Los Angeles Times

Look in its heart, see a hometown

The small ‘not the same as the Westside’ community doesn’t flaunt its hipness.

- By Scott Garner

Despite its name, West Los Angeles is not the westernmos­t part of the city; its western border does not even reach the 405 Freeway.

It ends instead a few blocks east of that gargantuan river of asphalt, where Sawtelle begins.

Nowadays, West L.A. is actually a marooned rump of the oncemighty West Los Angeles of old, which stretched from Century City to the Santa Monica city limits and which has atomized over the years into a handful of disparate neighborho­ods.

It’s cloaked in a state of semianonym­ity. Many people assume West Los Angeles refers to all that lies between the sea and Robertson Boulevard (or wherever their own arbitrary border of central Los Angeles lies). But it is its own place, not just a toponym to be used interchang­eably with “the Westside.”

Reduced now to a rectangula­r patch of heavily residentia­l streets squeezed in between Santa Monica and Pico boulevards, it is something very like a suburb in the heart of the city. It’s a hometown, a place whose most recognizab­le extant landmark might just be the appropriat­ely homey Apple Pan, since the oh-so-suburban Westside Pavilion actually lies across Pico in Rancho Park and will soon be converted to offices anyway.

The agricultur­al origins of the neighborho­od are apparent in its orderly street grid, which is substantia­lly broken only in its hilly northeast corner. In the 1920s, when Pico Boulevard was paved and the bean fields and orchards were subdivided, there were no small townships to incorporat­e into the street plan, so developers laid out regularly spaced blocks and filled them with homes.

Santa Monica, Westwood and Pico boulevards served as the Main Streets of the residents of these homes, with small businesses

of every stripe within walking distance of most. The widening of Santa Monica Boulevard, which began when it was part of Route 66, obliterate­d much of the older constructi­on that once lined it, but on Pico, the pleasing street wall of old brick buildings remains.

In the postwar boom years, developers began to build apartments at either end of the core of West L.A., especially in the Beverly Glen corridor, and in the 1980s, the Westside Pavilion replaced a number of neighborho­od shops, despite protests from residents.

The appeal of West Los Angeles as a place to live has survived all of these relatively minor disruption­s. It has stayed so popular that mansioniza­tion is the big worry

now. And as for Sawtelle and the other parts of the neighborho­od that were cleaved away over the years, West Los Angeles probably doesn’t even miss them.

Neighborho­od highlights

Shop ’til you drop: The impending death of the Westside Pavilion aside, West Los Angeles is still a thriving retail destinatio­n for those who like to shop local, and, better yet, it’s fairly walkable.

A Westside commuter’s dream:

For anyone who commutes to Century City, Culver City or Silicon Beach, West Los Angeles offers an extremely appealing location for your home base.

Neighborho­od challenge

Cut-through traffic: With three major thoroughfa­res and navigation apps dumping commuters onto surroundin­g residentia­l

streets, it’s best to cross the street carefully in West Los Angeles.

Expert insight

Elizabeth Donovan, who just sold the area’s priciest home this year, said West L.A. is hip sans the smugness that comes across in some surroundin­g areas.

“The neighborho­od has become home to a relatively young demographi­c that’s hip and cool and wants equally hip and cool places to dine, shop and experience the community,” she said.

She added that the Expo Line has been a game-changer for the community and that the Expo/ Bundy Station has opened the door for easier commutes and an increase in visitors.

“West L.A. is chock-full of new developmen­ts,” she said. “With hundreds of units and nearly 100,000 square feet of proposed retail and restaurant space, the

neighborho­od is definitely evolving.”

Market snapshot

In the 90025 ZIP Code, based on six sales, the median sales price for single-family homes in March was $1.45 million, up 5% year over year, according to CoreLogic.

Report card

Four public schools lie within the West Los Angeles boundaries. Of those, Nora Sterry Elementary scored the highest on the 2013 Academic Performanc­e Index, at 814.

Richland Avenue Elementary and Brockton Avenue Elementary posted scores of 785 and 778, respective­ly. The area’s high school, University Senior High, scored 747.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? THE MODEST Apple Pan restaurant, which opened more than 70 years ago on West Pico Boulevard, is an L.A. institutio­n.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times THE MODEST Apple Pan restaurant, which opened more than 70 years ago on West Pico Boulevard, is an L.A. institutio­n.
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 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? METRO’S EXPO LINE has a station near West Los Angeles, a community that is a short drive to Culver City, above, Silicon Beach and Century City.
Christina House Los Angeles Times METRO’S EXPO LINE has a station near West Los Angeles, a community that is a short drive to Culver City, above, Silicon Beach and Century City.
 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? SAWTELLE BOULEVARD is no longer considered part of a shrunken West L.A. — it’s a few blocks west of its border.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times SAWTELLE BOULEVARD is no longer considered part of a shrunken West L.A. — it’s a few blocks west of its border.

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