The City
With only limited space between the desert, the mountains and
the ocean, LA has long since filled in the gaps between what were
once small and isolated towns. As a result, it's a massive
conglomeration of interconnected, amorphous districts, often with
little in common.
If LA has a heart, however, it's downtown , in the center
of the basin. It offers a taste of almost everything you'll find
elsewhere around the city, from upscale avant-garde art along
Bunker Hill to the abject dereliction of Skid Row in the Eastside,
compressed into an area of small, easily walkable blocks. The area
around downtown contains some decaying Victorian suburbs,
1920s Art Deco buildings and the center of LA's enormous and
growing Hispanic population.
Heading west from downtown to the coast, the first major
district you come to, Hollywood , has streets caked with
movie legend - even if the genuine glamour is long gone. Adjoining
West LA is home to the city's newest money, shown off in
Beverly Hills and along the Sunset Strip. Santa Monica and
Venice to the west are the quintessential seafront LA of palm
trees, white sands and laid-back living, while the coastline itself
stretches another twenty miles northwest to glamorous Malibu
, home to the movieland elite.
Suburban Orange County , to the southeast, holds little
of interest apart from Disneyland and a handful of laid-back
beach towns. On the far side of the northern hills lie the San
Gabriel and San Fernando valleys , or simply "the Valley," seen
by mainstream Los Angeles as nothing more than depressing tract
homes and endless strip malls - not unlike the generic LA
stereotype viewed by the rest of America.
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