Как правильно написать лос анджелес

Лос-Анджелес или Лос-Анжелес — как правильно говорить и писать?

Лос-Анджелес или Лос-Анжелес — ?

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Itsutsjan

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Правильно Лос-Анджелес,от английского слова»angel»-ангел.Т­.е.Город ангелов.

Всего найдено: 11

Как правильно пишется по-русски название студии «Universal» в Лос-Анджелесе: через «ё» или через «е»? «ЮнивЁрсал» или «ЮнивЕрсал»?

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Возможны оба варианта.

Подскажите, пожалуйста, склоняются ли названия иностранных спортивных команд, если их писать в одно слово? В частности, официально команда, например, называется «Лос-Анджелес Доджерс»; неофициально обычно пишут просто «Доджерсы». Допустимо ли это, и если да, то можно ли их склонять («Доджерсов» пригласили на товарищескую встречу)?

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Такой вариант возможен в разговорной речи и в публицистике.

Коста-риканский кролик или костариканский кролик? В профильных «животных» источниках разнобой, в орфографическом словаре только отдельно о прилагательном, а не о словосочетании. Как быть?

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Есть орфографическое правило: пишутся через дефис прилагательные, образованные от существительных, пишущихся через дефис, в том числе от пишущихся через дефис собственных имен, напр.: санкт-петербургский (от Санкт-Петербург), нью-йоркский (Нью-Йорк), коста-риканский (Коста-Рика), лос-анджелесский (Лос-Анджелес), сан-францисский (Сан-Франциско), алма-атинский (Алма-Ата), йошкар-олинский (Йошкар-Ола), усть-каменогорский (Усть-Каменогорск), соль-илецкий (Соль-Илецк), орехово-зуевский (Орехово-Зуево) и т. д. Исключения: москворецкий и китайгородский. См.: Правила русской орфографии и пунктуации. Полный академический справочник / Под ред. В. В. Лопатина. М., 2006. Поэтому орфографически верно: коста-риканский кролик.

Здрасте! Оба следующих слова испанского происхождения. Вопрос: можно ли склонять такие названия городов, как Лос-Анджелес, Лос-Сантос? Заранее спасибо за ответ.

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Конечно, можно и нужно: в Лос-Анджелесе, из Лос-Сантоса…

Просьба разъяснить причину написания прилагательного «Нью-Йоркский» с прописной буквы, в справочнике Розенталя дана четкая инструкция:
«Прилагательные, образованные от географических названий с дефисным написанием, сохраняют в своем написании дефис, например: Алма-Ата – алма-атинский, Орехово-Зуево – орехово-зуевский, Лос-Анджелес – лос-анджелесский. Пуэрто-Рико – пуэрто-риканский, а существительные, образованные от этой цепочки, пишутся слитно, например: Нью-Йорк – нью-йоркский, ньюйоркцы, Коста-Рика – коста-риканский, костариканцы, Курган-Тюбе – курган-тюбинский, кургантюбинцы. Этому же правилу подчиняется цепочка ку-клукс-клан – ку-клукс-клановский – куклуксклановец.»
Будьте добры, поясните, в каких случаях используется прописная и в каких случаях строчная.

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

В подобных прилагательных обе части будут писаться с прописной буквы только в том случае, если прилагательное является первым словом в составном географическом и административно-территориальном названии, в названии исторического события, учреждения, памятника и т. п. В остальных случаях такие прилагательные пишутся строчными. Ср.: нью-йоркские улицы и Нью-Йоркский музей современного искусства, орехово-зуевские школьники и Орехово-Зуевский район Московской области.

Уважаемая Грамота! Срочно нужна ваша помощь.
Лос-(А)анджелесский филармонический оркестр. Это название имеет значение имени собственного, не являясь географическим или административным наименованием. Как правильно написать вторую часть? С прописной или со строчной?

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

В словаре В. В. Лопатина, И. В. Нечаевой, Л. К. Чельцовой «Прописная или строчная?» (М., 2011) дается: Нью-Йоркский симфонический оркестр. По аналогии: Лос-Анджелесский филармонический оркестр.

Добрый день!

Как правильно писать — Лос Анжелес или Лос Анджелес?

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Словарь имён собственных

Лос-Анджелес, Лос-Анджелеса (гор., США)

Здравствуйте.
Скажите, откуда в русском языке появилась традиция писать иностранные географические названия из двух слов через дефис? Например: Нью-Йорк, Лос-Анджелес, Тель-Авив, Буэнос-Айрес.
Заранее спасибо.

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Скорее всего, это связано с тем, что в русском языке не существует употребляющихся самостоятельно слов Тель, Авив, Буэнос, Айрес, Анджелес и т. д. Согласно нормам русской орфографии раздельно пишутся только составные географические названия, представляющие собой сочетание существительного с предшествующим прилагательным или числительным (Нижний Новгород, Ясная Поляна, Царское Село) или включающие в свой состав такое сочетание (мыс Доброй Надежды). Конечно, в названиях Нью-Йорк, Буэнос-Айрес первая часть тоже является прилагательным (нью – новый, буэнос – добрых), но по-русски они как прилагательные не воспринимаются.

Как правильно написать Г(г)ород А(а)нгелов (имеется в виду Лос-Анджелес)?

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Корректно: Город ангелов.

Как правильно перевести Los Angeles: Лос-Анжелес или Лос-Анджелес? Спасибо. Татьяна

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

Название американского города по-русски пишется так: _Лос-Анджелес_.

Уважаемые сотрудники «Справочного бюро»!Извините за настойчивость. Очень срочно нужна Ваша помощь! Правильно ли употребление (и отсутствие) кавычек:
1. Натуральный цвет волос-6/0(«темный блондин»);
2.1часть9/7 «шерри»,1часть 9/1 яркий пепельный блондин, 10/16 «ванильное небо»;
3.Первый краситель:Igora Royal 7-1(средний коричневый сандрэ)?
Спасибо.

Ответ справочной службы русского языка

В данном случае все названия цветов следует заключить в кавычки.

Как правильно пишется слово лос анджелес

Скорее всего, речь в вопросе идёт об употреблении слова во множественном числе.

У имени существительного «токарь» форма множественного числа вариативная: и тОкари (ударный гласный корня), и токарЯ (ударное окончание).

Обратимся к орфоэпическому словарю И. Резниченко:

Как правильно пишется слово лос анджелес

Как правильно пишется слово лос анджелес

Правильно будет «конкурентоспособный» (без дефиса).

Объяснить можно тем, что -н- является суффиксом — например, прилагательного «конкурентный», — и не относится к корню, поэтому в образовании слова «конкурентоспособный» не участвует.

Как правильно пишется слово лос анджелес

Думаю, что фамилия Берия в русском языке склоняется — и мужская, и женская. Склонять её нужно по особому типу — так, как склоняются существительные типа «линия», «история» (по Зализняку это тип склонения 7a). То есть нужно говорить: был в гостях у Берии, подошёл к Берии, поговорим о Берии. Полагаю, что пол в данном случае роли не играет, то есть Берия может быть мужчиной, но может и женщиной.

Есть правило, согласно которому в русском языке из фамилий, оканчивающихся на Я, не склоняются только французские, имеющие ударение на последнем слоге. Скажем, Золя (видел Золя, был в гостях у Золя). Фамилия Берия явно не французская, она грузинская, к тому же в этой фамилии ударение не на последний слог.

Есть ещё вариант, когда грузинские фамилии по-русски пишут с ИА на конце. Существует вариант Гамсахурдия, но есть и вариант Гамсахурдиа. Во втором случае (то есть ИА) такие фамилии не склоняются. В русском языке не склоняются фамилии, у которых последняя буква А, а предпоследняя буква — гласная, например, Бальбоа.

Как правильно пишется слово лос анджелес

Правильно будет оседлый, такого слова как «осёдлый» вообще нет. Оседлый происходит от глагола оседлать, к примеру: «Древние люди вели оседлый образ жизни». Оседлый — значит живущий на постоянном месте обитания.

Как правильно пишется слово лос анджелес

С точки зрения русского языка правильно говорить и писать- Округи

Как написать слово «лос-анджелесский» правильно? Где поставить ударение, сколько в слове ударных и безударных гласных и согласных букв? Как проверить слово «лос-анджелесский»?

лос-а́нджелесский

Правильное написание — лос-анджелесский, ударение падает на букву: а, безударными гласными являются: о, е, е, и.

Выделим согласные буквы — лоснджелесский, к согласным относятся: л, с, н, д, ж, к, й, звонкие согласные: л, н, д, ж, й, глухие согласные: с, к.

Количество букв и слогов:

  • букв — 16,
  • слогов — 5,
  • гласных — 5,
  • согласных — 10.

Формы слова: лос-а́нджелесский (от Лос-А́нджелес).

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Лос-анджелесский

⇒ Гласные буквы в слове:

л о с- а ндж е л е сск и й

гласные выделены красным

гласными являются: о, а, е, е, и

общее количество гласных: 5 (пять)

лос- а ́ нджелесский

ударная гласная выделена знаком ударения « ́ »

ударение падает на букву: а

л о с-андж е л е сск и й

безударные гласные выделены пунктирным подчеркиванием « »

безударными гласными являются: о, е, е, и

общее количество безударных гласных: 4 (четыре)

⇒ Согласные буквы в слове:

л о с -а н д ж е л е с с к и й

согласные выделены зеленым

согласными являются: л, с, н, д, ж, л, с, с, к, й

общее количество согласных: 10 (десять)

л ос-а н д ж е л есски й

звонкие согласные выделены одинарным подчеркиванием « »

звонкими согласными являются: л, н, д, ж, л, й

общее количество звонких согласных: 6 (шесть)

ло с -анджеле с с к ий

глухие согласные выделены двойным подчеркиванием « »

глухими согласными являются: с, с, с, к

общее количество глухих согласных: 4 (четыре)

лос-а́нджелесский (от Лос-А́нджелес)

⇒ Количество букв и слогов:

гласных букв: 5 (пять)

согласных букв: 10 (десять)

всего букв: 15 (пятнадцать)

всего слогов: 5 (пять)

Если вы хотите получить больше знаний, быстро и легко изучить английский язык, не выходя из дома, рекомендуем пройти уникальный и эффективный курс английского языка Polyglot.

Лос-анджелесский — как сделать фонетический разбор слова
звуко-буквенный анализ слова, его произношение, цветовая схема, характеристика букв и звуков, транскрипция слова «Лос-анджелесский»

Лос-А́нджелес (англ. Los Angeles, МФА (англ.): [lɒs ˈændʒələs], исп. Los Ángeles, МФА (исп.): [los ˈaŋxeles]; устар. Лос-Анжелос, Лос-Анжелес, Лос-Анхелес, также известен как L.A. и City of Angels — Город Ангелов) — город в США на юге штата Калифорния, находящийся на берегу Тихого океана. Крупнейший по численности населения в штате и второй — в стране (на 1 июля 2009 года — 3 831 868 жителей). Город является административным центром одноимённого округа, а также центром Большого Лос-Анджелеса — агломерации с населением выше 17 млн человек. Жителей Лос-Анджелеса называют «Angelenos» (произносится [анджели́нос]).

Все значения слова «Лос-Анджелес»

  • Лос-Анджелес стал своего рода региональной модной столицей не в последнюю очередь из‐за низких цен на недвижимость и трудовые ресурсы.

  • Комментируя его итоги, газета «Лос-Анджелес таймс» подчёркивала, что «Рэмбо-2» получил больше негативных оценок, чем любая кинокартина, с тех пор как организуются подобные опросы.

  • Лос-Анджелес встречал меня на красной линии подземного метро.

  • (все предложения)
  • город
  • город ангелов
  • (ещё синонимы…)
  • Голливуд
  • Нью-Йорк
  • (ещё ассоциации…)

Los Angeles, California

City

City of Los Angeles

Central Los Angeles skyline

Hollywood Sign

Griffith Observatory

Echo Park

Los Angeles City Hall

Theme Building at Los Angeles International Airport

Venice Beach

Clockwise from top: Downtown Los Angeles skyline, Griffith Observatory, City Hall, Venice Beach, Theme Building at Los Angeles International Airport, Echo Park, and the Hollywood Sign

Flag of Los Angeles, California

Flag

Official seal of Los Angeles, California

Seal

Nickname(s): 

L.A., City of Angels,[1] The Entertainment Capital of the World,[1] La-la-land, Tinseltown[1]

Map of Los Angeles County, California, with Los Angeles highlighted

Map of Los Angeles County, California, with Los Angeles highlighted

Los Angeles is located in California

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within California

Los Angeles is located in the United States

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within the United States

Los Angeles is located in North America

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within North America

Coordinates: 34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.050°N 118.250°WCoordinates: 34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.050°N 118.250°W
Country United States
State California
County Los Angeles
Region Southern California
CSA Los Angeles-Long Beach
MSA Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim
Pueblo September 4, 1781[2]
City status May 23, 1835[3]
Incorporated April 4, 1850[4]
Named for Our Lady, Queen of the Angels
Government
 • Type Strong mayor–council[5]
 • Body Los Angeles City Council
 • Mayor Karen Bass (D)
 • City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto (D)
 • City Controller Kenneth Mejia (D)
Area

[6]

 • Total 501.55 sq mi (1,299.01 km2)
 • Land 469.49 sq mi (1,215.97 km2)
 • Water 32.06 sq mi (83.04 km2)
Elevation 305 ft (93 m)
Population

 (2020)[7]

 • Total 3,898,747
 • Rank 2nd in the United States
1st in California
 • Density 8,304.22/sq mi (3,206.29/km2)
 • Urban 12,237,376 (2nd)
 • Urban density 7,476.3/sq mi (2,886.6/km2)
 • Metro

[8]

13,200,998 (2nd)
Demonym(s) Angeleno, Angelino, Angeleño[9][10]
Time zone UTC–08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC–07:00 (PDT)
ZIP Codes

List

  • 90001–90084, 90086–90089, 90091, 90093–90097, 90099, 90101–90103, 90174, 90185, 90189, 90291–90293, 91040–91043, 91303–91308, 91311, 91316, 91324–91328, 91330, 91331, 91335, 91340, 91342–91349, 91352–91353, 91356–91357, 91364–91367, 91401–91499, 91504–91505, 91601–91609[11]
Area codes 213/323, 310/424, 747/818
FIPS code 06-44000
GNIS feature IDs 1662328, 2410877
International airport Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
Rapid Transit LA Metro
Website lacity.gov

Los Angeles ( lawss AN-jəl-əs;[a] Spanish: Los Ángeles [los ˈaŋxeles], lit.‘The Angels’), often referred to by its initials L.A.,[13] is the largest city in the state of California and the second most populous city in the United States after New York City, as well as one of the world’s most populous megacities. Los Angeles is the commercial, financial, and cultural center of Southern California. With a population of roughly 3.9 million residents within the city limits as of 2020,[7] Los Angeles is known for its Mediterranean climate, ethnic and cultural diversity, being the home of the Hollywood film industry, and its sprawling metropolitan area. The city of Los Angeles lies in a basin in Southern California adjacent to the Pacific Ocean in the west and extending through the Santa Monica Mountains and north into the San Fernando Valley, with the city bordering the San Gabriel Valley to its east. It covers about 469 square miles (1,210 km2),[6] and is the county seat of Los Angeles County, which is the most populous county in the United States with an estimated 9.86 million residents as of 2022.[14]

Home to the Chumash and Tongva indigenous peoples, the area that became Los Angeles was claimed by Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo for Spain in 1542. The city was founded on September 4, 1781, under Spanish governor Felipe de Neve, on the village of Yaanga.[15] It became a part of Mexico in 1821 following the Mexican War of Independence. In 1848, at the end of the Mexican–American War, Los Angeles and the rest of California were purchased as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and thus became part of the United States. Los Angeles was incorporated as a municipality on April 4, 1850, five months before California achieved statehood. The discovery of oil in the 1890s brought rapid growth to the city.[16] The city was further expanded with the completion of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1913, which delivers water from Eastern California.

Los Angeles has a diverse economy, and hosts businesses in a broad range of professional and cultural fields. It also has the busiest container port in the Americas.[17][18] In 2018, the Los Angeles metropolitan area had a gross metropolitan product of over $1.0 trillion,[19] making it the city with the third-largest GDP in the world, after New York City and Tokyo. Los Angeles hosted the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympics and will host the 2028 Summer Olympics. More recently, statewide droughts in California have strained both the city’s and Los Angeles County’s water security.[20][21]

Pronunciation of the name

The local English pronunciation of the name of the city has varied over time. A 1953 article in the journal of the American Name Society asserts that the pronunciation lawss AN-jəl-əs was established following the 1850 incorporation of the city and that since the 1880s the pronunciation lohss ANG-gəl-əs emerged out of a trend in California to give places Spanish, or Spanish-sounding, names and pronunciations.[22] In 1908, librarian Charles Fletcher Lummis, who argued for the name’s pronunciation with a hard g (),[23][24] reported that there were at least 12 pronunciation variants.[25] In the early 1900s, the Los Angeles Times advocated for pronouncing it Loce AHNG-hayl-ais (), approximating Spanish [los ˈaŋxeles], by printing the respelling under its masthead for several years.[26] This did not find favor.[27]

Since the 1930s, has been most common.[28] In 1934, the United States Board on Geographic Names decreed that this pronunciation be used.[26] This was also endorsed in 1952 by a «jury» appointed by Mayor Fletcher Bowron to devise an official pronunciation.[22][26]

History

Pre-colonial history

The Los Angeles coastal area was settled by the Tongva (Gabrieleño) and Chumash tribes. Los Angeles would eventually be founded on the village of iyáanga’ or Yaanga (written «Yang-na» by the Spanish), meaning «poison oak place».[29][30][15]

Maritime explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo claimed the area of southern California for the Spanish Empire in 1542 while on an official military exploring expedition moving northward along the Pacific coast from earlier colonizing bases of New Spain in Central and South America.[31] Gaspar de Portolà and Franciscan missionary Juan Crespí reached the present site of Los Angeles on August 2, 1769.[32]

Spanish rule

In 1771, Franciscan friar Junípero Serra directed the building of the Mission San Gabriel Arcángel, the first mission in the area.[33] On September 4, 1781, a group of forty-four settlers known as «Los Pobladores» founded the pueblo (town) they called El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles, ‘The Town of Our Lady the Queen of the Angels’.[34] The original name of the settlement is disputed; the Guinness Book of World Records rendered it as «El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles de Porciúncula»;[35] other sources have shortened or alternate versions of the longer name.[36] The present-day city has the largest Roman Catholic archdiocese in the United States. Two-thirds of the Mexican or (New Spain) settlers were mestizo or mulatto, a mixture of African, indigenous and European ancestry.[37] The settlement remained a small ranch town for decades, but by 1820, the population had increased to about 650 residents.[38] Today, the pueblo is commemorated in the historic district of Los Angeles Pueblo Plaza and Olvera Street, the oldest part of Los Angeles.[39]

Mexican rule

New Spain achieved its independence from the Spanish Empire in 1821, and the pueblo now existed within the new Mexican Republic. During Mexican rule, Governor Pío Pico made Los Angeles, Alta California’s regional capital.[40] By this time, the new republic introduced more secularization acts within the Los Angeles region.[41] In 1846, during the wider Mexican-American war, marines from the United States occupied the pueblo. This resulted in the siege of Los Angeles where 150 Mexican militias fought the occupiers which eventually surrendered.[42]

1847 to present

Mexican rule ended during the Mexican–American War: Americans took control from the Californios after a series of battles, culminating with the signing of the Treaty of Cahuenga on January 13, 1847.[43]

Railroads arrived with the completion of the transcontinental Southern Pacific line from New Orleans to Los Angeles in 1876 and the Santa Fe Railroad in 1885.[44] Petroleum was discovered in the city and surrounding area in 1892, and by 1923, the discoveries had helped California become the country’s largest oil producer, accounting for about one-quarter of the world’s petroleum output.[45]

By 1900, the population had grown to more than 102,000,[46] putting pressure on the city’s water supply.[47] The completion of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1913, under the supervision of William Mulholland, ensured the continued growth of the city.[48] Because of clauses in the city’s charter that prevented the City of Los Angeles from selling or providing water from the aqueduct to any area outside its borders, many adjacent cities and communities felt compelled to join Los Angeles.[49][50][51]

Los Angeles created the first municipal zoning ordinance in the United States. On September 14, 1908, the Los Angeles City Council promulgated residential and industrial land use zones. The new ordinance established three residential zones of a single type, where industrial uses were prohibited. The proscriptions included barns, lumber yards, and any industrial land use employing machine-powered equipment. These laws were enforced against industrial properties after the fact. These prohibitions were in addition to existing activities that were already regulated as nuisances. These included explosives warehousing, gas works, oil drilling, slaughterhouses, and tanneries. Los Angeles City Council also designated seven industrial zones within the city. However, between 1908 and 1915, the Los Angeles City Council created various exceptions to the broad proscriptions that applied to these three residential zones, and as a consequence, some industrial uses emerged within them. There are two differences between the 1908 Residence District Ordinance and later zoning laws in the United States. First, the 1908 laws did not establish a comprehensive zoning map as the 1916 New York City Zoning Ordinance did. Second, the residential zones did not distinguish types of housing; they treated apartments, hotels, and detached-single-family housing equally.[52]

Hill Street, looking north from 6th Street, c. 1913. Notable sites include Central Park (today’s Pershing Square) (the trees, lower left), Hotel Portsmouth (lower right), and the Hill Street tunnel (at end of street).

