyline

This is a 'list of districts and neighborhoods of the City of Los Angeles'

Contents
Overview
Downtown Los Angeles
East and Northeast Los Angeles
Echo Park & Westlake
Greater Hollywood
Harbor Area
Los Feliz & Silver Lake
South Los Angeles
The Valley
West Los Angeles (The Westside)
Wilshire
City Map & Data
Other areas in Los Angeles County

Overview


Map depicting boundaries of Los Angeles city

Map of Los Angeles in 1970

Los Angeles neighborhoods display a degree of diversity well befitting the second-largest city in the United States. Much of this is an artifact of the city's history of growth by annexation and horizontal development, which allowed distinct environments to arise in many areas; indeed, many Los Angeles neighborhoods, such as Venice, Hancock Park, Silver Lake and Boyle Heights are fairly close-knit, culturally distinctive communities.
Many communities do not have defined or commonly accepted boundaries. Yet there is a broad consensus that they belong in particular larger district-wide groupings.
The city is oddly shaped—surrounded and punctured by unincorporated areas, other cities and state parklands. The city began in downtown, in what had first been a Tongva village named Yang-na located in what is now the Los Angeles State Historic Park near Chinatown. It later became a Spanish ''pueblo'' and eventually grew to a metropolis based on manufacturing, aerospace, and entertainment industries. The city, and indeed the county, radiated outward from downtown, and geographic names referencing cardinal points or relative directions tend to be determined by their relationship to downtown rather than directions proper. For example, East L.A. is not all of the city east of West L.A., but rather the portion of the city east of downtown (and the Los Angeles river in its proximity).
The origins of L.A. neighborhoods are varied. Angeleno Heights, populated with 1880s-era Victorian houses, was L.A.'s first suburb, while Playa Vista, is the city's newest manufactured neighborhood, conceived and birthed by developers. Chinatown is an ethnic-based community with an identity defined by the ancestry of its residence. San Pedro was once an independent city annexed by Los Angeles to access its harbor and ports.
The City of Los Angeles is divided between several area codes. Downtown is area code 213, the areas of Hollywood and Mid-Wilshire fall within area code 323, west L.A. is area code 310 and the Valley is area code 818.

Downtown Los Angeles


Chinatown gate

Downtown proper contains the Civic Center, a central business district, multiple large industrial districts, and some, but by no means all (or even a majority), of the city's cultural institutions. Downtown is the smallest of the city's regions.
Main articles: Downtown Los Angeles


Artist District

Bunker Hill

Chinatown

Civic Center

Fashion District

Financial District

Furniture and Decorative Arts District

Gallery Row

Historic Core

Jewelry District

Little Tokyo

Skid Row

South Park

Old Bank District

Toy District

Wholesale District

East and Northeast Los Angeles


To the east and northeast of Downtown LA and the Los Angeles River is Eastern Los Angeles, which is not very large in terms of the city proper, but quite large when including adjacent independent cities like Montebello or East Los Angeles, California. The entire region houses a significant Latino community, although this varies by neighborhood.
East of downtown lie mostly working class majority Latino neighborhoods, an example being Boyle Heights. North and northeast of downtown are a mix of similar neighborhoods but also genteel, older neighborhoods that abut Glendale and Pasadena. The major neighborhoods of this area include Atwater Village, Glassell Park, Mt. Washington and Eagle Rock. The communities of northeast Los Angeles sit on higher ground than the rest of the region and are characterized by a mix of middle and working class neighborhoods as well as rapidly gentrifying ones.

Main articles: East Los Angeles (region)

(Unincorporated area)

Aliso Village

Atwater Village

Arroyo Seco

Cypress Park

Boyle Heights

Eagle Rock

El Sereno

Garvanza

Glassell Park


Fletcher Square

Hermon

Highland Park

Hillside Village

Lincoln Heights

Montecito Heights

Monterey Hills

Mt. Washington

University Hills

Echo Park & Westlake


MacArthur Park, with the Westlake Theater and downtown in the background

Immediately west of Downtown is a collection of some of the city's first suburbs. Angelino Heights and Echo Park were the locations of some of the first film studios west of the Mississippi. Now mostly populated by Latino immigrants and some bohemians, they still possess distinctive architecture from the early 20th century when they were the most desirable neighborhoods of Los Angeles. Of these, the restored Victorian homes in Angelino Heights are an excellent example.

