Los Angeles Times

When quaint meets cutting-edge

A city built around oil keeps its small-town feel while embracing the future.

- By Scott Garner

In 1911, a small group of Standard Oil Co. employees boarded a Pacific Electric Railway car and headed south along the coast of Santa Monica Bay.

Like the beachgoers and vacationer­s sharing the train, they were sightseein­g, but while their fellow passengers were probably gazing at the blue waters of the bay, the men stared intently at the coastal barrens to the east.

As the trolley clattered through a lima bean field north of Redondo Beach, they called for the conductor to stop.

In a widely cited (and likely apocryphal) exchange the bewildered conductor cried, “But there’s nothing here!” Alighting the stopped train, one of the Standard Oil men is said to have replied: “No, but there will be.”

Nothing was precisely what they were looking for. They needed a blank space along the coast on which to build a refinery to complement the company’s existing facility nearly 400 miles to the north in Richmond.

In less than a year that notional refinery had been realized. A belching, smoking industrial complex replaced the bulldozed dunes and plowed-under bean fields. Standard Oil named it El Segundo, as it was the second refinery in California.

The company town to house the refinery’s workers was fortuitous­ly built near the future site of Mines Field, L.A.’s first municipal airport. When that opened for flights in 1930, it became a center of activity for the burgeoning aerospace industry.

Over the decades, as the grass midways of Mines Field transforme­d into one of the busiest airports in the world, companies such as Hughes Aircraft and Boeing establishe­d operations in El Segundo. Despite the precipitou­s decline of the defense aerospace industry after the end of the Cold

War, the city still plays host to Northrop Grumman and Raytheon, among others.

Recently, El Segundo has emerged as the southern anchor of Silicon Beach. Major video game companies and bootstrapp­ed start-ups alike fill the office parks and mid-rise towers lining Sepulveda Boulevard south of LAX. In a sign of the tech district’s increasing draw, the Los Angeles Times recently moved from its longtime home downtown to an El Segundo office building a stone’s throw from the airport.

Neighborho­od highlights

Down on Main Street: It’s easy to miss El Segundo’s historic downtown, which provides a glimpse of

the city in its earliest incarnatio­n, including the Old Town Music Hall, dating from 1921.

Aviation nerds, rejoice: Whether you’re looking for the perfect vantage point from which to plane spot or want to relive the early days of air travel at the Flight Path Museum, El Segundo has you covered.

Location, location, location:

Close to LAX, Silicon Beach, Culver City and other Westside employment centers, El Segundo offers short commutes and Metro Rail access. Neighborho­od challenges

Surrounded by industry: Life in the shadow of LAX, a massive oil refinery and a major sewer treatment plant is not for everyone, but you take the bad with the good in El Segundo.

Expert insight

Scot Nicol of Nicol Real Estate has 12 years of experience in El Segundo and credits the city’s success to “responsibl­e evolution.”

“Many places evolve too quickly and lose their sense of self,” Nicol said, pointing to the hip, trendy growth of nearby Culver City. “We’re holding tight to what has always defined us while walking steadily into the future.”

Nicol defines El Segundo as quaint, with parades, parks and a picturesqu­e high school. Many say it reminds them of their Midwestern hometowns.

On the developmen­t side, D.R. Horton is building two townhome communitie­s in the city.

Newer constructi­on throughout the area exhibits a more modern style, but Nicol said the majority of the housing stock consists of older Craftsman and Spanishsty­le homes.

“The people El Segundo attracts

are interested in being here because of the town we are, not the town we are going to be,” he said. Market snapshot

In the 90245 ZIP Code, based on 10 sales, the median sales price for single-family homes in August was $1.375 million, up 8.4% year over year, according to CoreLogic. Report card

Three of the four public schools in the El Segundo boundaries scored above 900 on the 2013 Academic Performanc­e Index.

Richmond Street Elementary School scored the highest at 910, followed by El Segundo Middle at 906 and Center Street Elementary at 901.

Not far behind is El Segundo High, which scored 880.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? THE HISTORIC downtown provides a glimpse of the city in its earliest incarnatio­n, including the Old Town Music Hall.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times THE HISTORIC downtown provides a glimpse of the city in its earliest incarnatio­n, including the Old Town Music Hall.
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 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? “THE DUNES” at the western edge attracts walkers and their dogs. Close to Westside employment centers, the city offers short commutes and Metro Rail access.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times “THE DUNES” at the western edge attracts walkers and their dogs. Close to Westside employment centers, the city offers short commutes and Metro Rail access.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ??
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times

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