In 1910, Hollywood merged into Los Angeles, with 10 movie companies already operating in the city at the time. By 1921, more than 80 percent of the world’s film industry was concentrated in L.A.[53] The money generated by the industry kept the city insulated from much of the economic loss suffered by the rest of the country during the Great Depression.[54]
By 1930, the population surpassed one million.[55] In 1932, the city hosted the Summer Olympics.

During World War II Los Angeles was a major center of wartime manufacturing, such as shipbuilding and aircraft. Calship built hundreds of Liberty Ships and Victory Ships on Terminal Island, and the Los Angeles area was the headquarters of six of the country’s major aircraft manufacturers (Douglas Aircraft Company, Hughes Aircraft, Lockheed, North American Aviation, Northrop Corporation, and Vultee). During the war, more aircraft were produced in one year than in all the pre-war years since the Wright brothers flew the first airplane in 1903, combined. Manufacturing in Los Angeles skyrocketed, and as William S. Knudsen, of the National Defense Advisory Commission put it, «We won because we smothered the enemy in an avalanche of production, the like of which he had never seen, nor dreamed possible.»[56]

General George Patton during a welcome-home parade in Los Angeles, June 9, 1945

After the end of World War II Los Angeles grew more rapidly than ever, sprawling into the San Fernando Valley.[57] The expansion of the Interstate Highway System during the 1950s and 1960s helped propel suburban growth and signaled the demise of the city’s electrified rail system, once the world’s largest.

As a consequence of World War II, suburban growth, and population density, many amusement parks were built and operated in this area.[58] An example is Beverly Park, which was located at the corner of Beverly Boulevard and La Cienega before being closed and substituted by the Beverly Center.[59]

Racial tensions led to the Watts riots in 1965, resulting in 34 deaths and over 1,000 injuries.[60]

In 1969, California became the birthplace of the Internet, as the first ARPANET transmission was sent from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) to the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park.[61]

In 1973, Tom Bradley was elected as the city’s first African American mayor, serving for five terms until retiring in 1993. Other events in the city during the 1970s included the Symbionese Liberation Army’s South Central standoff in 1974 and the Hillside Stranglers murder cases in 1977–1978.[62]

In early 1984, the city surpassed Chicago in population, thus becoming the second largest city in the United States.

In 1984, the city hosted the Summer Olympic Games for the second time. Despite being boycotted by 14 Communist countries, the 1984 Olympics became more financially successful than any previous,[63] and the second Olympics to turn a profit; the other, according to an analysis of contemporary newspaper reports, was the 1932 Summer Olympics, also held in Los Angeles.[64]

Racial tensions erupted on April 29, 1992, with the acquittal by a Simi Valley jury of four Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers captured on videotape beating Rodney King, culminating in large-scale riots.[65][66]

In 1994, the magnitude 6.7 Northridge earthquake shook the city, causing $12.5 billion in damage and 72 deaths.[67] The century ended with the Rampart scandal, one of the most extensive documented cases of police misconduct in American history.[68]

In 2002, Mayor James Hahn led the campaign against secession, resulting in voters defeating efforts by the San Fernando Valley and Hollywood to secede from the city.[69]

In 2022, Karen Bass became the city’s first female mayor, making Los Angeles the largest US city to have ever had a woman as mayor. [70]

Los Angeles will host the 2028 Summer Olympics and Paralympic Games, making Los Angeles the third city to host the Olympics three times.[71][72]

Geography

Topography

Satellite photo showing the city of Los Angeles

The city of Los Angeles covers a total area of 502.7 square miles (1,302 km2), comprising 468.7 square miles (1,214 km2) of land and 34.0 square miles (88 km2) of water.[73] The city extends for 44 miles (71 km) north-south and for 29 miles (47 km) east-west. The perimeter of the city is 342 miles (550 km).

Los Angeles is both flat and hilly. The highest point in the city proper is Mount Lukens at 5,074 ft (1,547 m),[74][75] located at the northeastern end of the San Fernando Valley. The eastern end of the Santa Monica Mountains stretches from Downtown to the Pacific Ocean and separates the Los Angeles Basin from the San Fernando Valley. Other hilly parts of Los Angeles include the Mt. Washington area north of Downtown, eastern parts such as Boyle Heights, the Crenshaw district around the Baldwin Hills, and the San Pedro district.

Surrounding the city are much higher mountains. Immediately to the north lie the San Gabriel Mountains, which is a popular recreation area for Angelenos. Its high point is Mount San Antonio, locally known as Mount Baldy, which reaches 10,064 feet (3,068 m). Further afield, the highest point in southern California is San Gorgonio Mountain, 81 miles (130 km) east of downtown Los Angeles,[76] with a height of 11,503 feet (3,506 m).

The Los Angeles River, which is largely seasonal, is the primary drainage channel. It was straightened and lined in 51 miles (82 km) of concrete by the Army Corps of Engineers to act as a flood control channel.[77] The river begins in the Canoga Park district of the city, flows east from the San Fernando Valley along the north edge of the Santa Monica Mountains, and turns south through the city center, flowing to its mouth in the Port of Long Beach at the Pacific Ocean. The smaller Ballona Creek flows into the Santa Monica Bay at Playa del Rey.

Vegetation

Oldest palm tree with the LA Coliseum in the background

Los Angeles is rich in native plant species partly because of its diversity of habitats, including beaches, wetlands, and mountains. The most prevalent plant communities are coastal sage scrub, chaparral shrubland, and riparian woodland.[78] Native plants include: the California poppy, matilija poppy, toyon, Ceanothus, Chamise, Coast Live Oak, sycamore, willow and Giant Wildrye. Many of these native species, such as the Los Angeles sunflower, have become so rare as to be considered endangered. Although it is not native to the area, the official tree of Los Angeles is the Coral Tree (Erythrina caffra)[79] and the official flower of Los Angeles is the Bird of Paradise (Strelitzia reginae).[80] Mexican Fan Palms, Canary Island Palms, Queen Palms, Date Palms, and California Fan Palms are common in the Los Angeles area, although only the last is native to California, though still not native to the City of Los Angeles.

Geology

Los Angeles is subject to earthquakes because of its location on the Pacific Ring of Fire. The geologic instability has produced numerous faults, which cause approximately 10,000 earthquakes annually in Southern California, though most of them are too small to be felt.[81] The strike-slip San Andreas Fault system, which sits at the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, passes through the Los Angeles metropolitan area. The segment of the fault passing through Southern California experiences a major earthquake roughly every 110 to 140 years, and seismologists have warned about the next «big one», as the last major earthquake was the 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake.[82] The Los Angeles basin and metropolitan area are also at risk from blind thrust earthquakes.[83] Major earthquakes that have hit the Los Angeles area include the 1933 Long Beach, 1971 San Fernando, 1987 Whittier Narrows, and the 1994 Northridge events. All but a few are of low intensity and are not felt. The USGS has released the UCERF California earthquake forecast, which models earthquake occurrence in California. Parts of the city are also vulnerable to tsunamis; harbor areas were damaged by waves from Aleutian Islands earthquake in 1946, Valdivia earthquake in 1960, Alaska earthquake in 1964, Chile earthquake in 2010 and Japan earthquake in 2011.[84]

Cityscape

The city is divided into many different districts and neighborhoods,[85][86] some of which were incorporated cities that have merged with Los Angeles.[87] These neighborhoods were developed piecemeal, and are well-defined enough that the city has signage which marks nearly all of them.[88]

Overview

The city’s street patterns generally follow a grid plan, with uniform block lengths and occasional roads that cut across blocks. However, this is complicated by rugged terrain, which has necessitated having different grids for each of the valleys that Los Angeles covers. Major streets are designed to move large volumes of traffic through many parts of the city, many of which are extremely long; Sepulveda Boulevard is 43 miles (69 km) long, while Foothill Boulevard is over 60 miles (97 km) long, reaching as far east as San Bernardino. Drivers in Los Angeles suffer from one of the worst rush hour periods in the world, according to an annual traffic index by navigation system maker, TomTom. LA drivers spend an additional 92 hours in traffic each year. During the peak rush hour, there is 80% congestion, according to the index.[89]

Los Angeles is often characterized by the presence of low-rise buildings, in contrast to New York City. Outside of a few centers such as Downtown, Warner Center, Century City, Koreatown, Miracle Mile, Hollywood, and Westwood, skyscrapers and high-rise buildings are not common in Los Angeles. The few skyscrapers built outside of those areas often stand out above the rest of the surrounding landscape. Most construction is done in separate units, rather than wall-to-wall. That being said Downtown Los Angeles itself has many buildings over 30 stories, with fourteen over 50 stories, and two over 70 stories, the tallest of which is the Wilshire Grand Center. Also Los Angeles is increasingly becoming a city of apartments rather than single-family dwellings, especially in the dense inner city and Westside neighborhoods.[citation needed]

Climate

Los Angeles (Downtown)
Climate chart (explanation)

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

A

S

O

N

D

3.3

68

49

3.6

68

50

2.2

70

52

0.7

72

55

0.3

74

58

0.1

77

61

0

82

65

0

84

65

0.1

83

64

0.6

79

60

0.8

73

53

2.5

67

48

Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: NOAA[90]
Metric conversion

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

A

S

O

N

D

84

20

9

92

20

10

57

21

11

18

22

13

8.1

23

15

2.3

25

16

0.5

28

18

0

29

19

3.3

28

18

15

26

16

20

23

12

63

20

9

Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

Los Angeles has a two-season Mediterranean climate of dry summer and very mild winter (Köppen Csb on the coast and most of downtown, Csa near the metropolitan region to the west), and receives just enough annual precipitation to avoid being classified as a semi-arid climate (BSh).[91] Daytime temperatures are generally temperate all year round. In winter, they average around 68 °F (20 °C) giving it a tropical feel although it is a few degrees too cool to be a true tropical climate on average due to cool night temperatures.[92][93] Los Angeles has plenty of sunshine throughout the year, with an average of only 35 days with measurable precipitation annually.[94]

Temperatures in the coastal basin exceed 90 °F (32 °C) on a dozen or so days in the year, from one day a month in April, May, June and November to three days a month in July, August, October and to five days in September.[94] Temperatures in the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys are considerably warmer. Temperatures are subject to substantial daily swings; in inland areas the difference between the average daily low and the average daily high is over 30 °F (17 °C).[95] The average annual temperature of the sea is 63 °F (17 °C), from 58 °F (14 °C) in January to 68 °F (20 °C) in August.[96] Hours of sunshine total more than 3,000 per year, from an average of 7 hours of sunshine per day in December to an average of 12 in July.[97]

A clear evening view of Mount Lee and the Hollywood Sign from the Griffith Observatory lawn

The Los Angeles area is also subject to phenomena typical of a microclimate, causing extreme variations in temperature in close physical proximity to each other. For example, the average July maximum temperature at the Santa Monica Pier is 70 °F (21 °C) whereas it is 95 °F (35 °C) in Canoga Park, 15 miles (24 km) away.[98] The city, like much of the Southern Californian coast, is subject to a late spring/early summer weather phenomenon called «June Gloom». This involves overcast or foggy skies in the morning that yield to sun by early afternoon.[99]

More recently, statewide droughts in California have further strained the city’s water security.[100] Downtown Los Angeles averages 14.67 in (373 mm) of precipitation annually, mainly occurring between November and March,[101][95] generally in the form of moderate rain showers, but sometimes as heavy rainfall during winter storms. Rainfall is usually higher in the hills and coastal slopes of the mountains because of orographic uplift. Summer days are usually rainless. Rarely, an incursion of moist air from the south or east can bring brief thunderstorms in late summer, especially to the mountains. The coast gets slightly less rainfall, while the inland and mountain areas get considerably more. Years of average rainfall are rare. The usual pattern is a year-to-year variability, with a short string of dry years of 5–10 in (130–250 mm) rainfall, followed by one or two wet years with more than 20 in (510 mm).[95] Wet years are usually associated with warm water El Niño conditions in the Pacific, dry years with cooler water La Niña episodes. A series of rainy days can bring floods to the lowlands and mudslides to the hills, especially after wildfires have denuded the slopes.

Both freezing temperatures and snowfall are extremely rare in the city basin and along the coast, with the last occurrence of a 32 °F (0 °C) reading at the downtown station being January 29, 1979;[95] freezing temperatures occur nearly every year in valley locations while the mountains within city limits typically receive snowfall every winter. The greatest snowfall recorded in downtown Los Angeles was 2.0 inches (5 cm) on January 15, 1932.[95][102] While the most recent snowfall occurred in February 2019, the first snowfall since 1962,[103][104] with snow falling in areas adjacent to Los Angeles as recently as January 2021.[105] At the official downtown station, the highest recorded temperature is 113 °F (45 °C) on September 27, 2010,[95][106] while the lowest is 28 °F (−2 °C),[95] on January 4, 1949.[95] Within the City of Los Angeles, the highest temperature ever officially recorded is 121 °F (49 °C), on September 6, 2020, at the weather station at Pierce College in the San Fernando Valley neighborhood of Woodland Hills.[107] During autumn and winter, Santa Ana winds sometimes bring much warmer and drier conditions to Los Angeles, and raise wildfire risk.

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Climate data for Los Angeles (USC, Downtown), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1877–present

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 95
(35)
95
(35)
99
(37)
106
(41)
103
(39)
112
(44)
109
(43)
106
(41)
113
(45)
108
(42)
100
(38)
92
(33)
113
(45)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 83.0
(28.3)
82.8
(28.2)
85.8
(29.9)
90.1
(32.3)
88.9
(31.6)
89.1
(31.7)
93.5
(34.2)
95.2
(35.1)
99.4
(37.4)
95.7
(35.4)
88.9
(31.6)
81.0
(27.2)
101.5
(38.6)
Average high °F (°C) 68.0
(20.0)
68.0
(20.0)
69.9
(21.1)
72.4
(22.4)
73.7
(23.2)
77.2
(25.1)
82.0
(27.8)
84.0
(28.9)
83.0
(28.3)
78.6
(25.9)
72.9
(22.7)
67.4
(19.7)
74.8
(23.8)
Daily mean °F (°C) 58.4
(14.7)
59.0
(15.0)
61.1
(16.2)
63.6
(17.6)
65.9
(18.8)
69.3
(20.7)
73.3
(22.9)
74.7
(23.7)
73.6
(23.1)
69.3
(20.7)
63.0
(17.2)
57.8
(14.3)
65.8
(18.8)
Average low °F (°C) 48.9
(9.4)
50.0
(10.0)
52.4
(11.3)
54.8
(12.7)
58.1
(14.5)
61.4
(16.3)
64.7
(18.2)
65.4
(18.6)
64.2
(17.9)
59.9
(15.5)
53.1
(11.7)
48.2
(9.0)
56.8
(13.8)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 41.4
(5.2)
42.9
(6.1)
45.4
(7.4)
48.9
(9.4)
53.5
(11.9)
57.4
(14.1)
61.1
(16.2)
61.7
(16.5)
59.1
(15.1)
53.7
(12.1)
45.4
(7.4)
40.5
(4.7)
39.2
(4.0)
Record low °F (°C) 28
(−2)
28
(−2)
31
(−1)
36
(2)
40
(4)
46
(8)
49
(9)
49
(9)
44
(7)
40
(4)
34
(1)
30
(−1)
28
(−2)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 3.29
(84)
3.64
(92)
2.23
(57)
0.69
(18)
0.32
(8.1)
0.09
(2.3)
0.02
(0.51)
0.00
(0.00)
0.13
(3.3)
0.58
(15)
0.78
(20)
2.48
(63)
14.25
(362)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.1 6.3 5.1 2.8 1.9 0.5 0.4 0.1 0.4 2.2 2.8 5.5 34.1
Mean monthly sunshine hours 225.3 222.5 267.0 303.5 276.2 275.8 364.1 349.5 278.5 255.1 217.3 219.4 3,254.2
Percent possible sunshine 71 72 72 78 64 64 83 84 75 73 70 71 73
Source: NOAA (sun 1961–1977)[108][90][109][110]
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Climate data for Los Angeles (LAX), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1944–present

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 91
(33)
92
(33)
95
(35)
102
(39)
97
(36)
104
(40)
97
(36)
98
(37)
110
(43)
106
(41)
101
(38)
94
(34)
110
(43)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 81.2
(27.3)
80.1
(26.7)
80.6
(27.0)
83.1
(28.4)
80.6
(27.0)
79.8
(26.6)
83.7
(28.7)
86.0
(30.0)
90.7
(32.6)
90.9
(32.7)
87.2
(30.7)
78.8
(26.0)
95.5
(35.3)
Average high °F (°C) 66.3
(19.1)
65.6
(18.7)
66.1
(18.9)
68.1
(20.1)
69.5
(20.8)
72.0
(22.2)
75.1
(23.9)
76.7
(24.8)
76.5
(24.7)
74.4
(23.6)
70.9
(21.6)
66.1
(18.9)
70.6
(21.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 57.9
(14.4)
57.9
(14.4)
59.1
(15.1)
61.1
(16.2)
63.6
(17.6)
66.4
(19.1)
69.6
(20.9)
70.7
(21.5)
70.1
(21.2)
67.1
(19.5)
62.3
(16.8)
57.6
(14.2)
63.6
(17.6)
Average low °F (°C) 49.4
(9.7)
50.1
(10.1)
52.2
(11.2)
54.2
(12.3)
57.6
(14.2)
60.9
(16.1)
64.0
(17.8)
64.8
(18.2)
63.7
(17.6)
59.8
(15.4)
53.7
(12.1)
49.1
(9.5)
56.6
(13.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 41.8
(5.4)
42.9
(6.1)
45.3
(7.4)
48.0
(8.9)
52.7
(11.5)
56.7
(13.7)
60.2
(15.7)
61.0
(16.1)
58.7
(14.8)
53.2
(11.8)
46.1
(7.8)
41.1
(5.1)
39.4
(4.1)
Record low °F (°C) 27
(−3)
34
(1)
35
(2)
42
(6)
45
(7)
48
(9)
52
(11)
51
(11)
47
(8)
43
(6)
38
(3)
32
(0)
27
(−3)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 2.86
(73)
2.99
(76)
1.73
(44)
0.60
(15)
0.28
(7.1)
0.08
(2.0)
0.04
(1.0)
0.00
(0.00)
0.11
(2.8)
0.49
(12)
0.82
(21)
2.23
(57)
12.23
(311)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.1 6.3 5.6 2.6 1.7 0.5 0.5 0.1 0.5 2.0 3.2 5.4 34.5
Average relative humidity (%) 63.4 67.9 70.5 71.0 74.0 75.9 76.6 76.6 74.2 70.5 65.5 62.9 70.8
Average dew point °F (°C) 41.4
(5.2)
44.4
(6.9)
46.6
(8.1)
49.1
(9.5)
52.7
(11.5)
56.5
(13.6)
60.1
(15.6)
61.2
(16.2)
59.2
(15.1)
54.1
(12.3)
46.8
(8.2)
41.4
(5.2)
51.1
(10.6)
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and dew point 1961–1990)[108][111][112][113]

Environmental issues

The city is often covered in smog, December 2005.

External audio
audio icon “Fighting Smog in Los Angeles”, Distillations Podcast, 2018 Science History Institute

A Gabrielino settlement in the area was called iyáangẚ (written Yang-na by the Spanish), which has been translated as «poison oak place».[29][30] Yang-na has also been translated as «the valley of smoke».[114][115] Owing to geography, heavy reliance on automobiles, and the Los Angeles/Long Beach port complex, Los Angeles suffers from air pollution in the form of smog. The Los Angeles Basin and the San Fernando Valley are susceptible to atmospheric inversion, which holds in the exhausts from road vehicles, airplanes, locomotives, shipping, manufacturing, and other sources.[116] The percentage of small particle pollution (the kind that penetrates into the lungs) coming from vehicles in the city can get as high as 55 percent.[citation needed]

The smog season lasts from approximately May to October.[117] While other large cities rely on rain to clear smog, Los Angeles gets only 15 inches (380 mm) of rain each year: pollution accumulates over many consecutive days. Issues of air quality in Los Angeles and other major cities led to the passage of early national environmental legislation, including the Clean Air Act. When the act was passed, California was unable to create a State Implementation Plan that would enable it to meet the new air quality standards, largely because of the level of pollution in Los Angeles generated by older vehicles.[118] More recently, the state of California has led the nation in working to limit pollution by mandating low-emission vehicles. Smog is expected to continue to drop in the coming years because of aggressive steps to reduce it, which include electric and hybrid cars, improvements in mass transit, and other measures.

