SANTA MONICA BOULEVARD
California State Route 2; the 'Santa Monica Boulevard' segment is highlighted in red, Alvarado Street is highlighted in green, the Glendale Freeway is highlighted in blue, and the Angeles Crest Highway is highlighted in purple. Concurrencies with the Hollywood Freeway (U.S. Route 101) and the Foothill Freeway (Interstate 210) are highlighted yellow.
| Contents |
| History |
| Description |
| Current Construction |
| Landmarks |
| Footnotes |
| Trivia |
History
For its entire length, until the tracks were removed, Santa Monica Boulevard followed the tracks of the Pacific Electric Railway. In the portion from Holloway Drive in West Hollywood to Sepulveda Boulevard in West Los Angeles, the tracks were in a separate right-of-way, with two roadways on either side of the tracks. For the rest of the route, the tracks ran in the traffic lanes.
Except for a short portion at its eastern end, Santa Monica Boulevard was adopted as a California state highway in 1933. From 1934 to 1936,[1] it was signed as State Route 2. Then it became U.S. Highway 66. When U.S. Highway 66 was truncated to Pasadena in 1964, Santa Monica Boulevard once again became State Route 2 as far east as the Hollywood Freeway. Today, the State Route 2 portion of Santa Monica Boulevard is defined from the Santa Monica/Los Angeles city limits to US-101.
Description
Santa Monica Boulevard, being a major street, is for most of its length at least four lanes wide. On its western end to Beverly Hills, it runs south of Wilshire Boulevard along a southwest-northeast route. After intersecting with Wilshire in Beverly Hills, Santa Monica Boulevard continues northeast towards West Hollywood, spanning Beverly Boulevard and Melrose Avenue. In the middle of West Hollywood, Santa Monica turns to run east-west north of Wilshire Boulevard.
At the west end of its run, Santa Monica Boulevard starts off of Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica. From there until Sepulveda Boulevard, Santa Monica Boulevard is a densely urban commercial street. Most of the Westside car dealerships are located on Santa Monica Boulevard. After Sepulveda, Santa Monica Boulevard passes by Century City and its shopping center, and intersects with Wilshire in Beverly Hills. From Doheny Drive to La Cienega Boulevard in West Hollywood is the center of gay life in Los Angeles. Entering Hollywood, Santa Monica Boulevard becomes considerably more gritty. One of the most famous spots for male prostitution and transgender prostitution is Santa Monica Boulevard in the Hollywood area, especially the area east of La Brea Avenue.
South Santa Monica Boulevard, often called Little Santa Monica, runs parallel to Santa Monica Blvd. from Sepulevda Blvd. to Beverly Drive. After Beverly Drive, Little Santa Monica ends, becoming Burton Way. Burton Way merges into San Vicente Boulevard at its intersection with La Cienega Boulevard.
Current Construction
Santa Monica Boulevard is currently undergoing reconstruction from the western city limits of Beverly Hills to Sepulveda Boulevard. When finished, there will be three roadways, the center roadway being for through traffic, and the two side roadways for local access (named Santa Monica Blvd North and Santa Monica Blvd South).
Landmarks
Landmarks along or near Santa Monica Boulevard include:
★ Los Angeles City College Red Line Station
★ Hollywood Forever Cemetery
★ Paramount Studios
★ Warner Hollywood Studios
★ Pacific Design Center
★ Beverly Hills City Hall
★ Museum of Television and Radio
★ Beverly Hilton Hotel
★ Peninsula Beverly Hills Hotel
★ Los Angeles Mormon Temple (Los Angeles California Temple)
★ Westlake Recording Studios
Footnotes
1. http://www.historic66.com/california/
Trivia
★ Sheryl Crow's song, ''All I Wanna Do'', makes reference to the street.
★ In the movie The Net, Angela/Ruth sleeps in a lot just off the street.
★ System of a Down's song, ''Lost in Hollywood'', makes reference to the street.
★ Theory of a Deadman's song, "Santa Monica", makes reference to the street.
★ Nik Kershaw's song, "Lady On The Phone", makes reference to the street.
★ Jeffrey Lee Pierce's song, "Jungle Book", makes reference to the street.
★ Randy Newman's song, ''I Love L.A.'', makes reference to the street
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