University Hills is a neighborhood on the East Side of Los Angeles, California. It consists of the residential areas surrounding California State University, Los Angeles . [1]
University Hills | |
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Coordinates: 34°04′00″N 118°10′04″W / 34.066667°N 118.167778°W | |
Country | United States |
State | California |
County | Los Angeles |
City | Los Angeles |
Time zone | UTC-8 (PST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-7 (PDT) |
History
editUniversity Hills is in the eastern San Rafael Hills. They were part of the Pre-columbian homeland of the Tongva Indians for thousands of years, and they named this area Otsunga (place of roses).
It is the former site of one of California's 36 original adobes, built in 1776 by Franciscan missionaries, and destroyed by a fire in 1908. The area was part of the 1831 Mexican land grant of Rancho Rosa Castilla, given to Juan Ballesteros by Alta California Governor Manuel Victoria. It was named for the abundant amount of native Wood roses (Rosa californica) along the creek.[2]
In 1852, after statehood, the title passed to Jean-Baptiste Batz and his wife, Catalina. He was a Basque immigrant rancher from northern Spain. In 1882, after both died, the land was divided among six of their children.[3][4]
For most of its history, University Hills was a neighborhood within El Sereno, which was developed more than a century ago with the expansion of the Pacific Electric Railway Red Car lines.[5] In the 1990s, the community's homeowners association lobbied for renaming the area. In 2004, the City of Los Angeles designated the residential community surrounding California State University Los Angeles as "University Hills".[6] The increase in Southern California real estate values in the early 2000s attracted professionals looking for alternative neighborhoods to more distant suburbs and the Westside.[7]
Geography
editUniversity Hills was designated an official Los Angeles neighborhood in October 2004. It is bounded by Mariana Avenue on the west, Valley Boulevard on the north, the Long Beach Freeway on the east, and Eastern Avenue on the south. The Department of Transportation was instructed to install signs (with a blue background, white text, and City logo at the top) at the following locations to identify "University Hills": Valley Boulevard at Beatie Place, Valley Boulevard at Highbury Avenue, and Eastern Avenue at Medford Street. [6]
University Hills is bordered by El Sereno on the north and west, City Terrace on the south, Alhambra on the north-east, and Monterey Park on the south-east.
Major thoroughfares include Eastern Avenue, Marianna Avenue, and Valley Boulevard. The San Bernardino freeway runs along the neighborhood's southern edge.
The adjacent campus of California State University, Los Angeles occupies nearly 200 acres (0.8 km2) on a hilltop site that affords views of the San Gabriel Mountains to the north, the San Gabriel Valley to the east, metropolitan Los Angeles to the west, and the Palos Verdes Peninsula and Catalina Island to the south.
Education
editUniversity Hills is zoned to schools in the Los Angeles USD:[7]
- City Terrace Elementary School
- El Sereno Middle School
- Wilson High School
References
edit- ^ "Council File 04-0944 Designating University Hills" (PDF). November 1, 2004. p. 2. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
University Hills...which is comprised of the residential areas surrounding the California State University Los Angeles campus.
- ^ J. N. Bowman, The Rose of Castile, Western Folklore, Vol. 6, No. 3 (Jul., 1947), pp. 204–210, Western States Folklore Society
- ^ John R. Chávez, 1998, Eastside Landmark:A History of the East Los Angeles Community Union, 1968-1993, ISBN 978-0-8047-3333-5, Stanford University Press
- ^ "Sustainable Cities and Industrial Ecology in El Sereno" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-24. Retrieved 2009-02-24.
- ^ The Eastsider.com: "El Sereno historic district comes up for review"
- ^ a b "Council File No. 04-0944 - "Designating University Hills"" (PDF). October 12, 2004. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
- ^ a b Jennifer Delson, "A Campus Enclave That's a Study in Contrasts," Los Angeles Times, April 24, 2005