The number of Stage 1 smog alerts in Los Angeles has declined from over 100 per year in the 1970s to almost zero in the new millennium.[119] Despite improvement, the 2006 and 2007 annual reports of the American Lung Association ranked the city as the most polluted in the country with short-term particle pollution and year-round particle pollution.[120] In 2008, the city was ranked the second most polluted and again had the highest year-round particulate pollution.[121] The city met its goal of providing 20 percent of the city’s power from renewable sources in 2010.[122] The American Lung Association’s 2013 survey ranks the metro area as having the nation’s worst smog, and fourth in both short-term and year-round pollution amounts.[123]

Los Angeles is also home to the nation’s largest urban oil field. There are more than 700 active oil wells within 1,500 feet (460 m) of homes, churches, schools and hospitals in the city, a situation about which the EPA has voiced serious concerns.[124]

The city has an urban population of bobcats (Lynx rufus).[125] Mange is a common problem in this population.[125] Although Serieys et al. 2014 find selection of immune genetics at several loci they do not demonstrate that this produces a real difference which helps the bobcats to survive future mange outbreaks.[125]

Demographics

City compared to State & U.S. 
2019 Estimate[126] L.A. CA U.S.
Total population 3,979,576 39,512,223 328,239,523
Population change, 2010 to 2019 +4.9% +6.1% +6.3%
Population density (people/sqmi) 8,514.4 253.9 92.6
Median household income (2018) $58,385 $71,228 $60,293
Bachelor’s degree or higher 33.7% 33.3% 31.5%
Foreign born 37.3% 26.9% 13.5%
White (non-Hispanic) 28.5% 36.8% 60.4%
Black 8.9% 6.5% 13.4%
Hispanic (any race) 48.6% 39.3% 18.3%
Asian 11.6% 15.3% 5.9%
Historical population
Census Pop.
1850 1,610
1860 4,385 172.4%
1870 5,728 30.6%
1880 11,183 95.2%
1890 50,395 350.6%
1900 102,479 103.4%
1910 319,198 211.5%
1920 576,673 80.7%
1930 1,238,048 114.7%
1940 1,504,277 21.5%
1950 1,970,358 31.0%
1960 2,479,015 25.8%
1970 2,811,801 13.4%
1980 2,968,528 5.6%
1990 3,485,398 17.4%
2000 3,694,820 6.0%
2010 3,792,621 2.6%
2020 3,898,747 2.8%
2022 (est.) 3,819,538 [127] −2.0%
United States Census Bureau[128]
2010–2020, 2021[7]

The 2010 U.S. census[129] reported Los Angeles had a population of 3,792,621.[130] The population density was 8,092.3 people per square mile (2,913.0/km2). The age distribution was 874,525 people (23.1%) under 18, 434,478 people (11.5%) from 18 to 24, 1,209,367 people (31.9%) from 25 to 44, 877,555 people (23.1%) from 45 to 64, and 396,696 people (10.5%) who were 65 or older.[130] The median age was 34.1 years. For every 100 females, there were 99.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 97.6 males.[130]

There were 1,413,995 housing units—up from 1,298,350 during 2005–2009[130]—at an average density of 2,812.8 households per square mile (1,086.0/km2), of which 503,863 (38.2%) were owner-occupied, and 814,305 (61.8%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 2.1%; the rental vacancy rate was 6.1%. 1,535,444 people (40.5% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 2,172,576 people (57.3%) lived in rental housing units.[130]

Percentage of households with incomes above $150k across LA County census tracts

According to the 2010 United States Census, Los Angeles had a median household income of $49,497, with 22.0% of the population living below the federal poverty line.[130]

Race and ethnicity

Racial and ethnic composition 1940[131] 1970[131] 1990[131] 2010[132] 2020[132]
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 7.1% 17.1% 39.9% 48.5% 46.9%
White (non-Hispanic) 86.3% 61.1% 37.3% 28.7% 28.9%
Asian (non-Hispanic) 2.2% 3.6% 9.8% 11.1% 11.7%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 4.2% 17.9% 14.0% 9.2% 8.3%
Other (non-Hispanic) N/A N/A 0.1% 0.3% 0.7%
Two or more races (non-Hispanic) N/A N/A N/A 2.0% 3.3%

Map of racial and ethnic distribution in Los Angeles, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people:  White

 Black

 Asian

 Hispanic

 Other

According to the 2010 census, the racial makeup of Los Angeles included: 1,888,158 Whites (49.8%), 365,118 African Americans (9.6%), 28,215 Native Americans (0.7%), 426,959 Asians (11.3%), 5,577 Pacific Islanders (0.1%), 902,959 from other races (23.8%), and 175,635 (4.6%) from two or more races.[130] Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 1,838,822 persons (48.5%). Los Angeles is home to people from more than 140 countries speaking 224 different identified languages.[133] Ethnic enclaves like Chinatown, Historic Filipinotown, Koreatown, Little Armenia, Little Ethiopia, Tehrangeles, Little Tokyo, Little Bangladesh, and Thai Town provide examples of the polyglot character of Los Angeles.

Non-Hispanic Whites were 28.7% of the population in 2010,[130] compared to 86.3% in 1940.[131] The majority of the Non-Hispanic White population is living in areas along the Pacific coast as well as in neighborhoods near and on the Santa Monica Mountains from the Pacific Palisades to Los Feliz.

Mexican ancestry make up the largest ethnic group of Hispanics at 31.9% of the city’s population, followed by those of Salvadoran (6.0%) and Guatemalan (3.6%) heritage. The Hispanic population has a long established Mexican-American and Central American community and is spread well-nigh throughout the entire city of Los Angeles and its metropolitan area. It is most heavily concentrated in regions around Downtown as East Los Angeles, Northeast Los Angeles and Westlake. Furthermore, a vast majority of residents in neighborhoods in eastern South Los Angeles towards Downey are of Hispanic origin.[citation needed]

The largest Asian ethnic groups are Filipinos (3.2%) and Koreans (2.9%), which have their own established ethnic enclaves—Koreatown in the Wilshire Center and Historic Filipinotown.[134] Chinese people, which make up 1.8% of Los Angeles’s population, reside mostly outside of Los Angeles city limits and rather in the San Gabriel Valley of eastern Los Angeles County, but make a sizable presence in the city, notably in Chinatown.[135] Chinatown and Thaitown are also home to many Thais and Cambodians, which make up 0.3% and 0.1% of Los Angeles’s population, respectively. The Japanese comprise 0.9% of LA’s population and have an established Little Tokyo in the city’s downtown, and another significant community of Japanese Americans is in the Sawtelle district of West Los Angeles. Vietnamese make up 0.5% of Los Angeles’s population. Indians make up 0.9% of the city’s population. The city is also home to Armenians, Assyrians, and Iranians, many of whom live in enclaves like Little Armenia and Tehrangeles.[citation needed]

African Americans have been the predominant ethnic group in South Los Angeles, which has emerged as the largest African American community in the western United States since the 1960s. The neighborhoods of South Los Angeles with highest concentration of African Americans include Crenshaw, Baldwin Hills, Leimert Park, Hyde Park, Gramercy Park, Manchester Square and Watts.[136] Apart from South Los Angeles, neighborhoods in the Central region of Los Angeles, as Mid-City and Mid-Wilshire have a moderate concentration of African Americans as well.[citation needed]

Los Angeles has the second largest Mexican, Armenian, Salvadoran, Filipino and Guatemalan population by city in the world, the third largest Canadian population in the world, and has the largest Japanese, Iranian/Persian, Cambodian and Romani (Gypsy) population in the country.[137]

There is an Italian community in Los Angeles. Italians are concentrated in San Pedro.[138]

Religion

According to a 2014 study by the Pew Research Center, Christianity is the most prevalently practiced religion in Los Angeles (65%).[139][140] The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles is the largest archdiocese in the country.[142] Cardinal Roger Mahony, as the archbishop, oversaw construction of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, which opened in September 2002 in Downtown Los Angeles.[143]

In 2011, the once common, but ultimately lapsed, custom of conducting a procession and Mass in honor of Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles, in commemoration of the founding of the City of Los Angeles in 1781, was revived by the Queen of Angels Foundation and its founder Mark Albert, with the support of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles as well as several civic leaders.[144] The recently revived custom is a continuation of the original processions and Masses that commenced on the first anniversary of the founding of Los Angeles in 1782 and continued for nearly a century thereafter.

With 621,000 Jews in the metropolitan area, the region has the second-largest population of Jews in the United States, after New York City.[145] Many of Los Angeles’s Jews now live on the Westside and in the San Fernando Valley, though Boyle Heights once had a large Jewish population prior to World War II due to restrictive housing covenants. Major Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods include Hancock Park, Pico-Robertson, and Valley Village, while Jewish Israelis are well represented in the Encino and Tarzana neighborhoods, and Persian Jews in Beverly Hills. Many varieties of Judaism are represented in the greater Los Angeles area, including Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, and Reconstructionist. The Breed Street Shul in East Los Angeles, built in 1923, was the largest synagogue west of Chicago in its early decades; it is no longer in daily use as a synagogue and is being converted to a museum and community center.[146][147] The Kabbalah Centre also has a presence in the city.[148]

The International Church of the Foursquare Gospel was founded in Los Angeles by Aimee Semple McPherson in 1923 and remains headquartered there to this day. For many years, the church convened at Angelus Temple, which, at its construction, was one of the largest churches in the country.[149]

Los Angeles has had a rich and influential Protestant tradition. The first Protestant service in Los Angeles was a Methodist meeting held in a private home in 1850 and the oldest Protestant church still operating, First Congregational Church, was founded in 1867.[150] In the early 1900s the Bible Institute Of Los Angeles published the founding documents of the Christian Fundamentalist movement and the Azusa Street Revival launched Pentecostalism.[150] The Metropolitan Community Church also had its origins in the Los Angeles area.[151] Important churches in the city include First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, Bel Air Presbyterian Church, First African Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, West Angeles Church of God in Christ, Second Baptist Church, Crenshaw Christian Center, McCarty Memorial Christian Church, and First Congregational Church.

The Los Angeles California Temple, the second-largest temple operated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is on Santa Monica Boulevard in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. Dedicated in 1956, it was the first temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints built in California and it was the largest in the world when completed.[152]

The Hollywood region of Los Angeles also has several significant headquarters, churches, and the Celebrity Center of Scientology.[153][154]

Because of Los Angeles’s large multi-ethnic population, a wide variety of faiths are practiced, including Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Zoroastrianism, Sikhism, Baháʼí, various Eastern Orthodox Churches, Sufism, Shintoism, Taoism, Confucianism, Chinese folk religion and countless others. Immigrants from Asia for example, have formed a number of significant Buddhist congregations making the city home to the greatest variety of Buddhists in the world. The first Buddhist joss house was founded in the city in 1875.[150] Atheism and other secular beliefs are also common, as the city is the largest in the Western U.S. Unchurched Belt.

Homelessness

Homeless people outside city hall, 2021

As of January 2020, there are 41,290 homeless people in the City of Los Angeles, comprising roughly 62% of the homeless population of LA County.[155] This is an increase of 14.2% over the previous year (with a 12.7% increase in the overall homeless population of LA County).[156][157] The epicenter of homelessness in Los Angeles is the Skid Row neighborhood, which contains 8,000 homeless people, one of the largest stable populations of homeless people in the United States.[158][159] The increased homeless population in Los Angeles has been attributed to lack of housing affordability[160] and to substance abuse.[161] Almost 60 percent of the 82,955 people who became newly homeless in 2019 said their homelessness was because of economic hardship.[156] In Los Angeles, black people are roughly four times more likely to experience homelessness.[156][162]

Crime

The LAPD on May Day 2006 in front of the new Caltrans District 7 Headquarters

In 1992, the city of Los Angeles recorded 1,092 murders.[163] Los Angeles experienced a significant decline in crime in the 1990s and late 2000s and reached a 50-year low in 2009 with 314 homicides.[164][165] This is a rate of 7.85 per 100,000 population—a major decrease from 1980 when a homicide rate of 34.2 per 100,000 was reported.[166][167] This included 15 officer-involved shootings. One shooting led to the death of a SWAT team member, Randal Simmons, the first in LAPD’s history.[168] Los Angeles in the year of 2013 totaled 251 murders, a decrease of 16 percent from the previous year. Police speculate the drop resulted from a number of factors, including young people spending more time online.[169] In 2021, murders rose to the highest level since 2008 and there were 348.[170]

In 2015, it was revealed that the LAPD had been under-reporting crime for eight years, making the crime rate in the city appear much lower than it really is.[171][172]

The Dragna crime family and the Cohen crime family dominated organized crime in the city during the Prohibition era[173] and reached its peak during the 1940s and 1950s with the battle of Sunset Strip as part of the American Mafia, but has gradually declined since then with the rise of various black and Hispanic gangs in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[173]

According to the Los Angeles Police Department, the city is home to 45,000 gang members, organized into 450 gangs.[174] Among them are the Crips and Bloods, which are both African American street gangs that originated in the South Los Angeles region. Latino street gangs such as the Sureños, a Mexican American street gang, and Mara Salvatrucha, which has mainly members of Salvadoran descent, all originated in Los Angeles. This has led to the city being referred to as the «Gang Capital of America».[175]

Economy

Employment by industry in Los Angeles County (2015)

Kaiser Sunset Hospital in Los Angeles. Kaiser Permanente was the largest non-government employer in Los Angeles County in 2018.

LA gas prices before taxes

Median housing price by metro area

The economy of Los Angeles is driven by international trade, entertainment (television, motion pictures, video games, music recording, and production), aerospace, technology, petroleum, fashion, apparel, and tourism.[citation needed] Other significant industries include finance, telecommunications, law, healthcare, and transportation. In the 2017 Global Financial Centres Index, Los Angeles was ranked as having the 19th most competitive financial center in the world, and sixth most competitive in the United States (after New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, and Washington, D.C.).[176]

One of the five major film studios, Paramount Pictures, is within the city limits,[177] its location being part of the so-called «Thirty-Mile Zone» of entertainment headquarters in Southern California.

Los Angeles is the largest manufacturing center in the United States.[178] The contiguous ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach together comprise the busiest port in the United States by some measures and the fifth-busiest port in the world, vital to trade within the Pacific Rim.[178]

The Los Angeles metropolitan area has a gross metropolitan product of over $1.0 trillion (as of 2018),[19] making it the third-largest economic metropolitan area in the world after Tokyo and New York.[19] Los Angeles has been classified an «alpha world city» according to a 2012 study by a group at Loughborough University.[179]

The Department of Cannabis Regulation enforces cannabis legislation after the legalization of the sale and distribution of cannabis in 2016.[180] As of October 2019, more than 300 existing cannabis businesses (both retailers and their suppliers) have been granted approval to operate in what is considered the nation’s largest market.[181][182]

As of 2018, Los Angeles is home to three Fortune 500 companies: AECOM, CBRE Group, and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co.[183] Other companies headquartered in Los Angeles and the surrounding metropolitan area include The Aerospace Corporation, California Pizza Kitchen,[184] Capital Group Companies, Deluxe Entertainment Services Group, Dine Brands Global, DreamWorks Animation, Dollar Shave Club, Fandango Media, Farmers Insurance Group, Forever 21, Hulu, Panda Express, SpaceX, Ubisoft Film & Television, The Walt Disney Company, Universal Pictures, Warner Bros., Warner Music Group, and Trader Joe’s.

Largest non-government employers in Los Angeles County, August 2018[185]
Rank Employer Employees
1 Kaiser Permanente 37,468
2 University of Southern California 21,055
3 Northrop Grumman Corp. 16,600
4 Providence Health and Services Southern California 15,952
5 Target Corp. 15,000
6 Ralphs/Food 4 Less (Kroger Co. Division) 14,970
7 Cedars-Sinai Medical Center 14,903
8 Walt Disney Co. 13,000
9 Allied Universal 12,879
10 NBC Universal 12,000

Arts and culture

Los Angeles is often billed as the «Creative Capital of the World» because one in every six of its residents works in a creative industry[186] and there are more artists, writers, filmmakers, actors, dancers and musicians living and working in Los Angeles than any other city at any other time in world history.[187]

Movies and the performing arts

The city’s Hollywood neighborhood has been recognized as the center of the motion picture industry, having held this distinction since the early 20th century, and the Los Angeles area is also associated with being the center of the television industry.[188] The city is home to major film studios as well as major record labels. Los Angeles plays host to the annual Academy Awards, the Primetime Emmy Awards, the Grammy Awards as well as many other entertainment industry awards shows. Los Angeles is the site of the USC School of Cinematic Arts which is the oldest film school in the United States.[189]

The performing arts play a major role in Los Angeles’s cultural identity. According to the USC Stevens Institute for Innovation, «there are more than 1,100 annual theatrical productions and 21 openings every week.»[187] The Los Angeles Music Center is «one of the three largest performing arts centers in the nation», with more than 1.3 million visitors per year.[190] The Walt Disney Concert Hall, centerpiece of the Music Center, is home to the prestigious Los Angeles Philharmonic.[191] Notable organizations such as Center Theatre Group, the Los Angeles Master Chorale, and the Los Angeles Opera are also resident companies of the Music Center.[192][193][194] Talent is locally cultivated at premier institutions such as the Colburn School and the USC Thornton School of Music.

Museums and galleries

There are 841 museums and art galleries in Los Angeles County,[195] more museums per capita than any other city in the U.S.[195] Some of the notable museums are the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (the largest art museum in the Western United States[196]), the Getty Center (part of the J. Paul Getty Trust, the world’s wealthiest art institution[197]), the Petersen Automotive Museum,[198] the Huntington Library,[199] the Natural History Museum,[200] the Battleship Iowa,[201] and the Museum of Contemporary Art.[202] A significant number of art galleries are on Gallery Row, and tens of thousands attend the monthly Downtown Art Walk there.[203]

Libraries

The Los Angeles Public Library system operates 72 public libraries in the city.[204] Enclaves of unincorporated areas are served by branches of the County of Los Angeles Public Library, many of which are within walking distance to residents.[205]

Landmarks

Important landmarks in Los Angeles include the Hollywood Sign,[206] Walt Disney Concert Hall, Capitol Records Building,[207] the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels,[208] Angels Flight,[209] Grauman’s Chinese Theatre,[210] Dolby Theatre,[211] Griffith Observatory,[212] Getty Center,[213] Getty Villa,[214] Stahl House,[215] the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, L.A. Live,[216] the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Venice Canal Historic District and boardwalk, Theme Building, Bradbury Building, U.S. Bank Tower, Wilshire Grand Center, Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles City Hall, Hollywood Bowl,[217] battleship USS Iowa, Watts Towers,[218] Staples Center, Dodger Stadium, and Olvera Street.[219]

Cuisine

Grand Central Market in Downtown Los Angeles

Los Angeles’s food culture is a fusion of global cuisine brought on by the city’s rich immigrant history and population. Latin American immigrants, particularly Mexican immigrants, brought tacos, burritos, quesadillas, tortas, tamales, and enchiladas served from food trucks and stands, taquerias, and cafés. Asian restaurants, many immigrant-owned, exist throughout the city with hotspots in Chinatown,[220] Koreatown,[221] and Little Tokyo.[222] Los Angeles also carries an outsized offering of vegan, vegetarian, and plant-based options. As of 2022, the Michelin Guide recognized 10 restaurants granting 2 restaurants two stars and eight restaurants one star. [223]

Sports

The city of Los Angeles and its metropolitan area are the home of eleven top-level professional sports teams, several of which play in neighboring communities but use Los Angeles in their name. These teams include the Los Angeles Dodgers[224] and Los Angeles Angels[225] of Major League Baseball (MLB), the Los Angeles Rams[226] and Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League (NFL), the Los Angeles Lakers[227] and Los Angeles Clippers[228] of the National Basketball Association (NBA), the Los Angeles Kings[229] and Anaheim Ducks[230] of the National Hockey League (NHL), the Los Angeles Galaxy[231] and Los Angeles FC[232] of Major League Soccer (MLS), and the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA).[233]

Other notable sports teams include the UCLA Bruins and the USC Trojans in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), both of which are Division I teams in the Pac-12 Conference, but will soon be moved to the Big Ten Conference.[234]

Los Angeles is the second-largest city in the United States but hosted no NFL team between 1995 and 2015. At one time, the Los Angeles area hosted two NFL teams: the Rams and the Raiders. Both left the city in 1995, with the Rams moving to St. Louis, and the Raiders moving back to their original home of Oakland. After 21 seasons in St. Louis, on January 12, 2016, the NFL announced the Rams would be moving back to Los Angeles for the 2016 NFL season with its home games played at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for four seasons.[235][236][237] Prior to 1995, the Rams played their home games in the Coliseum from 1946 to 1979 which made them the first professional sports team to play in Los Angeles, and then moved to Anaheim Stadium from 1980 until 1994. The San Diego Chargers announced on January 12, 2017, that they would also relocate back to Los Angeles (the first since its inaugural season in 1960) and become the Los Angeles Chargers beginning in the 2017 NFL season and played at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California for three seasons.[238] The Rams and the Chargers would soon move to the newly built SoFi Stadium, located in nearby Inglewood during the 2020 season.[239]

Los Angeles boasts a number of sports venues, including Dodger Stadium,[240] the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum,[241] Banc of California Stadium[242] and the Crypto.com Arena.[243] The Forum, SoFi Stadium, Dignity Health Sports Park, the Rose Bowl, Angel Stadium, and the Honda Center are also in adjacent cities and cities in Los Angeles’s metropolitan area.[244]

Los Angeles has twice hosted the Summer Olympic Games: in 1932 and in 1984, and will host the games for a third time in 2028.[245] Los Angeles will be the third city after London (1908, 1948 and 2012) and Paris (1900, 1924 and 2024) to host the Olympic Games three times. When the tenth Olympic Games were hosted in 1932, the former 10th Street was renamed Olympic Blvd. Los Angeles also hosted the Deaflympics in 1985[246] and Special Olympics World Summer Games in 2015.[247]

8 NFL Super Bowls were also held in the city and its surrounding areas- 2 at the Memorial Coliseum (the first Super Bowl, I and VII), 5 at the Rose Bowl in suburban Pasadena (XI, XIV, XVII, XXI, and XXVII), and 1 at the suburban Inglewood (LVI) .[248] The Rose Bowl also hosts an annual and highly prestigious NCAA college football game called the Rose Bowl, which happens every New Year’s Day.

Los Angeles also hosted 8 FIFA World Cup soccer games at the Rose Bowl in 1994, including the final, where Brazil won. The Rose Bowl also hosted 4 matches in the 1999 FIFA Women’s World Cup, including the final, where the United States won against China on penalty kicks. This was the game where Brandi Chastain took her shirt off after she scored the tournament-winning penalty kick, creating an iconic image. Los Angeles will be one of eleven US host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup with matches set to be held at SoFi Stadium.[249]

Los Angeles is one of six North American cities to have won championships in all five of its major leagues (MLB, NFL, NHL, NBA and MLS), having completed the feat with the Kings’ 2012 Stanley Cup title.[250]

Government

The Tom Bradley Room, making up the whole interior of L.A. City Hall’s 27th floor

Los Angeles is a charter city as opposed to a general law city. The current charter was adopted on June 8, 1999, and has been amended many times.[251] The elected government consists of the Los Angeles City Council and the mayor of Los Angeles, which operate under a mayor–council government, as well as the city attorney (not to be confused with the district attorney, a county office) and controller. The mayor is Karen Bass.[252] There are 15 city council districts.

