The area where the two neighborhoods meet is the kind of place where you’ll find Mexican and Korean immigrants making Italian subs in a Korean-owned market.
The Los Angeles base for United Farm Workers, César Chavez gave speeches at the church, and it served as a hub of organizing for the Chicano Movement in the 1960s and ’70s.
Across the street from a Gold Line Station, the nine-warehouse complex has served as a set for big movies like L.A. Confidential and Catch Me If You Can.
California was a Union state not typically associated with Confederate efforts, but one of its streets is named after the son of Robert E. Lee’s predecessor.
With a whole wall pretty much made of windows, there's plenty of light in this unit, which is in a converted Art Deco warehouse. The tri-level loft has high ceilings and plenty of closet space.
The totally illegal and unpermitted experiment angered neighbors and got its owner, food-in-a-bottle-company CEO Robert Rhinehart, hit with criminal charges. Now, the container is gone and Rhinehart is saying sorry.
Robert Rhinehart has said his container was an "eco experiment." The city says he doesn’t have the proper permits and it’s accusing of him of ignoring its demands that he remove it.
City says Robert Rhinehart, founder and CEO of meal-replacement company Soylent, is refusing to comply with code enforcement violations. Rhinehart says his red shipping container is an "experiment in sustainable living."
In this week's edition of Curbed Comparisons, we look at apartments asking about $1,300 a month in neighborhoods like See what $1,300 per month rents in LA neighborhoods like East Hollywood, Sawtelle, and Sherman Oaks. Vote for which one you'd choose
LA is making a new push to activate the landmarked Lincoln Heights Jail; they're hoping to see the 229,000-square-foot, Art Deco structure turned into, well, something—they've put out the call for ideas and floated a few themselves.