Angelino Heights

Byzantine-Latino Quarter

Harvard Heights

Echo Park

Historic Filipinotown

Lafayette Park

Pico-Union


Temple-Beaudry

Westlake


MacArthur Park

Greater Hollywood


Formerly a religious colony then an independent city, Hollywood was annexed by Los Angeles in 1910. Its name is synonymous with the motion picture industry, yet, much of movie production has moved out to neighboring cities. Tourists flock around Hollywood Boulevard and gaze up to the mountains to see the Hollywood sign. The last decade has brought in new life to the once-struggling parts of the Hollywood district with various developments taking advantage of the subway stations built within the past decade. The wealth of the neighborhoods here are strongly influenced by elevation with some of the wealthiest tracts in the country are up in the Hollywood Hills and gradually lessen to pockets of large working-class and transient populations further southeast.
The world-famous Hollywood sign


Hollywood


Beachwood Canyon (also called BeHo, Below the Hollywood Sign)


Cahuenga Pass


Hollywood Hills



Hollywood Heights



Laurel Canyon



Mount Olympus



Nichols Canyon



Outpost Estates



Sunset Hills


East Hollywood



Little Armenia



Thai Town



Virgil Village

Melrose District

Melrose Hill

Sierra Vista

Spaulding Square

Yucca Corridor

Harbor Area


Following the Harbor Gateway south to the port leads to the Harbor area, an enclave of L.A. surrounded by independent cities and annexed so the city would have full right-of-way to the port. The leading neighborhood of the harbor area is San Pedro.
Satellite image of the Harbor area

Main articles: Harbor Area


Harbor City


★ Harbor Pines

Harbor Gateway

San Pedro


★ Palisades


★ Point Fermin


★ South Shores


★ Vista del Oro


★ The Gardens


★ Rolling Hills Highlands


★ Vinegar Hill

Terminal Island

Wilmington

Los Feliz & Silver Lake


Griffith Observatory in Los Feliz.

Nestled between Hollywood and the Los Angeles River are a group of the city's older residential neighborhoods that house Griffith and Elysian Parks, the city's largest public parks.
Similar to most of the city, communities in this area are significantly wealthier closer to the hills. In this fashion, Los Feliz retained its expensive reputation while other districts further south and closer to Westlake were plagued by gang wars or crime. In the last decade, the area particularly around the Silver Lake Reservoir and now Sunset Blvd has become closely associated with gentrification, a process which has pushed working class families out due to high housing costs. This is also the location of Chavez Ravine, a focal point of local history where the Latino neighborhood was demolished to make way for the Dodger Stadium in the 1950s.

Elysian Park

Elysian Heights

Elysian Valley

Los Feliz


Franklin Hills

Silver Lake


Sunset Junction

South Los Angeles


Gateway to Jefferson Park


South Los Angeles, formerly called South-Central, includes most of the city directly south of downtown, the I-10, and Wilshire, but not those areas as far south as the Harbor Gateway, Harbor Area or the Port of Los Angeles.
Most noted for its modern legacy of crime, and urban decay, South Los Angeles still harbors struggling areas. An example of this is Watts. More genteel communities are situated near USC in West Adams/University Park, as well as in the westernmost part of the region in districts like Crenshaw and Leimert Park.

Arlington Park

Athens on the Hill

Baldwin Hills


Baldwin Hills Estates


Baldwin Village


Baldwin Vista

Cameo Plaza (Cameo Square?)

Canterbury Knolls

Century Palms

Chesterfield Square

Crenshaw

Exposition Park

Gramercy Park

Hyde Park

Jefferson Park

King Estates

Leimert Park

Magnolia Square

Manchester Square

Morningside Park

View Heights[1]

Vermont Knolls

Vermont Park

Vermont Square

Village Green

Watts

West Adams


Kinney Heights


North University Park



Figueroa Corridor


University Park

West Alameda

West Park Terrace

The Valley


Mission San Fernando Rey de España is the only California Mission located in Los Angeles. It is in the community of Mission Hills.

Lake Balboa, namesake of the neighborhood

Victory Boulevard in Van Nuys

View of Woodland Hills with Warner Center in the foreground

The largest region of the city is "the Valley," which includes the San Fernando Valley and portions of the Crescenta Valley. It is mainly suburban, and houses a wide-range of socioeconomic groups. About forty percent of the city's area and population are located in the Valley. Mulholland Drive in the Santa Monica Mountains forms its southern boundary. It has gone through periodic clashes with the rest of the city over policy, culminating in a failed effort to become an independent city in 2002.
Main articles: San Fernando Valley, Crescenta Valley


Arleta

Balboa Park

Canoga Park

Chatsworth

Encino

Granada Hills

Hansen Hills

Knollwood

Lake View Terrace

Lake Balboa

La Tuna Canyon


Rancho La Tuna Canyon

Mission Hills

North Hills

North Hollywood


NoHo Arts District

Northridge

Olive View

Pacoima

Panorama City

Porter Ranch

Reseda


Reseda Ranch

Sepulveda

Shadow Hills

Sherman Oaks


Sherman Village

Studio City

Sun Valley

Sunland

Sylmar


Sylmar Square

Tarzana


Melody Acres[2]