The city has many departments and appointed officers, including the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD),[253] the Los Angeles Board of Police Commissioners,[254] the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD),[255] the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA),[256] the Los Angeles Department of Transportation (LADOT),[257] and the Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL).[258]

The charter of the City of Los Angeles ratified by voters in 1999 created a system of advisory neighborhood councils that would represent the diversity of stakeholders, defined as those who live, work or own property in the neighborhood. The neighborhood councils are relatively autonomous and spontaneous in that they identify their own boundaries, establish their own bylaws, and elect their own officers. There are about 90 neighborhood councils.

Residents of Los Angeles elect supervisors for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th supervisorial districts.

Federal and state representation

In the California State Assembly, Los Angeles is split between fourteen districts.[259] In the California State Senate, the city is split between eight districts.[260] In the United States House of Representatives, it is split among ten congressional districts.[261]

Education

Colleges and universities

There are three public universities within the city limits: California State University, Los Angeles (CSULA), California State University, Northridge (CSUN) and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).[262]

Private colleges in the city include:

  • American Film Institute Conservatory[263]
  • Alliant International University[264]
  • American Academy of Dramatic Arts (Los Angeles Campus)[265]
  • American Jewish University[266]
  • Abraham Lincoln University[267]
  • The American Musical and Dramatic Academy – Los Angeles campus
  • Antioch University’s Los Angeles campus[268]
  • Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science[269]
  • Colburn School[270]
  • Columbia College Hollywood[271]
  • Emerson College (Los Angeles Campus)[272]
  • Emperor’s College[273]
  • Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising’s Los Angeles campus (FIDM)
  • Los Angeles Film School[274]
  • Loyola Marymount University (LMU is also the parent university of Loyola Law School in Los Angeles)[275]
  • Mount St. Mary’s College[276]
  • National University of California[277]
  • Occidental College («Oxy»)[278]
  • Otis College of Art and Design (Otis)[279]
  • Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc)[280]
  • Southwestern Law School[281]
  • University of Southern California (USC)[282]
  • Woodbury University[283]

The community college system consists of nine campuses governed by the trustees of the Los Angeles Community College District:

  • East Los Angeles College (ELAC)[284]
  • Los Angeles City College (LACC)[285]
  • Los Angeles Harbor College[286]
  • Los Angeles Mission College[287]
  • Los Angeles Pierce College[288]
  • Los Angeles Valley College (LAVC)[289]
  • Los Angeles Southwest College[290]
  • Los Angeles Trade-Technical College[291]
  • West Los Angeles College[292]

There are numerous additional colleges and universities outside the city limits in the Greater Los Angeles area, including the Claremont Colleges consortium, which includes the most selective liberal arts colleges in the U.S., and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), one of the top STEM-focused research institutions in the world.

Schools

Los Angeles Unified School District serves almost all of the city of Los Angeles, as well as several surrounding communities, with a student population around 800,000.[293] After Proposition 13 was approved in 1978, urban school districts had considerable trouble with funding. LAUSD has become known for its underfunded, overcrowded and poorly maintained campuses, although its 162 Magnet schools help compete with local private schools.

Several small sections of Los Angeles are in the Inglewood Unified School District,[294] and the Las Virgenes Unified School District.[295] The Los Angeles County Office of Education operates the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts.

Media

Former Los Angeles Times headquarters in the Civic Center

The Los Angeles metro area is the second-largest broadcast designated market area in the U.S. (after New York) with 5,431,140 homes (4.956% of the U.S.), which is served by a wide variety of local AM and FM radio and television stations. Los Angeles and New York City are the only two media markets to have seven VHF allocations assigned to them.[296]

As part of the region’s aforementioned creative industry, the Big Four major broadcast television networks, ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC, all have production facilities and offices throughout various areas of Los Angeles. All four major broadcast television networks, plus major Spanish-language networks Telemundo and Univision, also own and operate stations that both serve the Los Angeles market and serve as each network’s West Coast flagship station: ABC’s KABC-TV (Channel 7),[297] CBS’s KCBS-TV (Channel 2), Fox’s KTTV-TV (Channel 11),[298] NBC’s KNBC-TV (Channel 4),[299] MyNetworkTV’s KCOP-TV (Channel 13), Telemundo’s KVEA-TV (Channel 52), and Univision’s KMEX-TV (Channel 34). The region also has four PBS stations, with KCET, re-joining the network as secondary affiliate in August 2019, after spending the previous eight years as the nation’s largest independent public television station. KTBN (Channel 40) is the flagship station of the religious Trinity Broadcasting Network, based out of Santa Ana. A variety of independent television stations, such as KCAL-TV (Channel 9) and KTLA-TV (Channel 5), also operate in the area.

The major daily English-language newspaper in the area is the Los Angeles Times.[300] La Opinión is the city’s major daily Spanish-language paper.[301] The Korea Times is the city’s major daily Korean-language paper while The World Journal is the city and county’s major Chinese newspaper. The Los Angeles Sentinel is the city’s major African-American weekly paper, boasting the largest African-American readership in the Western United States.[302] Investor’s Business Daily is distributed from its LA corporate offices, which are headquartered in Playa del Rey.[303]

There are also a number of smaller regional newspapers, alternative weeklies and magazines, including the Los Angeles Register, Los Angeles Community News, (which focuses on coverage of the greater Los Angeles area), Los Angeles Daily News (which focuses coverage on the San Fernando Valley), LA Weekly, L.A. Record (which focuses coverage on the music scene in the Greater Los Angeles Area), Los Angeles Magazine, the Los Angeles Business Journal, the Los Angeles Daily Journal (legal industry paper), The Hollywood Reporter, Variety (both entertainment industry papers), and Los Angeles Downtown News.[304] In addition to the major papers, numerous local periodicals serve immigrant communities in their native languages, including Armenian, English, Korean, Persian, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew, and Arabic. Many cities adjacent to Los Angeles also have their own daily newspapers whose coverage and availability overlaps with certain Los Angeles neighborhoods. Examples include The Daily Breeze (serving the South Bay), and The Long Beach Press-Telegram.

Los Angeles arts, culture and nightlife news is also covered by a number of local and national online guides, including Time Out Los Angeles, Thrillist, Kristin’s List, DailyCandy, Diversity News Magazine, LAist, and Flavorpill.[305][306][307][308]

Infrastructure

Transportation

Freeways

The city and the rest of the Los Angeles metropolitan area are served by an extensive network of freeways and highways. Texas Transportation Institute’s annual Urban Mobility Report ranked Los Angeles area roads the most congested in the United States in 2019 as measured by annual delay per traveler, area residents experiencing a cumulative average of 119 hours waiting in traffic that year.[309] Los Angeles was followed by San Francisco/Oakland, Washington, D.C., and Miami. Despite the congestion in the city, the mean daily travel time for commuters in Los Angeles is shorter than other major cities, including New York City, Philadelphia and Chicago. Los Angeles’s mean travel time for work commutes in 2006 was 29.2 minutes, similar to those of San Francisco and Washington, D.C.[310]

The major highways that connect LA to the rest of the nation include Interstate 5, which runs south through San Diego to Tijuana in Mexico and north through Sacramento, Portland, and Seattle to the Canada–US border; Interstate 10, the southernmost east–west, coast-to-coast Interstate Highway in the United States, going to Jacksonville, Florida; and U.S. Route 101, which heads to the California Central Coast, San Francisco, the Redwood Empire, and the Oregon and Washington coasts.

Transit systems

The LA County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (LA County Metro) and other agencies operate an extensive system of bus lines, as well as subway and light rail lines across Los Angeles County, with a combined monthly ridership (measured in individual boardings) of 38.8 million as of September 2011. The majority of this (30.5 million) is taken up by the city’s bus system,[311] the second busiest in the country. The subway and light rail combined average the remaining roughly 8.2 million boardings per month.[311] LA County Metro recorded over 397 million boardings for the 2017 calendar year, including about 285 million bus riders and about 113 million riding on rail transit.[312] For the first quarter of 2018, there were just under 95 million system-wide boardings, down from about 98 million in 2017, and about 105 million in 2016.[313] In 2005, 10.2% of Los Angeles commuters rode some form of public transportation.[314] According to the 2016 American Community Survey, 9.2% of working Los Angeles (city) residents made the journey to work via public transportation.[315]

The city’s subway system is the ninth busiest in the United States and its light rail system is the country’s busiest.[316] The rail system includes the B and D subway lines, as well as the A, C, E, and L light rail lines. In 2016, the E Line was extended to the Pacific Ocean at Santa Monica. The Metro G and J lines are bus rapid transit lines with stops and frequency similar to those of light rail. As of 2022, the total number of light rail stations is 99. The city is also central to the commuter rail system Metrolink, which links Los Angeles to all neighboring counties as well as many suburbs.[317]

Besides the rail service provided by Metrolink and the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, Los Angeles is served by inter-city passenger trains from Amtrak. The main rail station in the city is Union Station just north of Downtown.

In addition, the city directly contracts for local and commuter bus service through the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, or LADOT.

Airports

The main international and domestic airport serving Los Angeles is Los Angeles International Airport (IATA: LAX, ICAO: KLAX), commonly referred to by its airport code, LAX.[318] It is located on the Westside of Los Angeles near the Sofi Stadium in Inglewood.

Other major nearby commercial airports include:

  • (IATA: ONT, ICAO: KONT) Ontario International Airport, owned by the city of Ontario, CA; serves the Inland Empire.[319]
  • (IATA: BUR, ICAO: KBUR) Hollywood Burbank Airport, jointly owned by the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and Pasadena. Formerly known as Bob Hope Airport and Burbank Airport, the closest airport to Downtown Los Angeles serves the San Fernando, San Gabriel, and Antelope Valleys.[320]
  • (IATA: LGB, ICAO: KLGB) Long Beach Airport, serves the Long Beach/Harbor area.[321]
  • (IATA: SNA, ICAO: KSNA) John Wayne Airport of Orange County.

One of the world’s busiest general-aviation airports is also in Los Angeles: Van Nuys Airport (IATA: VNY, ICAO: KVNY).[322]

Seaports

Port of LA traffic

  Loaded Exports

  Empty Imports

The Port of Los Angeles is in San Pedro Bay in the San Pedro neighborhood, approximately 20 miles (32 km) south of Downtown. Also called Los Angeles Harbor and WORLDPORT LA, the port complex occupies 7,500 acres (30 km2) of land and water along 43 miles (69 km) of waterfront. It adjoins the separate Port of Long Beach.[323]

The sea ports of the Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach together make up the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor.[324][325] Together, both ports are the fifth busiest container port in the world, with a trade volume of over 14.2 million TEU’s in 2008.[326] Singly, the Port of Los Angeles is the busiest container port in the United States and the largest cruise ship center on the West Coast of the United States – The Port of Los Angeles’s World Cruise Center served about 590,000 passengers in 2014.[327]

There are also smaller, non-industrial harbors along Los Angeles’s coastline. The port includes four bridges: the Vincent Thomas Bridge, Henry Ford Bridge, Long Beach International Gateway Bridge, and Commodore Schuyler F. Heim Bridge. Passenger ferry service from San Pedro to the city of Avalon (and Two Harbors) on Santa Catalina Island is provided by Catalina Express.

Notable people

Sister cities

A sign near City Hall points to the sister cities of Los Angeles.

Los Angeles has 25 sister cities,[328] listed chronologically by year joined:

  • Eilat, Israel (1959)
  • Nagoya, Japan (1959)
  • Salvador, Brazil (1962)
  • Bordeaux, France (1964)[329][330]
  • Berlin, Germany (1967)[331]
  • Lusaka, Zambia (1968)
  • Mexico City, Mexico (1969)
  • Auckland, New Zealand (1971)
  • Busan, South Korea (1971)
  • Mumbai, India (1972)
  • Tehran, Iran (1972)
  • Taipei, Taiwan (1979)
  • Guangzhou, China (1981)[332]
  • Athens, Greece (1984)
  • Saint Petersburg, Russia (1984)
  • Vancouver, Canada (1986)[333]
  • Giza, Egypt (1989)
  • Jakarta, Indonesia (1990)
  • Kaunas, Lithuania (1991)
  • Makati, Philippines (1992)
  • Split, Croatia (1993)[334]
  • San Salvador, El Salvador (2005)
  • Beirut, Lebanon (2006)
  • Ischia, Campania, Italy (2006)
  • Yerevan, Armenia (2007)[335]

In addition, Los Angeles has the following «friendship cities»:

See also

  • Largest cities in Southern California
  • Largest cities in the Americas
  • List of hotels in Los Angeles
  • List of largest houses in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area
  • List of museums in Los Angeles
  • List of museums in Los Angeles County, California
  • List of music venues in Los Angeles
  • List of people from Los Angeles
  • List of tallest buildings in Los Angeles
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles, California

Notes

  1. ^ loss AN-jih-leez, -⁠liz, -⁠liss[12]

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Further reading

General

  • Carey McWilliams (2009). Southern California: An Island on the Land (9th ed.). Peregrine Smith. ISBN 978-0-87905-007-8.
  • Richard White (1991). It’s Your Misfortune and None of My Own: A New History of the American West. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-2567-1.
  • David Rieff (1992). Los Angeles: Capital of the Third World. Touchstone. ISBN 978-0-671-79210-7.
  • Peter Theroux (1994). Translating LA: A Tour of the Rainbow City. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-31394-9.
  • Paul Glover (1995). Los Angeles: A History of the Future. Greenplanners. ISBN 978-0-9622911-0-4.
  • Leonard Pitt & Dale Pitt (2000). Los Angeles A to Z: An Encyclopedia of the City and County. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20530-7.
  • Kevin Starr and David Ulin (2009). Jim Heimann (ed.). Los Angeles: Portrait of a City. Taschen America. ISBN 978-3-8365-0291-7.

Architecture and urban theory

  • Reyner Banham (2009). Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26015-3.
  • Mike Davis (2006). City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles. Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-568-5.
  • Robert M. Fogelson (1993). The Fragmented Metropolis: Los Angeles 1850–1930. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08230-4.
  • Norman M. Klein (1997). The History of Forgetting: Los Angeles and the Erasure of Memory. Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-242-4.
  • Sam Hall Kaplan (2000). L.A. Lost & Found: An Architectural History of Los Angeles. Hennessey and Ingalls. ISBN 978-0-940512-23-8.
  • Wim de Wit and Christopher James Alexander (2013). Overdrive: L.A. Constructs the Future, 1940–1990. Getty Publications. ISBN 978-1-60606-128-2.

Race relations

  • Acuña, Rodolfo (1996). Anything but Mexican: Chicanos in contemporary Los Angeles. Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-031-3. Retrieved September 30, 2011.
  • George, Lynell (1992). No Crystal Stair: African Americans in the City of Angels. Verso. ISBN 978-0-86091-389-4.
  • Sides, Josh (2006). L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24830-4.
  • Eduardo Obregón Pagán (2006). Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-5494-5.
  • R. J. Smith (2007). The Great Black Way: L.A. in the 1940s and the Last African American Renaissance. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-58648-521-4.

LGBT

  • Lillian Faderman and Stuart Timmons (2006). Gay L. A.: A History of Sexual Outlaws, Power Politics, And Lipstick Lesbians. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02288-5.
  • Hurewitz, Daniel (2007). Bohemian Los Angeles: and the Making of Modern Politics. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24925-7.

Environment

  • Marc Reisner (1986). Cadillac Desert: The American West and its Disappearing Water. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-017824-1.
  • Chip Jacobs and William Kelly (2008). Smogtown: The Lung-Burning History of Pollution in Los Angeles. Outlook Hardcover. ISBN 978-1-58567-860-0.
  • Mike Davis and Jon Wiener (2020). Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties. Verso. ISBN 978-1-78478-024-1.

Art and literature

  • David L. Ulin, ed. (2002). Writing Los Angeles: A Literary Anthology. Library of America. ISBN 978-1-931082-27-3.
  • Whiting, Cécile (2008). Pop L.A.: Art and the City in the 1960s. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25634-7.

External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

Los Angeles, California

City

City of Los Angeles

Central Los Angeles skyline

Hollywood Sign

Griffith Observatory

Echo Park

Los Angeles City Hall

Theme Building at Los Angeles International Airport

Venice Beach

Clockwise from top: Downtown Los Angeles skyline, Griffith Observatory, City Hall, Venice Beach, Theme Building at Los Angeles International Airport, Echo Park, and the Hollywood Sign

Flag of Los Angeles, California

Flag

Official seal of Los Angeles, California

Seal

Nickname(s): 

L.A., City of Angels,[1] The Entertainment Capital of the World,[1] La-la-land, Tinseltown[1]

Map of Los Angeles County, California, with Los Angeles highlighted

Map of Los Angeles County, California, with Los Angeles highlighted

Los Angeles is located in California

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within California

Los Angeles is located in the United States

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within the United States

Los Angeles is located in North America

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within North America

Coordinates: 34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.050°N 118.250°WCoordinates: 34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.050°N 118.250°W
Country United States
State California
County Los Angeles
Region Southern California
CSA Los Angeles-Long Beach
MSA Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim
Pueblo September 4, 1781[2]
City status May 23, 1835[3]
Incorporated April 4, 1850[4]
Named for Our Lady, Queen of the Angels
Government
 • Type Strong mayor–council[5]
 • Body Los Angeles City Council
 • Mayor Karen Bass (D)
 • City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto (D)
 • City Controller Kenneth Mejia (D)
Area

[6]

 • Total 501.55 sq mi (1,299.01 km2)
 • Land 469.49 sq mi (1,215.97 km2)
 • Water 32.06 sq mi (83.04 km2)
Elevation 305 ft (93 m)
Population

 (2020)[7]

 • Total 3,898,747
 • Rank 2nd in the United States
1st in California
 • Density 8,304.22/sq mi (3,206.29/km2)
 • Urban 12,237,376 (2nd)
 • Urban density 7,476.3/sq mi (2,886.6/km2)
 • Metro

[8]

13,200,998 (2nd)
Demonym(s) Angeleno, Angelino, Angeleño[9][10]
Time zone UTC–08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC–07:00 (PDT)
ZIP Codes

List

  • 90001–90084, 90086–90089, 90091, 90093–90097, 90099, 90101–90103, 90174, 90185, 90189, 90291–90293, 91040–91043, 91303–91308, 91311, 91316, 91324–91328, 91330, 91331, 91335, 91340, 91342–91349, 91352–91353, 91356–91357, 91364–91367, 91401–91499, 91504–91505, 91601–91609[11]
Area codes 213/323, 310/424, 747/818
FIPS code 06-44000
GNIS feature IDs 1662328, 2410877
International airport Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
Rapid Transit LA Metro
Website lacity.gov

Los Angeles ( lawss AN-jəl-əs;[a] Spanish: Los Ángeles [los ˈaŋxeles], lit.‘The Angels’), often referred to by its initials L.A.,[13] is the largest city in the state of California and the second most populous city in the United States after New York City, as well as one of the world’s most populous megacities. Los Angeles is the commercial, financial, and cultural center of Southern California. With a population of roughly 3.9 million residents within the city limits as of 2020,[7] Los Angeles is known for its Mediterranean climate, ethnic and cultural diversity, being the home of the Hollywood film industry, and its sprawling metropolitan area. The city of Los Angeles lies in a basin in Southern California adjacent to the Pacific Ocean in the west and extending through the Santa Monica Mountains and north into the San Fernando Valley, with the city bordering the San Gabriel Valley to its east. It covers about 469 square miles (1,210 km2),[6] and is the county seat of Los Angeles County, which is the most populous county in the United States with an estimated 9.86 million residents as of 2022.[14]

Home to the Chumash and Tongva indigenous peoples, the area that became Los Angeles was claimed by Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo for Spain in 1542. The city was founded on September 4, 1781, under Spanish governor Felipe de Neve, on the village of Yaanga.[15] It became a part of Mexico in 1821 following the Mexican War of Independence. In 1848, at the end of the Mexican–American War, Los Angeles and the rest of California were purchased as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and thus became part of the United States. Los Angeles was incorporated as a municipality on April 4, 1850, five months before California achieved statehood. The discovery of oil in the 1890s brought rapid growth to the city.[16] The city was further expanded with the completion of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1913, which delivers water from Eastern California.

