Los Angeles Times

A welcoming, small-town vibe

Within a web of busy freeways lies a product of the postwar boom.

- By Scott Garner

For most of its history, Arleta was an undevelope­d portion of Pacoima, which had its own roots in the frenzied real estate speculatio­n of the 1880s, after major railroads expanded into Southern California.

After a brief flurry of developmen­t — the vast majority of which occurred in the San Fernando Road corridor — the boom went bust in the 1890s. The western portion of Pacoima in particular saw very little residentia­l constructi­on throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Then the Los Angeles Aqueduct opened in 1913, bringing a vast network of irrigation channels, and the area became a center of agricultur­e in the San Fernando Valley. Newly planted citrus groves, interspers­ed with poultry farms and other livestock operations, soon carpeted the valley floor.

From the time of its annexation by the city of Los Angeles in 1915 until U.S. entry into World War II in 1941, the embryonic Arleta neighborho­od remained semirural, with most residentia­l developmen­t consisting of farmhouses and ranches.

But as the nation ramped up the war effort in earnest, aviation manufactur­ers rapidly expanded their operations in the Valley, with Lockheed in particular creating thousands of jobs in what was once a sleepy hinterland.

To provide housing for the assembly-line workers who built P-38 fighters and B-17 bombers at the company’s Burbank plant, developers began bulldozing the orange groves and chicken farms to make room for modest homes tailored to their purchasing power.

In what would become Arleta, that developmen­t came in two waves. During the war, the first wave of housing tracts was mostly confined to the narrow strip of

land between Sharp and Arleta avenues. In the 1950s, as the region struggled to house its booming population, a larger wave saw the neighborho­od built out to its current western border at Woodman Avenue.

While greater Pacoima developed during this period into a multiethni­c neighborho­od with sizable percentage­s of African American and Latino residents, its western portion remained primarily a white enclave.

The constructi­on of the 5 Freeway in the early 1960s created a physical barrier between eastern and western Pacoima. Seeking to make the split official, residents west of the freeway formed their own breakaway neighborho­od,

which they named Arleta.

In the 1980s, as the Valley’s industrial base began to erode and many residents left to chase employment opportunit­ies elsewhere,

Arleta became much more diverse, and today shares the majority Latino demographi­cs of Pacoima.

Neighborho­od highlights

Where the ’50s dream is still alive: The sturdy, yet affordable homes built during the postwar boom are still making homeowners­hip possible for working-class Angelenos.

Choose your commute: With easy access to the 5, 405 and 118 freeways,

and a new Metro line on the way, Arleta makes a convenient, affordable home base for commuters.

Parks and rec: Although the neighborho­od itself has little green space, nearby recreation facilities at Devonwood, Ritchie Valens and Hansen Dam parks offer a variety of outdoor activities.

Neighborho­od challenges

De industrial­ization blues: The loss of aviation-and automobile manufactur­ing plants in the Northeast Valley has been a severe and ongoing burden on the area’s economy.

Expert insight

John Seward of Seward Real Estate and Financial Inc. said recent state laws allowing residents to convert garages into granny units have been a boon for Arleta homeowners.

“There are mostly smaller lots here, but many have detached garages or carports.

“Now that people are allowed to convert those into secondary housing units, they can rent them out and make some extra income,” Seward said.

Arleta has become home to working-class families priced out of surroundin­g areas such as Burbank and Glendale.

As home prices in the area start to slightly increase, he said, that opportunit­y for extra cash will help families weather the rising cost of living.

“They can go in, spend $20,000 to convert the garage and then make an extra $1,500 per month on rent,” Seward said.

On the business side of things, he added that Arleta is holding on to its stock of mom-and-pop shops, which gives the community a homier feel than the larger commercial districts that surround it.

Market snapshot

In the 91331 ZIP Code, based on 36 sales, the median sales price for single-family homes in October

was $493,000, up 2.8% year over year, according to CoreLogic.

Report card

All five public schools in the Arleta boundaries scored above 700 on the Academic Performanc­e Index. Two scored above 800: Vena Avenue Elementary at 890 and Canterbury Avenue Elementary at 801.

Sharp Avenue Elementary and Beachy Avenue Elementary scored 799 and 750, respective­ly. Arleta High, the area’s largest high school, scored 718.

 ?? Photograph­s by Jesse Goddard For The Times ?? HOMES LINE the Tujunga Wash in Arleta. Sturdy houses built during the postwar boom are still making homeowners­hip possible.
Photograph­s by Jesse Goddard For The Times HOMES LINE the Tujunga Wash in Arleta. Sturdy houses built during the postwar boom are still making homeowners­hip possible.
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 ??  ?? MOM-AND-POP shops give the community a homier feel than the larger commercial districts that surround it, says John Seward of Seward Real Estate.
MOM-AND-POP shops give the community a homier feel than the larger commercial districts that surround it, says John Seward of Seward Real Estate.

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