Toluca Lake

Toluca Woods

Tujunga

Valley Village

Van Nuys


Valley Glen[3][4]



Cameron Woods

Ventura Business District

Warner Center

West Hills

West Toluca

Winnetka

Woodland Hills

West Los Angeles (The Westside)


A palm-lined boulevard in West Los Angeles

The Getty Villa Museum in Pacific Palisades

Century City skyline

Venice Canals

West Los Angeles is the part of the city encircled by Beverly Hills and Wilshire on the east, and Santa Monica and the Pacific Ocean on the west, the Santa Monica Mountains on the north, and Culver City and El Segundo on the south.
While the area is inhabited by a wide range of socioeconomic groups, it undoubtedly houses the largest concentration of wealth in the city. Attracted by its rolling hills on the north end, and close proximity to the ocean, early developers succeeded in establishing some of the most upscale residential districts in the city and the county. Pre-eminent among these are Bel-Air and Pacific Palisades. Yet further south, pockets of working class areas remain in those areas closest to former industrial areas like those near South LA and Culver City.
The term ''Westside'', though often debated, refers to both the western parts of the city of Los Angeles as well as adjoning cities, such as Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, and West Hollywood. ''West L.A.'' or ''West Los Angeles'' also refers to a specific neighborhood south of Brentwood and east of Santa Monica.
Main articles: West Los Angeles (region)


Bel-Air


Roscomare Valley


Beverly Glen[5]



Benedict Canyon

Beverly Crest

Beverlywood

Brentwood


Brentwood Circle


Brentwood Glen


Brentwood Hills


Brentwood Park


Bundy Canyon


Kenter Canyon



Crestwood Hills


Mandeville Canyon



Westridge Heights


South Brentwood


Westgate

Century City

Cheviot Hills


Castle Heights

Crestview

Del Rey

Mar Vista


Westdale

Marina Peninsula

Pacific Palisades


Castellammare


Huntington Palisades


Palisades Highlands


Santa Monica Canyon



Rustic Canyon

Palms


Westside Village

Playa del Rey

Playa Vista

Rancho Park


Home Junction

Regent Square

South Robertson


Reynier Village

Venice


Oakwood


Venice Canals[6]

Westchester


Los Angeles International Airport


Loyola Village


Manchester Square

West Los Angeles


Sawtelle

Westwood


Holmby Hills


Westwood Village


Westwood North Village

Wilshire


Carthay Circle

The Wilshire area is north of the I-10, east of Beverly Hills, west of Downtown LA and south of Hollywood.
It is a collection of wealthy, middle, and working class neighborhoods that cluster around Wilshire Boulevard. Unlike other parts of Los Angeles the wealthier neighborhoods are set not in the hills, but rather on leveled land north of Wilshire Boulevard, east of Beverly Hills such as Larchmont, and Hancock Park. On the lower end, Koreatown is an example of a somewhat struggling neighborhood undergoing a revival.
Main articles: Mid-City West, Mid-Wilshire

Canter's Deli in the Fairfax District


Carthay


★ Carthay Circle


★ Carthay Square


★ South Carthay


Little Ethiopia

Fairfax District

Olympic Park

West Pico


Picfair Village


★ Pico Del Mar


★ Pico Park


★ Wilshire Highlands


★ Wilshire Vista
This Streamline Modern building at the corner of Wilshire and Fairfax houses part of the L.A. County Museum of Art


Arlington Heights


Western Heights

Country Club Park

Greater Hancock Park


Brookside Park (or just Brookside)[7]


Fremont Place


Hancock Park


Larchmont



★ Larchmont Village


Windsor Square

★ La Brea-Hancock

★ Ridgewood-Wilton

★ St. Andrews Square

Wilshire Park


★ Longwood Highlands


Park Mile


★ Windsor Village

Harvard Heights

Lafayette Square

Wellington Square

Miracle Mile


★ Miracle Mile North


★ Miracle Mile South

Park La Brea

Wilshire Center


Koreatown

City Map & Data



Map - Individual Communities within the City of Los Angeles (Detailed View)

Southern California Association of Governments analysis of 2006 census data

★ 'Los Angeles City Nerd: The Officially Designated Communities of Los Angeles'

Flickr: LA City Neighborhood Signs

Other areas in Los Angeles County



Other cities in L.A. County

Other areas of L.A. County, which are census-recognized but unincorporated

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