Los Angeles has a diverse economy, and hosts businesses in a broad range of professional and cultural fields. It also has the busiest container port in the Americas.[17][18] In 2018, the Los Angeles metropolitan area had a gross metropolitan product of over $1.0 trillion,[19] making it the city with the third-largest GDP in the world, after New York City and Tokyo. Los Angeles hosted the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympics and will host the 2028 Summer Olympics. More recently, statewide droughts in California have strained both the city’s and Los Angeles County’s water security.[20][21]

Pronunciation of the name

The local English pronunciation of the name of the city has varied over time. A 1953 article in the journal of the American Name Society asserts that the pronunciation lawss AN-jəl-əs was established following the 1850 incorporation of the city and that since the 1880s the pronunciation lohss ANG-gəl-əs emerged out of a trend in California to give places Spanish, or Spanish-sounding, names and pronunciations.[22] In 1908, librarian Charles Fletcher Lummis, who argued for the name’s pronunciation with a hard g (),[23][24] reported that there were at least 12 pronunciation variants.[25] In the early 1900s, the Los Angeles Times advocated for pronouncing it Loce AHNG-hayl-ais (), approximating Spanish [los ˈaŋxeles], by printing the respelling under its masthead for several years.[26] This did not find favor.[27]

Since the 1930s, has been most common.[28] In 1934, the United States Board on Geographic Names decreed that this pronunciation be used.[26] This was also endorsed in 1952 by a «jury» appointed by Mayor Fletcher Bowron to devise an official pronunciation.[22][26]

History

Pre-colonial history

The Los Angeles coastal area was settled by the Tongva (Gabrieleño) and Chumash tribes. Los Angeles would eventually be founded on the village of iyáanga’ or Yaanga (written «Yang-na» by the Spanish), meaning «poison oak place».[29][30][15]

Maritime explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo claimed the area of southern California for the Spanish Empire in 1542 while on an official military exploring expedition moving northward along the Pacific coast from earlier colonizing bases of New Spain in Central and South America.[31] Gaspar de Portolà and Franciscan missionary Juan Crespí reached the present site of Los Angeles on August 2, 1769.[32]

Spanish rule

In 1771, Franciscan friar Junípero Serra directed the building of the Mission San Gabriel Arcángel, the first mission in the area.[33] On September 4, 1781, a group of forty-four settlers known as «Los Pobladores» founded the pueblo (town) they called El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles, ‘The Town of Our Lady the Queen of the Angels’.[34] The original name of the settlement is disputed; the Guinness Book of World Records rendered it as «El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles de Porciúncula»;[35] other sources have shortened or alternate versions of the longer name.[36] The present-day city has the largest Roman Catholic archdiocese in the United States. Two-thirds of the Mexican or (New Spain) settlers were mestizo or mulatto, a mixture of African, indigenous and European ancestry.[37] The settlement remained a small ranch town for decades, but by 1820, the population had increased to about 650 residents.[38] Today, the pueblo is commemorated in the historic district of Los Angeles Pueblo Plaza and Olvera Street, the oldest part of Los Angeles.[39]

Mexican rule

New Spain achieved its independence from the Spanish Empire in 1821, and the pueblo now existed within the new Mexican Republic. During Mexican rule, Governor Pío Pico made Los Angeles, Alta California’s regional capital.[40] By this time, the new republic introduced more secularization acts within the Los Angeles region.[41] In 1846, during the wider Mexican-American war, marines from the United States occupied the pueblo. This resulted in the siege of Los Angeles where 150 Mexican militias fought the occupiers which eventually surrendered.[42]

1847 to present

Mexican rule ended during the Mexican–American War: Americans took control from the Californios after a series of battles, culminating with the signing of the Treaty of Cahuenga on January 13, 1847.[43]

Railroads arrived with the completion of the transcontinental Southern Pacific line from New Orleans to Los Angeles in 1876 and the Santa Fe Railroad in 1885.[44] Petroleum was discovered in the city and surrounding area in 1892, and by 1923, the discoveries had helped California become the country’s largest oil producer, accounting for about one-quarter of the world’s petroleum output.[45]

By 1900, the population had grown to more than 102,000,[46] putting pressure on the city’s water supply.[47] The completion of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1913, under the supervision of William Mulholland, ensured the continued growth of the city.[48] Because of clauses in the city’s charter that prevented the City of Los Angeles from selling or providing water from the aqueduct to any area outside its borders, many adjacent cities and communities felt compelled to join Los Angeles.[49][50][51]

Los Angeles created the first municipal zoning ordinance in the United States. On September 14, 1908, the Los Angeles City Council promulgated residential and industrial land use zones. The new ordinance established three residential zones of a single type, where industrial uses were prohibited. The proscriptions included barns, lumber yards, and any industrial land use employing machine-powered equipment. These laws were enforced against industrial properties after the fact. These prohibitions were in addition to existing activities that were already regulated as nuisances. These included explosives warehousing, gas works, oil drilling, slaughterhouses, and tanneries. Los Angeles City Council also designated seven industrial zones within the city. However, between 1908 and 1915, the Los Angeles City Council created various exceptions to the broad proscriptions that applied to these three residential zones, and as a consequence, some industrial uses emerged within them. There are two differences between the 1908 Residence District Ordinance and later zoning laws in the United States. First, the 1908 laws did not establish a comprehensive zoning map as the 1916 New York City Zoning Ordinance did. Second, the residential zones did not distinguish types of housing; they treated apartments, hotels, and detached-single-family housing equally.[52]

Hill Street, looking north from 6th Street, c. 1913. Notable sites include Central Park (today’s Pershing Square) (the trees, lower left), Hotel Portsmouth (lower right), and the Hill Street tunnel (at end of street).

In 1910, Hollywood merged into Los Angeles, with 10 movie companies already operating in the city at the time. By 1921, more than 80 percent of the world’s film industry was concentrated in L.A.[53] The money generated by the industry kept the city insulated from much of the economic loss suffered by the rest of the country during the Great Depression.[54]
By 1930, the population surpassed one million.[55] In 1932, the city hosted the Summer Olympics.

During World War II Los Angeles was a major center of wartime manufacturing, such as shipbuilding and aircraft. Calship built hundreds of Liberty Ships and Victory Ships on Terminal Island, and the Los Angeles area was the headquarters of six of the country’s major aircraft manufacturers (Douglas Aircraft Company, Hughes Aircraft, Lockheed, North American Aviation, Northrop Corporation, and Vultee). During the war, more aircraft were produced in one year than in all the pre-war years since the Wright brothers flew the first airplane in 1903, combined. Manufacturing in Los Angeles skyrocketed, and as William S. Knudsen, of the National Defense Advisory Commission put it, «We won because we smothered the enemy in an avalanche of production, the like of which he had never seen, nor dreamed possible.»[56]

General George Patton during a welcome-home parade in Los Angeles, June 9, 1945

After the end of World War II Los Angeles grew more rapidly than ever, sprawling into the San Fernando Valley.[57] The expansion of the Interstate Highway System during the 1950s and 1960s helped propel suburban growth and signaled the demise of the city’s electrified rail system, once the world’s largest.

As a consequence of World War II, suburban growth, and population density, many amusement parks were built and operated in this area.[58] An example is Beverly Park, which was located at the corner of Beverly Boulevard and La Cienega before being closed and substituted by the Beverly Center.[59]

Racial tensions led to the Watts riots in 1965, resulting in 34 deaths and over 1,000 injuries.[60]

In 1969, California became the birthplace of the Internet, as the first ARPANET transmission was sent from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) to the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park.[61]

In 1973, Tom Bradley was elected as the city’s first African American mayor, serving for five terms until retiring in 1993. Other events in the city during the 1970s included the Symbionese Liberation Army’s South Central standoff in 1974 and the Hillside Stranglers murder cases in 1977–1978.[62]

In early 1984, the city surpassed Chicago in population, thus becoming the second largest city in the United States.

In 1984, the city hosted the Summer Olympic Games for the second time. Despite being boycotted by 14 Communist countries, the 1984 Olympics became more financially successful than any previous,[63] and the second Olympics to turn a profit; the other, according to an analysis of contemporary newspaper reports, was the 1932 Summer Olympics, also held in Los Angeles.[64]

Racial tensions erupted on April 29, 1992, with the acquittal by a Simi Valley jury of four Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers captured on videotape beating Rodney King, culminating in large-scale riots.[65][66]

In 1994, the magnitude 6.7 Northridge earthquake shook the city, causing $12.5 billion in damage and 72 deaths.[67] The century ended with the Rampart scandal, one of the most extensive documented cases of police misconduct in American history.[68]

In 2002, Mayor James Hahn led the campaign against secession, resulting in voters defeating efforts by the San Fernando Valley and Hollywood to secede from the city.[69]

In 2022, Karen Bass became the city’s first female mayor, making Los Angeles the largest US city to have ever had a woman as mayor. [70]

Los Angeles will host the 2028 Summer Olympics and Paralympic Games, making Los Angeles the third city to host the Olympics three times.[71][72]

Geography

Topography

Satellite photo showing the city of Los Angeles

The city of Los Angeles covers a total area of 502.7 square miles (1,302 km2), comprising 468.7 square miles (1,214 km2) of land and 34.0 square miles (88 km2) of water.[73] The city extends for 44 miles (71 km) north-south and for 29 miles (47 km) east-west. The perimeter of the city is 342 miles (550 km).

Los Angeles is both flat and hilly. The highest point in the city proper is Mount Lukens at 5,074 ft (1,547 m),[74][75] located at the northeastern end of the San Fernando Valley. The eastern end of the Santa Monica Mountains stretches from Downtown to the Pacific Ocean and separates the Los Angeles Basin from the San Fernando Valley. Other hilly parts of Los Angeles include the Mt. Washington area north of Downtown, eastern parts such as Boyle Heights, the Crenshaw district around the Baldwin Hills, and the San Pedro district.

Surrounding the city are much higher mountains. Immediately to the north lie the San Gabriel Mountains, which is a popular recreation area for Angelenos. Its high point is Mount San Antonio, locally known as Mount Baldy, which reaches 10,064 feet (3,068 m). Further afield, the highest point in southern California is San Gorgonio Mountain, 81 miles (130 km) east of downtown Los Angeles,[76] with a height of 11,503 feet (3,506 m).

The Los Angeles River, which is largely seasonal, is the primary drainage channel. It was straightened and lined in 51 miles (82 km) of concrete by the Army Corps of Engineers to act as a flood control channel.[77] The river begins in the Canoga Park district of the city, flows east from the San Fernando Valley along the north edge of the Santa Monica Mountains, and turns south through the city center, flowing to its mouth in the Port of Long Beach at the Pacific Ocean. The smaller Ballona Creek flows into the Santa Monica Bay at Playa del Rey.

Vegetation

Oldest palm tree with the LA Coliseum in the background

Los Angeles is rich in native plant species partly because of its diversity of habitats, including beaches, wetlands, and mountains. The most prevalent plant communities are coastal sage scrub, chaparral shrubland, and riparian woodland.[78] Native plants include: the California poppy, matilija poppy, toyon, Ceanothus, Chamise, Coast Live Oak, sycamore, willow and Giant Wildrye. Many of these native species, such as the Los Angeles sunflower, have become so rare as to be considered endangered. Although it is not native to the area, the official tree of Los Angeles is the Coral Tree (Erythrina caffra)[79] and the official flower of Los Angeles is the Bird of Paradise (Strelitzia reginae).[80] Mexican Fan Palms, Canary Island Palms, Queen Palms, Date Palms, and California Fan Palms are common in the Los Angeles area, although only the last is native to California, though still not native to the City of Los Angeles.

Geology

Los Angeles is subject to earthquakes because of its location on the Pacific Ring of Fire. The geologic instability has produced numerous faults, which cause approximately 10,000 earthquakes annually in Southern California, though most of them are too small to be felt.[81] The strike-slip San Andreas Fault system, which sits at the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, passes through the Los Angeles metropolitan area. The segment of the fault passing through Southern California experiences a major earthquake roughly every 110 to 140 years, and seismologists have warned about the next «big one», as the last major earthquake was the 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake.[82] The Los Angeles basin and metropolitan area are also at risk from blind thrust earthquakes.[83] Major earthquakes that have hit the Los Angeles area include the 1933 Long Beach, 1971 San Fernando, 1987 Whittier Narrows, and the 1994 Northridge events. All but a few are of low intensity and are not felt. The USGS has released the UCERF California earthquake forecast, which models earthquake occurrence in California. Parts of the city are also vulnerable to tsunamis; harbor areas were damaged by waves from Aleutian Islands earthquake in 1946, Valdivia earthquake in 1960, Alaska earthquake in 1964, Chile earthquake in 2010 and Japan earthquake in 2011.[84]

Cityscape

The city is divided into many different districts and neighborhoods,[85][86] some of which were incorporated cities that have merged with Los Angeles.[87] These neighborhoods were developed piecemeal, and are well-defined enough that the city has signage which marks nearly all of them.[88]

Overview

The city’s street patterns generally follow a grid plan, with uniform block lengths and occasional roads that cut across blocks. However, this is complicated by rugged terrain, which has necessitated having different grids for each of the valleys that Los Angeles covers. Major streets are designed to move large volumes of traffic through many parts of the city, many of which are extremely long; Sepulveda Boulevard is 43 miles (69 km) long, while Foothill Boulevard is over 60 miles (97 km) long, reaching as far east as San Bernardino. Drivers in Los Angeles suffer from one of the worst rush hour periods in the world, according to an annual traffic index by navigation system maker, TomTom. LA drivers spend an additional 92 hours in traffic each year. During the peak rush hour, there is 80% congestion, according to the index.[89]

Los Angeles is often characterized by the presence of low-rise buildings, in contrast to New York City. Outside of a few centers such as Downtown, Warner Center, Century City, Koreatown, Miracle Mile, Hollywood, and Westwood, skyscrapers and high-rise buildings are not common in Los Angeles. The few skyscrapers built outside of those areas often stand out above the rest of the surrounding landscape. Most construction is done in separate units, rather than wall-to-wall. That being said Downtown Los Angeles itself has many buildings over 30 stories, with fourteen over 50 stories, and two over 70 stories, the tallest of which is the Wilshire Grand Center. Also Los Angeles is increasingly becoming a city of apartments rather than single-family dwellings, especially in the dense inner city and Westside neighborhoods.[citation needed]

Climate

Los Angeles (Downtown)
Climate chart (explanation)

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

A

S

O

N

D

3.3

68

49

3.6

68

50

2.2

70

52

0.7

72

55

0.3

74

58

0.1

77

61

0

82

65

0

84

65

0.1

83

64

0.6

79

60

0.8

73

53

2.5

67

48

Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: NOAA[90]
Metric conversion

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

A

S

O

N

D

84

20

9

92

20

10

57

21

11

18

22

13

8.1

23

15

2.3

25

16

0.5

28

18

0

29

19

3.3

28

18

15

26

16

20

23

12

63

20

9

Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

Los Angeles has a two-season Mediterranean climate of dry summer and very mild winter (Köppen Csb on the coast and most of downtown, Csa near the metropolitan region to the west), and receives just enough annual precipitation to avoid being classified as a semi-arid climate (BSh).[91] Daytime temperatures are generally temperate all year round. In winter, they average around 68 °F (20 °C) giving it a tropical feel although it is a few degrees too cool to be a true tropical climate on average due to cool night temperatures.[92][93] Los Angeles has plenty of sunshine throughout the year, with an average of only 35 days with measurable precipitation annually.[94]

Temperatures in the coastal basin exceed 90 °F (32 °C) on a dozen or so days in the year, from one day a month in April, May, June and November to three days a month in July, August, October and to five days in September.[94] Temperatures in the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys are considerably warmer. Temperatures are subject to substantial daily swings; in inland areas the difference between the average daily low and the average daily high is over 30 °F (17 °C).[95] The average annual temperature of the sea is 63 °F (17 °C), from 58 °F (14 °C) in January to 68 °F (20 °C) in August.[96] Hours of sunshine total more than 3,000 per year, from an average of 7 hours of sunshine per day in December to an average of 12 in July.[97]

A clear evening view of Mount Lee and the Hollywood Sign from the Griffith Observatory lawn

The Los Angeles area is also subject to phenomena typical of a microclimate, causing extreme variations in temperature in close physical proximity to each other. For example, the average July maximum temperature at the Santa Monica Pier is 70 °F (21 °C) whereas it is 95 °F (35 °C) in Canoga Park, 15 miles (24 km) away.[98] The city, like much of the Southern Californian coast, is subject to a late spring/early summer weather phenomenon called «June Gloom». This involves overcast or foggy skies in the morning that yield to sun by early afternoon.[99]

More recently, statewide droughts in California have further strained the city’s water security.[100] Downtown Los Angeles averages 14.67 in (373 mm) of precipitation annually, mainly occurring between November and March,[101][95] generally in the form of moderate rain showers, but sometimes as heavy rainfall during winter storms. Rainfall is usually higher in the hills and coastal slopes of the mountains because of orographic uplift. Summer days are usually rainless. Rarely, an incursion of moist air from the south or east can bring brief thunderstorms in late summer, especially to the mountains. The coast gets slightly less rainfall, while the inland and mountain areas get considerably more. Years of average rainfall are rare. The usual pattern is a year-to-year variability, with a short string of dry years of 5–10 in (130–250 mm) rainfall, followed by one or two wet years with more than 20 in (510 mm).[95] Wet years are usually associated with warm water El Niño conditions in the Pacific, dry years with cooler water La Niña episodes. A series of rainy days can bring floods to the lowlands and mudslides to the hills, especially after wildfires have denuded the slopes.

Both freezing temperatures and snowfall are extremely rare in the city basin and along the coast, with the last occurrence of a 32 °F (0 °C) reading at the downtown station being January 29, 1979;[95] freezing temperatures occur nearly every year in valley locations while the mountains within city limits typically receive snowfall every winter. The greatest snowfall recorded in downtown Los Angeles was 2.0 inches (5 cm) on January 15, 1932.[95][102] While the most recent snowfall occurred in February 2019, the first snowfall since 1962,[103][104] with snow falling in areas adjacent to Los Angeles as recently as January 2021.[105] At the official downtown station, the highest recorded temperature is 113 °F (45 °C) on September 27, 2010,[95][106] while the lowest is 28 °F (−2 °C),[95] on January 4, 1949.[95] Within the City of Los Angeles, the highest temperature ever officially recorded is 121 °F (49 °C), on September 6, 2020, at the weather station at Pierce College in the San Fernando Valley neighborhood of Woodland Hills.[107] During autumn and winter, Santa Ana winds sometimes bring much warmer and drier conditions to Los Angeles, and raise wildfire risk.

  • v
  • t
  • e

Climate data for Los Angeles (USC, Downtown), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1877–present

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 95
(35)
95
(35)
99
(37)
106
(41)
103
(39)
112
(44)
109
(43)
106
(41)
113
(45)
108
(42)
100
(38)
92
(33)
113
(45)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 83.0
(28.3)
82.8
(28.2)
85.8
(29.9)
90.1
(32.3)
88.9
(31.6)
89.1
(31.7)
93.5
(34.2)
95.2
(35.1)
99.4
(37.4)
95.7
(35.4)
88.9
(31.6)
81.0
(27.2)
101.5
(38.6)
Average high °F (°C) 68.0
(20.0)
68.0
(20.0)
69.9
(21.1)
72.4
(22.4)
73.7
(23.2)
77.2
(25.1)
82.0
(27.8)
84.0
(28.9)
83.0
(28.3)
78.6
(25.9)
72.9
(22.7)
67.4
(19.7)
74.8
(23.8)
Daily mean °F (°C) 58.4
(14.7)
59.0
(15.0)
61.1
(16.2)
63.6
(17.6)
65.9
(18.8)
69.3
(20.7)
73.3
(22.9)
74.7
(23.7)
73.6
(23.1)
69.3
(20.7)
63.0
(17.2)
57.8
(14.3)
65.8
(18.8)
Average low °F (°C) 48.9
(9.4)
50.0
(10.0)
52.4
(11.3)
54.8
(12.7)
58.1
(14.5)
61.4
(16.3)
64.7
(18.2)
65.4
(18.6)
64.2
(17.9)
59.9
(15.5)
53.1
(11.7)
48.2
(9.0)
56.8
(13.8)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 41.4
(5.2)
42.9
(6.1)
45.4
(7.4)
48.9
(9.4)
53.5
(11.9)
57.4
(14.1)
61.1
(16.2)
61.7
(16.5)
59.1
(15.1)
53.7
(12.1)
45.4
(7.4)
40.5
(4.7)
39.2
(4.0)
Record low °F (°C) 28
(−2)
28
(−2)
31
(−1)
36
(2)
40
(4)
46
(8)
49
(9)
49
(9)
44
(7)
40
(4)
34
(1)
30
(−1)
28
(−2)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 3.29
(84)
3.64
(92)
2.23
(57)
0.69
(18)
0.32
(8.1)
0.09
(2.3)
0.02
(0.51)
0.00
(0.00)
0.13
(3.3)
0.58
(15)
0.78
(20)
2.48
(63)
14.25
(362)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.1 6.3 5.1 2.8 1.9 0.5 0.4 0.1 0.4 2.2 2.8 5.5 34.1
Mean monthly sunshine hours 225.3 222.5 267.0 303.5 276.2 275.8 364.1 349.5 278.5 255.1 217.3 219.4 3,254.2
Percent possible sunshine 71 72 72 78 64 64 83 84 75 73 70 71 73
Source: NOAA (sun 1961–1977)[108][90][109][110]
  • v
  • t
  • e

Climate data for Los Angeles (LAX), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1944–present

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 91
(33)
92
(33)
95
(35)
102
(39)
97
(36)
104
(40)
97
(36)
98
(37)
110
(43)
106
(41)
101
(38)
94
(34)
110
(43)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 81.2
(27.3)
80.1
(26.7)
80.6
(27.0)
83.1
(28.4)
80.6
(27.0)
79.8
(26.6)
83.7
(28.7)
86.0
(30.0)
90.7
(32.6)
90.9
(32.7)
87.2
(30.7)
78.8
(26.0)
95.5
(35.3)
Average high °F (°C) 66.3
(19.1)
65.6
(18.7)
66.1
(18.9)
68.1
(20.1)
69.5
(20.8)
72.0
(22.2)
75.1
(23.9)
76.7
(24.8)
76.5
(24.7)
74.4
(23.6)
70.9
(21.6)
66.1
(18.9)
70.6
(21.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 57.9
(14.4)
57.9
(14.4)
59.1
(15.1)
61.1
(16.2)
63.6
(17.6)
66.4
(19.1)
69.6
(20.9)
70.7
(21.5)
70.1
(21.2)
67.1
(19.5)
62.3
(16.8)
57.6
(14.2)
63.6
(17.6)
Average low °F (°C) 49.4
(9.7)
50.1
(10.1)
52.2
(11.2)
54.2
(12.3)
57.6
(14.2)
60.9
(16.1)
64.0
(17.8)
64.8
(18.2)
63.7
(17.6)
59.8
(15.4)
53.7
(12.1)
49.1
(9.5)
56.6
(13.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 41.8
(5.4)
42.9
(6.1)
45.3
(7.4)
48.0
(8.9)
52.7
(11.5)
56.7
(13.7)
60.2
(15.7)
61.0
(16.1)
58.7
(14.8)
53.2
(11.8)
46.1
(7.8)
41.1
(5.1)
39.4
(4.1)
Record low °F (°C) 27
(−3)
34
(1)
35
(2)
42
(6)
45
(7)
48
(9)
52
(11)
51
(11)
47
(8)
43
(6)
38
(3)
32
(0)
27
(−3)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 2.86
(73)
2.99
(76)
1.73
(44)
0.60
(15)
0.28
(7.1)
0.08
(2.0)
0.04
(1.0)
0.00
(0.00)
0.11
(2.8)
0.49
(12)
0.82
(21)
2.23
(57)
12.23
(311)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.1 6.3 5.6 2.6 1.7 0.5 0.5 0.1 0.5 2.0 3.2 5.4 34.5
Average relative humidity (%) 63.4 67.9 70.5 71.0 74.0 75.9 76.6 76.6 74.2 70.5 65.5 62.9 70.8
Average dew point °F (°C) 41.4
(5.2)
44.4
(6.9)
46.6
(8.1)
49.1
(9.5)
52.7
(11.5)
56.5
(13.6)
60.1
(15.6)
61.2
(16.2)
59.2
(15.1)
54.1
(12.3)
46.8
(8.2)
41.4
(5.2)
51.1
(10.6)
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and dew point 1961–1990)[108][111][112][113]

Environmental issues

The city is often covered in smog, December 2005.

External audio
audio icon “Fighting Smog in Los Angeles”, Distillations Podcast, 2018 Science History Institute

A Gabrielino settlement in the area was called iyáangẚ (written Yang-na by the Spanish), which has been translated as «poison oak place».[29][30] Yang-na has also been translated as «the valley of smoke».[114][115] Owing to geography, heavy reliance on automobiles, and the Los Angeles/Long Beach port complex, Los Angeles suffers from air pollution in the form of smog. The Los Angeles Basin and the San Fernando Valley are susceptible to atmospheric inversion, which holds in the exhausts from road vehicles, airplanes, locomotives, shipping, manufacturing, and other sources.[116] The percentage of small particle pollution (the kind that penetrates into the lungs) coming from vehicles in the city can get as high as 55 percent.[citation needed]

The smog season lasts from approximately May to October.[117] While other large cities rely on rain to clear smog, Los Angeles gets only 15 inches (380 mm) of rain each year: pollution accumulates over many consecutive days. Issues of air quality in Los Angeles and other major cities led to the passage of early national environmental legislation, including the Clean Air Act. When the act was passed, California was unable to create a State Implementation Plan that would enable it to meet the new air quality standards, largely because of the level of pollution in Los Angeles generated by older vehicles.[118] More recently, the state of California has led the nation in working to limit pollution by mandating low-emission vehicles. Smog is expected to continue to drop in the coming years because of aggressive steps to reduce it, which include electric and hybrid cars, improvements in mass transit, and other measures.

The number of Stage 1 smog alerts in Los Angeles has declined from over 100 per year in the 1970s to almost zero in the new millennium.[119] Despite improvement, the 2006 and 2007 annual reports of the American Lung Association ranked the city as the most polluted in the country with short-term particle pollution and year-round particle pollution.[120] In 2008, the city was ranked the second most polluted and again had the highest year-round particulate pollution.[121] The city met its goal of providing 20 percent of the city’s power from renewable sources in 2010.[122] The American Lung Association’s 2013 survey ranks the metro area as having the nation’s worst smog, and fourth in both short-term and year-round pollution amounts.[123]

Los Angeles is also home to the nation’s largest urban oil field. There are more than 700 active oil wells within 1,500 feet (460 m) of homes, churches, schools and hospitals in the city, a situation about which the EPA has voiced serious concerns.[124]

The city has an urban population of bobcats (Lynx rufus).[125] Mange is a common problem in this population.[125] Although Serieys et al. 2014 find selection of immune genetics at several loci they do not demonstrate that this produces a real difference which helps the bobcats to survive future mange outbreaks.[125]

Demographics

City compared to State & U.S. 
2019 Estimate[126] L.A. CA U.S.
Total population 3,979,576 39,512,223 328,239,523
Population change, 2010 to 2019 +4.9% +6.1% +6.3%
Population density (people/sqmi) 8,514.4 253.9 92.6
Median household income (2018) $58,385 $71,228 $60,293
Bachelor’s degree or higher 33.7% 33.3% 31.5%
Foreign born 37.3% 26.9% 13.5%
White (non-Hispanic) 28.5% 36.8% 60.4%
Black 8.9% 6.5% 13.4%
Hispanic (any race) 48.6% 39.3% 18.3%
Asian 11.6% 15.3% 5.9%
Historical population
Census Pop.
1850 1,610
1860 4,385 172.4%
1870 5,728 30.6%
1880 11,183 95.2%
1890 50,395 350.6%
1900 102,479 103.4%
1910 319,198 211.5%
1920 576,673 80.7%
1930 1,238,048 114.7%
1940 1,504,277 21.5%
1950 1,970,358 31.0%
1960 2,479,015 25.8%
1970 2,811,801 13.4%
1980 2,968,528 5.6%
1990 3,485,398 17.4%
2000 3,694,820 6.0%
2010 3,792,621 2.6%
2020 3,898,747 2.8%
2022 (est.) 3,819,538 [127] −2.0%
United States Census Bureau[128]
2010–2020, 2021[7]

The 2010 U.S. census[129] reported Los Angeles had a population of 3,792,621.[130] The population density was 8,092.3 people per square mile (2,913.0/km2). The age distribution was 874,525 people (23.1%) under 18, 434,478 people (11.5%) from 18 to 24, 1,209,367 people (31.9%) from 25 to 44, 877,555 people (23.1%) from 45 to 64, and 396,696 people (10.5%) who were 65 or older.[130] The median age was 34.1 years. For every 100 females, there were 99.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 97.6 males.[130]

There were 1,413,995 housing units—up from 1,298,350 during 2005–2009[130]—at an average density of 2,812.8 households per square mile (1,086.0/km2), of which 503,863 (38.2%) were owner-occupied, and 814,305 (61.8%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 2.1%; the rental vacancy rate was 6.1%. 1,535,444 people (40.5% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 2,172,576 people (57.3%) lived in rental housing units.[130]

Percentage of households with incomes above $150k across LA County census tracts

According to the 2010 United States Census, Los Angeles had a median household income of $49,497, with 22.0% of the population living below the federal poverty line.[130]

Race and ethnicity

Racial and ethnic composition 1940[131] 1970[131] 1990[131] 2010[132] 2020[132]
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 7.1% 17.1% 39.9% 48.5% 46.9%
White (non-Hispanic) 86.3% 61.1% 37.3% 28.7% 28.9%
Asian (non-Hispanic) 2.2% 3.6% 9.8% 11.1% 11.7%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 4.2% 17.9% 14.0% 9.2% 8.3%
Other (non-Hispanic) N/A N/A 0.1% 0.3% 0.7%
Two or more races (non-Hispanic) N/A N/A N/A 2.0% 3.3%

Map of racial and ethnic distribution in Los Angeles, 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people:  White

 Black

 Asian

 Hispanic

 Other

According to the 2010 census, the racial makeup of Los Angeles included: 1,888,158 Whites (49.8%), 365,118 African Americans (9.6%), 28,215 Native Americans (0.7%), 426,959 Asians (11.3%), 5,577 Pacific Islanders (0.1%), 902,959 from other races (23.8%), and 175,635 (4.6%) from two or more races.[130] Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 1,838,822 persons (48.5%). Los Angeles is home to people from more than 140 countries speaking 224 different identified languages.[133] Ethnic enclaves like Chinatown, Historic Filipinotown, Koreatown, Little Armenia, Little Ethiopia, Tehrangeles, Little Tokyo, Little Bangladesh, and Thai Town provide examples of the polyglot character of Los Angeles.

Non-Hispanic Whites were 28.7% of the population in 2010,[130] compared to 86.3% in 1940.[131] The majority of the Non-Hispanic White population is living in areas along the Pacific coast as well as in neighborhoods near and on the Santa Monica Mountains from the Pacific Palisades to Los Feliz.

Mexican ancestry make up the largest ethnic group of Hispanics at 31.9% of the city’s population, followed by those of Salvadoran (6.0%) and Guatemalan (3.6%) heritage. The Hispanic population has a long established Mexican-American and Central American community and is spread well-nigh throughout the entire city of Los Angeles and its metropolitan area. It is most heavily concentrated in regions around Downtown as East Los Angeles, Northeast Los Angeles and Westlake. Furthermore, a vast majority of residents in neighborhoods in eastern South Los Angeles towards Downey are of Hispanic origin.[citation needed]

The largest Asian ethnic groups are Filipinos (3.2%) and Koreans (2.9%), which have their own established ethnic enclaves—Koreatown in the Wilshire Center and Historic Filipinotown.[134] Chinese people, which make up 1.8% of Los Angeles’s population, reside mostly outside of Los Angeles city limits and rather in the San Gabriel Valley of eastern Los Angeles County, but make a sizable presence in the city, notably in Chinatown.[135] Chinatown and Thaitown are also home to many Thais and Cambodians, which make up 0.3% and 0.1% of Los Angeles’s population, respectively. The Japanese comprise 0.9% of LA’s population and have an established Little Tokyo in the city’s downtown, and another significant community of Japanese Americans is in the Sawtelle district of West Los Angeles. Vietnamese make up 0.5% of Los Angeles’s population. Indians make up 0.9% of the city’s population. The city is also home to Armenians, Assyrians, and Iranians, many of whom live in enclaves like Little Armenia and Tehrangeles.[citation needed]

African Americans have been the predominant ethnic group in South Los Angeles, which has emerged as the largest African American community in the western United States since the 1960s. The neighborhoods of South Los Angeles with highest concentration of African Americans include Crenshaw, Baldwin Hills, Leimert Park, Hyde Park, Gramercy Park, Manchester Square and Watts.[136] Apart from South Los Angeles, neighborhoods in the Central region of Los Angeles, as Mid-City and Mid-Wilshire have a moderate concentration of African Americans as well.[citation needed]

Los Angeles has the second largest Mexican, Armenian, Salvadoran, Filipino and Guatemalan population by city in the world, the third largest Canadian population in the world, and has the largest Japanese, Iranian/Persian, Cambodian and Romani (Gypsy) population in the country.[137]

There is an Italian community in Los Angeles. Italians are concentrated in San Pedro.[138]

Religion

According to a 2014 study by the Pew Research Center, Christianity is the most prevalently practiced religion in Los Angeles (65%).[139][140] The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles is the largest archdiocese in the country.[142] Cardinal Roger Mahony, as the archbishop, oversaw construction of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, which opened in September 2002 in Downtown Los Angeles.[143]

In 2011, the once common, but ultimately lapsed, custom of conducting a procession and Mass in honor of Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles, in commemoration of the founding of the City of Los Angeles in 1781, was revived by the Queen of Angels Foundation and its founder Mark Albert, with the support of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles as well as several civic leaders.[144] The recently revived custom is a continuation of the original processions and Masses that commenced on the first anniversary of the founding of Los Angeles in 1782 and continued for nearly a century thereafter.

With 621,000 Jews in the metropolitan area, the region has the second-largest population of Jews in the United States, after New York City.[145] Many of Los Angeles’s Jews now live on the Westside and in the San Fernando Valley, though Boyle Heights once had a large Jewish population prior to World War II due to restrictive housing covenants. Major Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods include Hancock Park, Pico-Robertson, and Valley Village, while Jewish Israelis are well represented in the Encino and Tarzana neighborhoods, and Persian Jews in Beverly Hills. Many varieties of Judaism are represented in the greater Los Angeles area, including Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, and Reconstructionist. The Breed Street Shul in East Los Angeles, built in 1923, was the largest synagogue west of Chicago in its early decades; it is no longer in daily use as a synagogue and is being converted to a museum and community center.[146][147] The Kabbalah Centre also has a presence in the city.[148]

The International Church of the Foursquare Gospel was founded in Los Angeles by Aimee Semple McPherson in 1923 and remains headquartered there to this day. For many years, the church convened at Angelus Temple, which, at its construction, was one of the largest churches in the country.[149]

Los Angeles has had a rich and influential Protestant tradition. The first Protestant service in Los Angeles was a Methodist meeting held in a private home in 1850 and the oldest Protestant church still operating, First Congregational Church, was founded in 1867.[150] In the early 1900s the Bible Institute Of Los Angeles published the founding documents of the Christian Fundamentalist movement and the Azusa Street Revival launched Pentecostalism.[150] The Metropolitan Community Church also had its origins in the Los Angeles area.[151] Important churches in the city include First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, Bel Air Presbyterian Church, First African Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, West Angeles Church of God in Christ, Second Baptist Church, Crenshaw Christian Center, McCarty Memorial Christian Church, and First Congregational Church.

The Los Angeles California Temple, the second-largest temple operated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is on Santa Monica Boulevard in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. Dedicated in 1956, it was the first temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints built in California and it was the largest in the world when completed.[152]

The Hollywood region of Los Angeles also has several significant headquarters, churches, and the Celebrity Center of Scientology.[153][154]

Because of Los Angeles’s large multi-ethnic population, a wide variety of faiths are practiced, including Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Zoroastrianism, Sikhism, Baháʼí, various Eastern Orthodox Churches, Sufism, Shintoism, Taoism, Confucianism, Chinese folk religion and countless others. Immigrants from Asia for example, have formed a number of significant Buddhist congregations making the city home to the greatest variety of Buddhists in the world. The first Buddhist joss house was founded in the city in 1875.[150] Atheism and other secular beliefs are also common, as the city is the largest in the Western U.S. Unchurched Belt.

Homelessness

Homeless people outside city hall, 2021

As of January 2020, there are 41,290 homeless people in the City of Los Angeles, comprising roughly 62% of the homeless population of LA County.[155] This is an increase of 14.2% over the previous year (with a 12.7% increase in the overall homeless population of LA County).[156][157] The epicenter of homelessness in Los Angeles is the Skid Row neighborhood, which contains 8,000 homeless people, one of the largest stable populations of homeless people in the United States.[158][159] The increased homeless population in Los Angeles has been attributed to lack of housing affordability[160] and to substance abuse.[161] Almost 60 percent of the 82,955 people who became newly homeless in 2019 said their homelessness was because of economic hardship.[156] In Los Angeles, black people are roughly four times more likely to experience homelessness.[156][162]

Crime

The LAPD on May Day 2006 in front of the new Caltrans District 7 Headquarters

In 1992, the city of Los Angeles recorded 1,092 murders.[163] Los Angeles experienced a significant decline in crime in the 1990s and late 2000s and reached a 50-year low in 2009 with 314 homicides.[164][165] This is a rate of 7.85 per 100,000 population—a major decrease from 1980 when a homicide rate of 34.2 per 100,000 was reported.[166][167] This included 15 officer-involved shootings. One shooting led to the death of a SWAT team member, Randal Simmons, the first in LAPD’s history.[168] Los Angeles in the year of 2013 totaled 251 murders, a decrease of 16 percent from the previous year. Police speculate the drop resulted from a number of factors, including young people spending more time online.[169] In 2021, murders rose to the highest level since 2008 and there were 348.[170]

In 2015, it was revealed that the LAPD had been under-reporting crime for eight years, making the crime rate in the city appear much lower than it really is.[171][172]

The Dragna crime family and the Cohen crime family dominated organized crime in the city during the Prohibition era[173] and reached its peak during the 1940s and 1950s with the battle of Sunset Strip as part of the American Mafia, but has gradually declined since then with the rise of various black and Hispanic gangs in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[173]

According to the Los Angeles Police Department, the city is home to 45,000 gang members, organized into 450 gangs.[174] Among them are the Crips and Bloods, which are both African American street gangs that originated in the South Los Angeles region. Latino street gangs such as the Sureños, a Mexican American street gang, and Mara Salvatrucha, which has mainly members of Salvadoran descent, all originated in Los Angeles. This has led to the city being referred to as the «Gang Capital of America».[175]

Economy

Employment by industry in Los Angeles County (2015)

Kaiser Sunset Hospital in Los Angeles. Kaiser Permanente was the largest non-government employer in Los Angeles County in 2018.

LA gas prices before taxes

Median housing price by metro area

The economy of Los Angeles is driven by international trade, entertainment (television, motion pictures, video games, music recording, and production), aerospace, technology, petroleum, fashion, apparel, and tourism.[citation needed] Other significant industries include finance, telecommunications, law, healthcare, and transportation. In the 2017 Global Financial Centres Index, Los Angeles was ranked as having the 19th most competitive financial center in the world, and sixth most competitive in the United States (after New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, and Washington, D.C.).[176]

One of the five major film studios, Paramount Pictures, is within the city limits,[177] its location being part of the so-called «Thirty-Mile Zone» of entertainment headquarters in Southern California.

Los Angeles is the largest manufacturing center in the United States.[178] The contiguous ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach together comprise the busiest port in the United States by some measures and the fifth-busiest port in the world, vital to trade within the Pacific Rim.[178]

The Los Angeles metropolitan area has a gross metropolitan product of over $1.0 trillion (as of 2018),[19] making it the third-largest economic metropolitan area in the world after Tokyo and New York.[19] Los Angeles has been classified an «alpha world city» according to a 2012 study by a group at Loughborough University.[179]

The Department of Cannabis Regulation enforces cannabis legislation after the legalization of the sale and distribution of cannabis in 2016.[180] As of October 2019, more than 300 existing cannabis businesses (both retailers and their suppliers) have been granted approval to operate in what is considered the nation’s largest market.[181][182]

As of 2018, Los Angeles is home to three Fortune 500 companies: AECOM, CBRE Group, and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co.[183] Other companies headquartered in Los Angeles and the surrounding metropolitan area include The Aerospace Corporation, California Pizza Kitchen,[184] Capital Group Companies, Deluxe Entertainment Services Group, Dine Brands Global, DreamWorks Animation, Dollar Shave Club, Fandango Media, Farmers Insurance Group, Forever 21, Hulu, Panda Express, SpaceX, Ubisoft Film & Television, The Walt Disney Company, Universal Pictures, Warner Bros., Warner Music Group, and Trader Joe’s.

Largest non-government employers in Los Angeles County, August 2018[185]
Rank Employer Employees
1 Kaiser Permanente 37,468
2 University of Southern California 21,055
3 Northrop Grumman Corp. 16,600
4 Providence Health and Services Southern California 15,952
5 Target Corp. 15,000
6 Ralphs/Food 4 Less (Kroger Co. Division) 14,970
7 Cedars-Sinai Medical Center 14,903
8 Walt Disney Co. 13,000
9 Allied Universal 12,879
10 NBC Universal 12,000

Arts and culture

Los Angeles is often billed as the «Creative Capital of the World» because one in every six of its residents works in a creative industry[186] and there are more artists, writers, filmmakers, actors, dancers and musicians living and working in Los Angeles than any other city at any other time in world history.[187]

Movies and the performing arts

The city’s Hollywood neighborhood has been recognized as the center of the motion picture industry, having held this distinction since the early 20th century, and the Los Angeles area is also associated with being the center of the television industry.[188] The city is home to major film studios as well as major record labels. Los Angeles plays host to the annual Academy Awards, the Primetime Emmy Awards, the Grammy Awards as well as many other entertainment industry awards shows. Los Angeles is the site of the USC School of Cinematic Arts which is the oldest film school in the United States.[189]

The performing arts play a major role in Los Angeles’s cultural identity. According to the USC Stevens Institute for Innovation, «there are more than 1,100 annual theatrical productions and 21 openings every week.»[187] The Los Angeles Music Center is «one of the three largest performing arts centers in the nation», with more than 1.3 million visitors per year.[190] The Walt Disney Concert Hall, centerpiece of the Music Center, is home to the prestigious Los Angeles Philharmonic.[191] Notable organizations such as Center Theatre Group, the Los Angeles Master Chorale, and the Los Angeles Opera are also resident companies of the Music Center.[192][193][194] Talent is locally cultivated at premier institutions such as the Colburn School and the USC Thornton School of Music.

Museums and galleries

There are 841 museums and art galleries in Los Angeles County,[195] more museums per capita than any other city in the U.S.[195] Some of the notable museums are the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (the largest art museum in the Western United States[196]), the Getty Center (part of the J. Paul Getty Trust, the world’s wealthiest art institution[197]), the Petersen Automotive Museum,[198] the Huntington Library,[199] the Natural History Museum,[200] the Battleship Iowa,[201] and the Museum of Contemporary Art.[202] A significant number of art galleries are on Gallery Row, and tens of thousands attend the monthly Downtown Art Walk there.[203]

Libraries

The Los Angeles Public Library system operates 72 public libraries in the city.[204] Enclaves of unincorporated areas are served by branches of the County of Los Angeles Public Library, many of which are within walking distance to residents.[205]

Landmarks

Important landmarks in Los Angeles include the Hollywood Sign,[206] Walt Disney Concert Hall, Capitol Records Building,[207] the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels,[208] Angels Flight,[209] Grauman’s Chinese Theatre,[210] Dolby Theatre,[211] Griffith Observatory,[212] Getty Center,[213] Getty Villa,[214] Stahl House,[215] the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, L.A. Live,[216] the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Venice Canal Historic District and boardwalk, Theme Building, Bradbury Building, U.S. Bank Tower, Wilshire Grand Center, Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles City Hall, Hollywood Bowl,[217] battleship USS Iowa, Watts Towers,[218] Staples Center, Dodger Stadium, and Olvera Street.[219]

Cuisine

Grand Central Market in Downtown Los Angeles

Los Angeles’s food culture is a fusion of global cuisine brought on by the city’s rich immigrant history and population. Latin American immigrants, particularly Mexican immigrants, brought tacos, burritos, quesadillas, tortas, tamales, and enchiladas served from food trucks and stands, taquerias, and cafés. Asian restaurants, many immigrant-owned, exist throughout the city with hotspots in Chinatown,[220] Koreatown,[221] and Little Tokyo.[222] Los Angeles also carries an outsized offering of vegan, vegetarian, and plant-based options. As of 2022, the Michelin Guide recognized 10 restaurants granting 2 restaurants two stars and eight restaurants one star. [223]

Sports

The city of Los Angeles and its metropolitan area are the home of eleven top-level professional sports teams, several of which play in neighboring communities but use Los Angeles in their name. These teams include the Los Angeles Dodgers[224] and Los Angeles Angels[225] of Major League Baseball (MLB), the Los Angeles Rams[226] and Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League (NFL), the Los Angeles Lakers[227] and Los Angeles Clippers[228] of the National Basketball Association (NBA), the Los Angeles Kings[229] and Anaheim Ducks[230] of the National Hockey League (NHL), the Los Angeles Galaxy[231] and Los Angeles FC[232] of Major League Soccer (MLS), and the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA).[233]

Other notable sports teams include the UCLA Bruins and the USC Trojans in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), both of which are Division I teams in the Pac-12 Conference, but will soon be moved to the Big Ten Conference.[234]

Los Angeles is the second-largest city in the United States but hosted no NFL team between 1995 and 2015. At one time, the Los Angeles area hosted two NFL teams: the Rams and the Raiders. Both left the city in 1995, with the Rams moving to St. Louis, and the Raiders moving back to their original home of Oakland. After 21 seasons in St. Louis, on January 12, 2016, the NFL announced the Rams would be moving back to Los Angeles for the 2016 NFL season with its home games played at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for four seasons.[235][236][237] Prior to 1995, the Rams played their home games in the Coliseum from 1946 to 1979 which made them the first professional sports team to play in Los Angeles, and then moved to Anaheim Stadium from 1980 until 1994. The San Diego Chargers announced on January 12, 2017, that they would also relocate back to Los Angeles (the first since its inaugural season in 1960) and become the Los Angeles Chargers beginning in the 2017 NFL season and played at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California for three seasons.[238] The Rams and the Chargers would soon move to the newly built SoFi Stadium, located in nearby Inglewood during the 2020 season.[239]

Los Angeles boasts a number of sports venues, including Dodger Stadium,[240] the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum,[241] Banc of California Stadium[242] and the Crypto.com Arena.[243] The Forum, SoFi Stadium, Dignity Health Sports Park, the Rose Bowl, Angel Stadium, and the Honda Center are also in adjacent cities and cities in Los Angeles’s metropolitan area.[244]

Los Angeles has twice hosted the Summer Olympic Games: in 1932 and in 1984, and will host the games for a third time in 2028.[245] Los Angeles will be the third city after London (1908, 1948 and 2012) and Paris (1900, 1924 and 2024) to host the Olympic Games three times. When the tenth Olympic Games were hosted in 1932, the former 10th Street was renamed Olympic Blvd. Los Angeles also hosted the Deaflympics in 1985[246] and Special Olympics World Summer Games in 2015.[247]

8 NFL Super Bowls were also held in the city and its surrounding areas- 2 at the Memorial Coliseum (the first Super Bowl, I and VII), 5 at the Rose Bowl in suburban Pasadena (XI, XIV, XVII, XXI, and XXVII), and 1 at the suburban Inglewood (LVI) .[248] The Rose Bowl also hosts an annual and highly prestigious NCAA college football game called the Rose Bowl, which happens every New Year’s Day.

Los Angeles also hosted 8 FIFA World Cup soccer games at the Rose Bowl in 1994, including the final, where Brazil won. The Rose Bowl also hosted 4 matches in the 1999 FIFA Women’s World Cup, including the final, where the United States won against China on penalty kicks. This was the game where Brandi Chastain took her shirt off after she scored the tournament-winning penalty kick, creating an iconic image. Los Angeles will be one of eleven US host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup with matches set to be held at SoFi Stadium.[249]

Los Angeles is one of six North American cities to have won championships in all five of its major leagues (MLB, NFL, NHL, NBA and MLS), having completed the feat with the Kings’ 2012 Stanley Cup title.[250]

Government

The Tom Bradley Room, making up the whole interior of L.A. City Hall’s 27th floor

Los Angeles is a charter city as opposed to a general law city. The current charter was adopted on June 8, 1999, and has been amended many times.[251] The elected government consists of the Los Angeles City Council and the mayor of Los Angeles, which operate under a mayor–council government, as well as the city attorney (not to be confused with the district attorney, a county office) and controller. The mayor is Karen Bass.[252] There are 15 city council districts.

The city has many departments and appointed officers, including the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD),[253] the Los Angeles Board of Police Commissioners,[254] the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD),[255] the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA),[256] the Los Angeles Department of Transportation (LADOT),[257] and the Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL).[258]

The charter of the City of Los Angeles ratified by voters in 1999 created a system of advisory neighborhood councils that would represent the diversity of stakeholders, defined as those who live, work or own property in the neighborhood. The neighborhood councils are relatively autonomous and spontaneous in that they identify their own boundaries, establish their own bylaws, and elect their own officers. There are about 90 neighborhood councils.

Residents of Los Angeles elect supervisors for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th supervisorial districts.

Federal and state representation

In the California State Assembly, Los Angeles is split between fourteen districts.[259] In the California State Senate, the city is split between eight districts.[260] In the United States House of Representatives, it is split among ten congressional districts.[261]

Education

Colleges and universities

There are three public universities within the city limits: California State University, Los Angeles (CSULA), California State University, Northridge (CSUN) and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).[262]

Private colleges in the city include:

  • American Film Institute Conservatory[263]
  • Alliant International University[264]
  • American Academy of Dramatic Arts (Los Angeles Campus)[265]
  • American Jewish University[266]
  • Abraham Lincoln University[267]
  • The American Musical and Dramatic Academy – Los Angeles campus
  • Antioch University’s Los Angeles campus[268]
  • Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science[269]
  • Colburn School[270]
  • Columbia College Hollywood[271]
  • Emerson College (Los Angeles Campus)[272]
  • Emperor’s College[273]
  • Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising’s Los Angeles campus (FIDM)
  • Los Angeles Film School[274]
  • Loyola Marymount University (LMU is also the parent university of Loyola Law School in Los Angeles)[275]
  • Mount St. Mary’s College[276]
  • National University of California[277]
  • Occidental College («Oxy»)[278]
  • Otis College of Art and Design (Otis)[279]
  • Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc)[280]
  • Southwestern Law School[281]
  • University of Southern California (USC)[282]
  • Woodbury University[283]

The community college system consists of nine campuses governed by the trustees of the Los Angeles Community College District:

  • East Los Angeles College (ELAC)[284]
  • Los Angeles City College (LACC)[285]
  • Los Angeles Harbor College[286]
  • Los Angeles Mission College[287]
  • Los Angeles Pierce College[288]
  • Los Angeles Valley College (LAVC)[289]
  • Los Angeles Southwest College[290]
  • Los Angeles Trade-Technical College[291]
  • West Los Angeles College[292]

There are numerous additional colleges and universities outside the city limits in the Greater Los Angeles area, including the Claremont Colleges consortium, which includes the most selective liberal arts colleges in the U.S., and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), one of the top STEM-focused research institutions in the world.

Schools

Los Angeles Unified School District serves almost all of the city of Los Angeles, as well as several surrounding communities, with a student population around 800,000.[293] After Proposition 13 was approved in 1978, urban school districts had considerable trouble with funding. LAUSD has become known for its underfunded, overcrowded and poorly maintained campuses, although its 162 Magnet schools help compete with local private schools.

Several small sections of Los Angeles are in the Inglewood Unified School District,[294] and the Las Virgenes Unified School District.[295] The Los Angeles County Office of Education operates the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts.

Media

Former Los Angeles Times headquarters in the Civic Center

The Los Angeles metro area is the second-largest broadcast designated market area in the U.S. (after New York) with 5,431,140 homes (4.956% of the U.S.), which is served by a wide variety of local AM and FM radio and television stations. Los Angeles and New York City are the only two media markets to have seven VHF allocations assigned to them.[296]

As part of the region’s aforementioned creative industry, the Big Four major broadcast television networks, ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC, all have production facilities and offices throughout various areas of Los Angeles. All four major broadcast television networks, plus major Spanish-language networks Telemundo and Univision, also own and operate stations that both serve the Los Angeles market and serve as each network’s West Coast flagship station: ABC’s KABC-TV (Channel 7),[297] CBS’s KCBS-TV (Channel 2), Fox’s KTTV-TV (Channel 11),[298] NBC’s KNBC-TV (Channel 4),[299] MyNetworkTV’s KCOP-TV (Channel 13), Telemundo’s KVEA-TV (Channel 52), and Univision’s KMEX-TV (Channel 34). The region also has four PBS stations, with KCET, re-joining the network as secondary affiliate in August 2019, after spending the previous eight years as the nation’s largest independent public television station. KTBN (Channel 40) is the flagship station of the religious Trinity Broadcasting Network, based out of Santa Ana. A variety of independent television stations, such as KCAL-TV (Channel 9) and KTLA-TV (Channel 5), also operate in the area.

The major daily English-language newspaper in the area is the Los Angeles Times.[300] La Opinión is the city’s major daily Spanish-language paper.[301] The Korea Times is the city’s major daily Korean-language paper while The World Journal is the city and county’s major Chinese newspaper. The Los Angeles Sentinel is the city’s major African-American weekly paper, boasting the largest African-American readership in the Western United States.[302] Investor’s Business Daily is distributed from its LA corporate offices, which are headquartered in Playa del Rey.[303]

There are also a number of smaller regional newspapers, alternative weeklies and magazines, including the Los Angeles Register, Los Angeles Community News, (which focuses on coverage of the greater Los Angeles area), Los Angeles Daily News (which focuses coverage on the San Fernando Valley), LA Weekly, L.A. Record (which focuses coverage on the music scene in the Greater Los Angeles Area), Los Angeles Magazine, the Los Angeles Business Journal, the Los Angeles Daily Journal (legal industry paper), The Hollywood Reporter, Variety (both entertainment industry papers), and Los Angeles Downtown News.[304] In addition to the major papers, numerous local periodicals serve immigrant communities in their native languages, including Armenian, English, Korean, Persian, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew, and Arabic. Many cities adjacent to Los Angeles also have their own daily newspapers whose coverage and availability overlaps with certain Los Angeles neighborhoods. Examples include The Daily Breeze (serving the South Bay), and The Long Beach Press-Telegram.

Los Angeles arts, culture and nightlife news is also covered by a number of local and national online guides, including Time Out Los Angeles, Thrillist, Kristin’s List, DailyCandy, Diversity News Magazine, LAist, and Flavorpill.[305][306][307][308]

Infrastructure

Transportation

Freeways

The city and the rest of the Los Angeles metropolitan area are served by an extensive network of freeways and highways. Texas Transportation Institute’s annual Urban Mobility Report ranked Los Angeles area roads the most congested in the United States in 2019 as measured by annual delay per traveler, area residents experiencing a cumulative average of 119 hours waiting in traffic that year.[309] Los Angeles was followed by San Francisco/Oakland, Washington, D.C., and Miami. Despite the congestion in the city, the mean daily travel time for commuters in Los Angeles is shorter than other major cities, including New York City, Philadelphia and Chicago. Los Angeles’s mean travel time for work commutes in 2006 was 29.2 minutes, similar to those of San Francisco and Washington, D.C.[310]

The major highways that connect LA to the rest of the nation include Interstate 5, which runs south through San Diego to Tijuana in Mexico and north through Sacramento, Portland, and Seattle to the Canada–US border; Interstate 10, the southernmost east–west, coast-to-coast Interstate Highway in the United States, going to Jacksonville, Florida; and U.S. Route 101, which heads to the California Central Coast, San Francisco, the Redwood Empire, and the Oregon and Washington coasts.

Transit systems

The LA County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (LA County Metro) and other agencies operate an extensive system of bus lines, as well as subway and light rail lines across Los Angeles County, with a combined monthly ridership (measured in individual boardings) of 38.8 million as of September 2011. The majority of this (30.5 million) is taken up by the city’s bus system,[311] the second busiest in the country. The subway and light rail combined average the remaining roughly 8.2 million boardings per month.[311] LA County Metro recorded over 397 million boardings for the 2017 calendar year, including about 285 million bus riders and about 113 million riding on rail transit.[312] For the first quarter of 2018, there were just under 95 million system-wide boardings, down from about 98 million in 2017, and about 105 million in 2016.[313] In 2005, 10.2% of Los Angeles commuters rode some form of public transportation.[314] According to the 2016 American Community Survey, 9.2% of working Los Angeles (city) residents made the journey to work via public transportation.[315]

The city’s subway system is the ninth busiest in the United States and its light rail system is the country’s busiest.[316] The rail system includes the B and D subway lines, as well as the A, C, E, and L light rail lines. In 2016, the E Line was extended to the Pacific Ocean at Santa Monica. The Metro G and J lines are bus rapid transit lines with stops and frequency similar to those of light rail. As of 2022, the total number of light rail stations is 99. The city is also central to the commuter rail system Metrolink, which links Los Angeles to all neighboring counties as well as many suburbs.[317]

Besides the rail service provided by Metrolink and the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, Los Angeles is served by inter-city passenger trains from Amtrak. The main rail station in the city is Union Station just north of Downtown.

In addition, the city directly contracts for local and commuter bus service through the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, or LADOT.

Airports

The main international and domestic airport serving Los Angeles is Los Angeles International Airport (IATA: LAX, ICAO: KLAX), commonly referred to by its airport code, LAX.[318] It is located on the Westside of Los Angeles near the Sofi Stadium in Inglewood.

Other major nearby commercial airports include:

  • (IATA: ONT, ICAO: KONT) Ontario International Airport, owned by the city of Ontario, CA; serves the Inland Empire.[319]
  • (IATA: BUR, ICAO: KBUR) Hollywood Burbank Airport, jointly owned by the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and Pasadena. Formerly known as Bob Hope Airport and Burbank Airport, the closest airport to Downtown Los Angeles serves the San Fernando, San Gabriel, and Antelope Valleys.[320]
  • (IATA: LGB, ICAO: KLGB) Long Beach Airport, serves the Long Beach/Harbor area.[321]
  • (IATA: SNA, ICAO: KSNA) John Wayne Airport of Orange County.

One of the world’s busiest general-aviation airports is also in Los Angeles: Van Nuys Airport (IATA: VNY, ICAO: KVNY).[322]

Seaports

Port of LA traffic

  Loaded Exports

  Empty Imports

The Port of Los Angeles is in San Pedro Bay in the San Pedro neighborhood, approximately 20 miles (32 km) south of Downtown. Also called Los Angeles Harbor and WORLDPORT LA, the port complex occupies 7,500 acres (30 km2) of land and water along 43 miles (69 km) of waterfront. It adjoins the separate Port of Long Beach.[323]

The sea ports of the Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach together make up the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor.[324][325] Together, both ports are the fifth busiest container port in the world, with a trade volume of over 14.2 million TEU’s in 2008.[326] Singly, the Port of Los Angeles is the busiest container port in the United States and the largest cruise ship center on the West Coast of the United States – The Port of Los Angeles’s World Cruise Center served about 590,000 passengers in 2014.[327]

There are also smaller, non-industrial harbors along Los Angeles’s coastline. The port includes four bridges: the Vincent Thomas Bridge, Henry Ford Bridge, Long Beach International Gateway Bridge, and Commodore Schuyler F. Heim Bridge. Passenger ferry service from San Pedro to the city of Avalon (and Two Harbors) on Santa Catalina Island is provided by Catalina Express.

Notable people

Sister cities

A sign near City Hall points to the sister cities of Los Angeles.

Los Angeles has 25 sister cities,[328] listed chronologically by year joined:

  • Eilat, Israel (1959)
  • Nagoya, Japan (1959)
  • Salvador, Brazil (1962)
  • Bordeaux, France (1964)[329][330]
  • Berlin, Germany (1967)[331]
  • Lusaka, Zambia (1968)
  • Mexico City, Mexico (1969)
  • Auckland, New Zealand (1971)
  • Busan, South Korea (1971)
  • Mumbai, India (1972)
  • Tehran, Iran (1972)
  • Taipei, Taiwan (1979)
  • Guangzhou, China (1981)[332]
  • Athens, Greece (1984)
  • Saint Petersburg, Russia (1984)
  • Vancouver, Canada (1986)[333]
  • Giza, Egypt (1989)
  • Jakarta, Indonesia (1990)
  • Kaunas, Lithuania (1991)
  • Makati, Philippines (1992)
  • Split, Croatia (1993)[334]
  • San Salvador, El Salvador (2005)
  • Beirut, Lebanon (2006)
  • Ischia, Campania, Italy (2006)
  • Yerevan, Armenia (2007)[335]

In addition, Los Angeles has the following «friendship cities»:

See also

  • Largest cities in Southern California
  • Largest cities in the Americas
  • List of hotels in Los Angeles
  • List of largest houses in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area
  • List of museums in Los Angeles
  • List of museums in Los Angeles County, California
  • List of music venues in Los Angeles
  • List of people from Los Angeles
  • List of tallest buildings in Los Angeles
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles, California

Notes

  1. ^ loss AN-jih-leez, -⁠liz, -⁠liss[12]

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Further reading

General

  • Carey McWilliams (2009). Southern California: An Island on the Land (9th ed.). Peregrine Smith. ISBN 978-0-87905-007-8.
  • Richard White (1991). It’s Your Misfortune and None of My Own: A New History of the American West. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-2567-1.
  • David Rieff (1992). Los Angeles: Capital of the Third World. Touchstone. ISBN 978-0-671-79210-7.
  • Peter Theroux (1994). Translating LA: A Tour of the Rainbow City. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-31394-9.
  • Paul Glover (1995). Los Angeles: A History of the Future. Greenplanners. ISBN 978-0-9622911-0-4.
  • Leonard Pitt & Dale Pitt (2000). Los Angeles A to Z: An Encyclopedia of the City and County. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20530-7.
  • Kevin Starr and David Ulin (2009). Jim Heimann (ed.). Los Angeles: Portrait of a City. Taschen America. ISBN 978-3-8365-0291-7.

Architecture and urban theory

  • Reyner Banham (2009). Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26015-3.
  • Mike Davis (2006). City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles. Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-568-5.
  • Robert M. Fogelson (1993). The Fragmented Metropolis: Los Angeles 1850–1930. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08230-4.
  • Norman M. Klein (1997). The History of Forgetting: Los Angeles and the Erasure of Memory. Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-242-4.
  • Sam Hall Kaplan (2000). L.A. Lost & Found: An Architectural History of Los Angeles. Hennessey and Ingalls. ISBN 978-0-940512-23-8.
  • Wim de Wit and Christopher James Alexander (2013). Overdrive: L.A. Constructs the Future, 1940–1990. Getty Publications. ISBN 978-1-60606-128-2.

Race relations

  • Acuña, Rodolfo (1996). Anything but Mexican: Chicanos in contemporary Los Angeles. Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-031-3. Retrieved September 30, 2011.
  • George, Lynell (1992). No Crystal Stair: African Americans in the City of Angels. Verso. ISBN 978-0-86091-389-4.
  • Sides, Josh (2006). L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24830-4.
  • Eduardo Obregón Pagán (2006). Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-5494-5.
  • R. J. Smith (2007). The Great Black Way: L.A. in the 1940s and the Last African American Renaissance. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-58648-521-4.

LGBT

  • Lillian Faderman and Stuart Timmons (2006). Gay L. A.: A History of Sexual Outlaws, Power Politics, And Lipstick Lesbians. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02288-5.
  • Hurewitz, Daniel (2007). Bohemian Los Angeles: and the Making of Modern Politics. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24925-7.

Environment

  • Marc Reisner (1986). Cadillac Desert: The American West and its Disappearing Water. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-017824-1.
  • Chip Jacobs and William Kelly (2008). Smogtown: The Lung-Burning History of Pollution in Los Angeles. Outlook Hardcover. ISBN 978-1-58567-860-0.
  • Mike Davis and Jon Wiener (2020). Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties. Verso. ISBN 978-1-78478-024-1.

Art and literature

  • David L. Ulin, ed. (2002). Writing Los Angeles: A Literary Anthology. Library of America. ISBN 978-1-931082-27-3.
  • Whiting, Cécile (2008). Pop L.A.: Art and the City in the 1960s. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25634-7.

External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

Лос-А́нджелес (Los Angeles), город и порт на юге Тихоокеанского побережья США, штат Калифорния. 3,5 млн. жителей (1994, с пригородами свыше 7 млн. жителей). Лос-Анджелес вытянут с севера на юг более чем на 80 км. Международный аэропорт. Главный экономический центр Запада США. Грузооборот порта свыше 25 млн. т в год. Авиакосмическая, радиоэлектронная, машиностроительная, военная, химическая, пищевая промышленность. Добыча нефти. Главный центр кинопромышленности и видеобизнеса (Голливуд). Крупный центр научных исследований, 3 университета. Музеи: естественной истории графства Лос-Анджелес, искусства графства Лос-Анджелес, Юго-Западный и др. Игры X и XXIII Олимпиад (1932, 1984). В окрестностях приморские климатические курорты. Основан в 1781 испанцами. До 1848 в составе Мексики.

* * *

ЛОС-АНДЖЕЛЕС — ЛОС-А́НДЖЕЛЕС (Los Angeles), город и порт на юге Тихоокеанского побережья США, штат Калифорния (см. КАЛИФОРНИЯ (штат)). Население 3,85 млн человек (2004), с пригородами — 16,7 млн человек (2004). Второй город и городская агломерация по численности населения в стране. Первый в США по занимаемой площади (1190 км2).

Расположен на узкой прибрежной низменности, окаймленной горами Сан-Габриэл, Санта-Моника, Санта-Ана. Вытянут с севера на юг (более 90 км), с востока на запад (более 60 км).

Тихоокеанский морской порт в бухте Сан-Педро (построен в 1899-1914, в 30 км от центра города, самая крупная искусственная гавань в мире). Международный аэропорт. Крупный узел железных и шоссейных дорог. Метрополитен. Важнейший экономический, научный и культурный центр Запада США. В Лос-Анджелесе находится одна из баз ВМС США. Крупнейший центр авиакосмической промышленности (космические летательные аппараты, военные самолеты, роботы; во время Второй мировой войны треть всех американских самолетов была выпущена в Лос-Анджелесе и его пригородах); радиоэлектроника, металлообработка; автомобильная промышленность; добыча и переработка нефти, производство медицинского оборудования, мебели, игрушек, пищевая промышленность. Крупный центр высоких технологий: разработка технологий и дизайна класса «хай-энд», производство компьютеров, телекоммуникационного оборудования, программного обеспечения. Крупные финансовые и торговые корпорации. Центр сельскохозяйственного региона (овощи, фрукты, орехи).

Крупный образовательный центр (11 университетов и колледжей, в том числе Калифорнийский университет и университет штата Калифорния). Около 1000 больниц и клиник, 19 теле- и 71 радиостанция. Здесь функционирует третья по размеру фондов (после Нью-Йорка и Чикаго) публичная библиотека. Филармонический оркестр, Лос-Анджелесская опера (под руководством Пласидо Доминго (см. ДОМИНГО Пласидо)).

Важный центр туризма. Развитая индустрия развлечений, десятки километров песчаных пляжей в западной части города. Центр кинопромышленности (Голливуд (см. ГОЛЛИВУД)).

Первое поселение El Pueblo de la Reyna de Los Angeles («Поселение Царицы Ангелов») на месте Лос-Анджелеса было основано испанцами в 1781, до этого в 9 км от него с 1771 существовала миссия Сан-Габриэл-Аркангел. Когда в 1835 поселение вошло в состав Мексики, оно получило статус города, к этому времени здесь проживало около 1250 человек. В 1846 было захвачено американцами. Название поселения сначала сократилось до Лос-Анхелес, а потом получило английское произношение — Лос-Анджелес. Статус города оно получило в 1850. В 1876 в город была проложена Южно-Тихоокеанская железная дорога («Юнион-Пасифик»), важнейшая артерия, связавшая Запад с центром страны. После строительства Панамского канала (1914) и постройки порта в бухте Сан-Педро, город стал лидером по числу морских перевозок на Тихоокеанском берегу США. В 1902 здесь открылся первый в стране кинотеатр. После катастрофического землетрясения (см. ЗЕМЛЕТРЯСЕНИЕ) в Сан-Франциско (1906) многие калифорнийцы перебрались в Лос-Анджелес, население которого увеличилось в три раза. Город все время пополнялся многочисленными иммигрантами из разных стран, дешевой рабочей силой.

В 1907 в Лос-Анджелесе началось кинопроизводство, в 1913 был снят первый фильм в Голливуде (см. ГОЛЛИВУД) (районе Лос-Анджелеса, где впоследствии были сосредоточены ведущие американские киностудии: 20-й век-Фокс, Метро Голдвин Майер, Уорнер бразерс, Парамаунт пикчерс, Коламбиа пикчерс и др.). Голливуд в течение очень короткого срока стал крупнейшим поставщиком коммерческой кинопродукции в США, а позднее и в мире. В середине 1940-х гг. студии переместились за границы Голливуда в другие районы Лос-Анджелеса (Бербанк, Сан-Фернандо-Вэлли, Беверли-Хиллс). Позднее (уже в 1980-е гг.) комплекс студий Юниверсал (Северный Голливуд) был превращен в музейно-развлекательный объект туризма, где посетители становятся свидетелями наиболее ярких эпизодов знаменитых голливудских фильмов (воспроизведены полностью декорации и некоторые трюки).

В начале 1920-х гг. Лос-Анджелес стал центром авиапромышленности США: авиазавод Д. Дугласа выпускал по одному самолету в неделю — рекорд для того времени. Начали интенсивно развиваться также нефтедобывающая, судостроение, автосборочная, электротехническая и приборостроительная отрасли.

В 1932 в Лос-Анджелесе впервые на американском континенте с большим успехом были проведены летние Олимпийские игры. Были построены многочисленные спортивные объекты, главным из которых стал Мемориальный Колизей.

После Второй мировой войны город резко выдвинулся вперед в социально-экономическом развитии (вошел в пятерку самых больших городов США). Благоприятный климат, вновь создаваемые рабочие места привлекали все больше не только жителей из Новой Англии, но и многочисленных эмигрантов. Эмигрантская волна (особенно, начиная с 1960-х гг.) из Мексики, Азии, Советского Союза захлестнула Калифорнию и ее самый большой мегаполис.

В 1955 в пригороде Лос-Анджелеса Анахайме (см. АНАХАЙМ) известным кинорежиссером-мультипликатором Уолтом Диснеем (см. ДИСНЕЙ Уолт) был основан первый парк развлечений «Диснейленд», в котором были воспроизведены декорации многих диснеевских фильмов, созданы уголки, имитирующие природу и быт населения, построены различные аттракционы (парк ежегодно посещает до 10 млн человек).

В 1984 в Лос-Анджелесе во второй раз здесь проходили XXIII Олимпийские игры, принесшие колоссальные прибыли американскими компаниям, однако Олимпиада бойкотировалась социалистическими странами (в ответ на отказ стран Запада участвовать в Московской Олимпиаде-80 из-за войны в Афганистане).

С 1980-х гг. главным образом из-за притока эмигрантов в Лос-Анджелесе более рельефно обозначались расовые и этнические конфликты (белое население стало меньшинством, вытесненное латиноамериканцами, самой многочисленной группой населения, а также выходцами из Азии и афроамериканцами). Самое кровавое столкновение, в результате которого погибло 50 человек, произошло в 1992, когда полицейскими был избит один из чернокожих.

В 1994 близ Лос-Анджелеса произошло землетрясение, унесшие жизни 60 человек. Несмотря на то что во время землетрясения серьезно пострадали некоторые скоростные трассы (фривеи) и транспортные развязки, все эти объекты были быстро восстановлены.

Лос-Анджелес в отличие от других мегаполисов США в основном застроен малоэтажными частными домами, окруженными садами, за исключением традиционного делового и торгового центра города Даунтауна, где сосредоточены современные небоскребы. Из-за огромной растянутости города, а также примыкающих к нему пригородов и маленьких городков власти Лос-Анджелес насыщен многочисленными (фривеями) со сложными многоярусными развязками (что создает особый архитектурный колорит мегаполиса).

Среди главных улиц выделяется бульвар Уилшир (его называют также Уилширский коридор) протянулся на 24 км от Даунтауна до океана, здесь расположены офисы, шикарные отели, рестораны, магазины, ночные клубы. Центральная знаменитая его часть, известна как «Миля чудес». Другие крупные улицы и бульвары — Голливуд, Вентура, Сансет, Санта-Моника, Сепульведа, Олимпик. Обе стороны бульвара Голливуд вымощены звездами с выбитыми на них именами кинозвезд, здесь же находится знаменитый китайский Театр Манна, на небольшой площадке (созданной специально для туристов) перед которым можно видеть отпечатки ступней или кистей рук тех же кинозвезд, на бульваре высится грандиозный развлекательный комплекс «Кодак» (2001), специально построенный для церемонии награждения лауреатов Оскара.

К району Голливуд с северо-востока примыкает парк «Гриффит» — крупнейший городской парк США, на площади которого в 1722 га высажено несколько тысяч различных видов тропических растений. Всего в городе и его пригородах более 100 парков.

Среди исторических и архитектурных достопримечательностей: миссии Сан-Габриэл-Аркангел и Сан-Фернандо-Реи-де-Эспанья, старинная мексиканская улица Олвера-Стрит, три башни Симона Родиа (высота 30, 29 и 16 м, известны под названием «Уоттс-Тауэрс», Watts Towers, построены из материалов с использованием битой кафельной плитки, посуды, бутылок, а также ракушек), «Брэдбери-билдинг» (1893), здание вокзала «Юнион-Стейшен» (1939, один из наиболее красивых вокзалов в стране), отель «Билтмор» (1923), Центральная библиотека (1926), здание Городской администрации — Сити-холл (City Hall, 1926), Тишмен-билдинг (1957, архитектор В. Грюн), комплекс Музыкального центра (1967, архитектор У. Беккет), фуникулер «Полет ангелов», «444 Плаза-билдинг» (здание, известное по многим сериалам).

Привлекают внимание оригинальные скульптурные композиции: «Двойное восхождение» (скульптор Г. Бейзер), «Разум, тело, дух» (скульптор Г. Грац), «Улисс» (скульптор А. Либерман), «Автомобильная пробка» и др.

В Лос-Анджелесе созданы маленькие национальные анклавы «Чайнатаун», «Литтл-Токио», популярные в основном среди туристов.

Музеи: Музей искусства графства Лос-Анджелес (1965, архитектор У. Перейра), Музей естественной истории, Калифорнийский центр науки (открыт в 1998), Юго-Западный музей, Музей современного искусства, Детский музей, Муниципальная художественная галерея. Музей Юго-Запада (индейского искусства), уникальный центр Пола Гетти (см. ГЕТТИ Пол) (1997, архитектор Р. Майер, включает музеи изобразительного и декоративно-прикладного искусства, библиотеку, научно-исследовательский центр, органично вписавшиеся в природную среду).

Внутри Лос-Анджелеса находится административно самостоятельный город Беверли-Хиллс. Этот район известен своими роскошными особняками, где обосновались знаменитые голливудские актеры и магнаты киноиндустрии. В Беверли-Хиллс в 1990-е гг. был создан гигантский торговый и развлекательный центр «Сенчури-сити» (название по расположенной здесь знаменитой студии «20-й век Фокс».

В многочисленных пригородах Лос-Анджелеса, входящих в состав одноименного графства, Пасадена (музей Нортона Саймона), Сан-Марино, Санта-Моника (Морской музей), Бербанк, Малибу (античная вилла-музей Пола Гетти) также находятся различные музеи, театры, концертные залы.

ЛОС-АНДЖЕЛЕС (Los Angeles) — город и порт на юге Тихоокеанского побережья США, шт. Калифорния. 3,5 млн. жителей (1990, с пригородами св. 7 млн. жителей). Лос-Анджелес вытянут с севера на юг более чем на 80 км. Международный аэропорт. Главный экономический центр Запада США. Грузооборот порта св. 25 млн. т в год. Авиакосмическая, радиоэлектронная, машиностроительная, военная, химическая, пищевая промышленность. Добыча нефти. Главный центр кинопромышленности и видеобизнеса (Голливуд). Крупный центр научных исследований, 3 университета. Музеи: естественной истории графства Лос-Анджелес, искусств графства Лос-Анджелес, Юго-Западный и др. Игры X и XXIII Олимпиад (1932, 1984). В окрестностях приморские климатические курорты. Основан в 1781 испанцами. До 1848 в составе Мексики.

Лос-Анжелес. Сумерки.

Лос-Анжелес. Сумерки.

ЛОС-АНДЖЕЛЕС, город в США, штат Калифорния. 3,5 млн. жителей (с пригородами свыше 7 млн. жителей). Порт (грузооборот свыше 25 млн. т в год) на юге Тихоокеанского побережья; международный аэропорт. Лос-Анджелес вытянут с севера на юг более чем на 80 км. Главный экономический центр запада США. Крупнейший в стране центр авиаракетной промышленности. Производство космических летательных аппаратов. Машиностроение, а также нефтеперерабатывающая, химическая, полиграфическая, швейная промышленность. Добыча нефти. Главный центр кинопромышленности и видеобизнеса (Голливуд). Крупный центр научных исследований. Университеты. Музей искусства графства Лос-Анджелес. Музыкальный центр. В окрестностях — приморские климатические курорты. Туризм. Основан в 1781 испанцами. До 1848 в составе Мексики.

Лос-Анжелес, Калифорния.

Лос-Анжелес, Калифорния.

Лос-Анжелес. Вид центра города ночью.

Лос-Анжелес. Вид центра города ночью.

Лос-Анжелес. Вид с моря ночью.

Лос-Анжелес. Вид с моря ночью.

Лос-Анджелес. Вид на Голливуд.

Лос-Анджелес. Вид на Голливуд.

сущ., кол-во синонимов: 3

Los Angeles

City

City of Los Angeles

The skyline of Downtown Los Angeles

Hollywood Sign

Griffith Observatory

Echo Park

Los Angeles City Hall

Theme Building

Venice Beach

Flag of Los Angeles

Flag

Official seal of Los Angeles

Seal

Nickname(s): 

L.A., City of Angels,[1] The Entertainment Capital of the World,[1] La-la-land, Tinseltown[1]

OpenStreetMap

Los Angeles is located in California

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within California

Los Angeles is located in the United States

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within the United States

Los Angeles is located in North America

Los Angeles

Los Angeles

Location within North America

Coordinates: 34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.050°N 118.250°WCoordinates: 34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.050°N 118.250°W
Country United States
State California
County Los Angeles
Region Southern California
CSA Los Angeles-Long Beach
MSA Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim
Pueblo September 4, 1781[2]
City status May 23, 1835[3]
Incorporated April 4, 1850[4]
Named for Our Lady, Queen of the Angels
Government
 • Type Strong mayor–council[5]
 • Body Los Angeles City Council
 • Mayor Karen Bass (D)
 • City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto (D)
 • City Controller Kenneth Mejia (D)
Area

[6]

 • Total 501.55 sq mi (1,299.01 km2)
 • Land 469.49 sq mi (1,215.97 km2)
 • Water 32.06 sq mi (83.04 km2)
Elevation 305 ft (93 m)
Highest elevation 5,075 ft (1,576 m)
Lowest elevation 0 ft (0 m)
Population

 (2020)[7]

 • Total 3,898,747
 • Estimate 

(2021)[7]

3,849,297
 • Rank 2nd in the United States
1st in California
 • Density 8,304.22/sq mi (3,206.29/km2)
 • Urban

[8]

12,237,376 (US: 2nd)
 • Urban density 7,476.3/sq mi (2,886.6/km2)
 • Metro

[9]

13,200,998 (US: 2nd)
Demonym(s) Angeleno, Angelino, Angeleño[10][11]
Time zone UTC–08:00 (PST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC–07:00 (PDT)
ZIP Codes

List

  • 90001–90084, 90086–90089, 90091, 90093–90097, 90099, 90101–90103, 90174, 90185, 90189, 90291–90293, 91040–91043, 91303–91308, 91311, 91316, 91324–91328, 91330, 91331, 91335, 91340, 91342–91349, 91352–91353, 91356–91357, 91364–91367, 91401–91499, 91504–91505, 91601–91609[12]
Area codes 213/323, 310/424, 747/818
FIPS code 06-44000
GNIS feature IDs 1662328, 2410877
Website lacity.gov

Los Angeles ( lawss AN-jəl-əs;[a] Spanish: Los Ángeles [los ˈaŋxeles], lit.‘The Angels’), often referred to by its initials L.A.,[14] is the commercial, financial, and cultural center of Southern California. Los Angeles is the largest city in the state of California, the second most populous city in the United States after New York City, and one of the world’s most populous megacities. With a population of roughly 3.9 million residents within the city limits as of 2020,[7] Los Angeles is known for its Mediterranean climate, ethnic and cultural diversity, being the home of the Hollywood film industry, and its sprawling metropolitan area. The majority of the city proper lies in a basin in Southern California adjacent to the Pacific Ocean in the west and extending partly through the Santa Monica Mountains and north into the San Fernando Valley, with the city bordering the San Gabriel Valley to its east. It covers about 469 square miles (1,210 km2),[6] and is the county seat of Los Angeles County, which is the most populous county in the United States with an estimated 9.86 million residents as of 2022.[15]

The area that became Los Angeles was originally inhabited by the indigenous Tongva people and later claimed by Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo for Spain in 1542. The city was founded on September 4, 1781, under Spanish governor Felipe de Neve, on the village of Yaanga.[16] It became a part of Mexico in 1821 following the Mexican War of Independence. In 1848, at the end of the Mexican–American War, Los Angeles and the rest of California were purchased as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and thus became part of the United States. Los Angeles was incorporated as a municipality on April 4, 1850, five months before California achieved statehood. The discovery of oil in the 1890s brought rapid growth to the city.[17] The city was further expanded with the completion of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1913, which delivers water from Eastern California.

Los Angeles has a diverse economy with a broad range of industries. It has the busiest container port in the Americas.[18][19] In 2018, the Los Angeles metropolitan area had a gross metropolitan product of over $1.0 trillion,[20] making it the city with the third-largest GDP in the world, after New York City and Tokyo. Los Angeles hosted the 1932 and 1984 Summer Olympics and will host the 2028 Summer Olympics. More recently, statewide droughts in California have strained both the city’s and Los Angeles County’s water security.[21][22]

Pronunciation of the name

The local English pronunciation of the name of the city has varied over time. A 1953 article in the journal of the American Name Society asserts that the pronunciation lawss AN-jəl-əs was established following the 1850 incorporation of the city and that since the 1880s the pronunciation lohss ANG-gəl-əs emerged out of a trend in California to give places Spanish, or Spanish-sounding, names and pronunciations.[23] In 1908, librarian Charles Fletcher Lummis, who argued for the name’s pronunciation with a hard g (),[24][25] reported that there were at least 12 pronunciation variants.[26] In the early 1900s, the Los Angeles Times advocated for pronouncing it Loce AHNG-hayl-ais (), approximating Spanish [los ˈaŋxeles], by printing the respelling under its masthead for several years.[27] This did not find favor.[28]

Since the 1930s, has been most common.[29] In 1934, the United States Board on Geographic Names decreed that this pronunciation be used.[27] This was also endorsed in 1952 by a «jury» appointed by Mayor Fletcher Bowron to devise an official pronunciation.[23][27]

History

Pre-colonial history

The Los Angeles coastal area was settled by the Tongva (Gabrieleño) and Chumash tribes. Los Angeles was founded on the village of iyáanga’ or Yaanga (written «Yang-na» by the Spanish), meaning «poison oak place».[30][31][16]

Maritime explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo claimed the area of southern California for the Spanish Empire in 1542 while on an official military exploring expedition moving northward along the Pacific coast from earlier colonizing bases of New Spain in Central and South America.[32] Gaspar de Portolà and Franciscan missionary Juan Crespí reached the present site of Los Angeles on August 2, 1769.[33]

Spanish rule

In 1771, Franciscan friar Junípero Serra directed the building of the Mission San Gabriel Arcángel, the first mission in the area.[34] On September 4, 1781, a group of forty-four settlers known as «Los Pobladores» founded the pueblo (town) they called El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles, ‘The Town of Our Lady the Queen of the Angels’.[35] The original name of the settlement is disputed; the Guinness Book of World Records rendered it as «El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles de Porciúncula»;[36] other sources have shortened or alternate versions of the longer name.[37] The present-day city has the largest Roman Catholic archdiocese in the United States. Two-thirds of the Mexican or (New Spain) settlers were mestizo or mulatto, a mixture of African, indigenous and European ancestry.[38] The settlement remained a small ranch town for decades, but by 1820, the population had increased to about 650 residents.[39] Today, the pueblo is commemorated in the historic district of Los Angeles Pueblo Plaza and Olvera Street, the oldest part of Los Angeles.[40]

Mexican rule

New Spain achieved its independence from the Spanish Empire in 1821, and the pueblo now existed within the new Mexican Republic. During Mexican rule, Governor Pío Pico made Los Angeles, Alta California’s regional capital.[41] By this time, the new republic introduced more secularization acts within the Los Angeles region.[42] In 1846, during the wider Mexican-American war, marines from the United States occupied the pueblo. This resulted in the siege of Los Angeles where 150 Mexican militias fought the occupiers which eventually surrendered.[43]

1847 to present

Hill Street looking north from 6th Street. Viewable are Central Park (today’s Pershing Square) on the lower left, Hotel Portsmouth on the lower right, and Hill Street tunnel at the end of the street, circa 1913

Mexican rule ended during the Mexican–American War: Americans took control from the Californios after a series of battles, culminating with the signing of the Treaty of Cahuenga on January 13, 1847.[44]

Railroads arrived with the completion of the transcontinental Southern Pacific line from New Orleans to Los Angeles in 1876 and the Santa Fe Railroad in 1885.[45] Petroleum was discovered in the city and surrounding area in 1892, and by 1923, the discoveries had helped California become the country’s largest oil producer, accounting for about one-quarter of the world’s petroleum output.[46]

By 1900, the population had grown to more than 102,000,[47] putting pressure on the city’s water supply.[48] The completion of the Los Angeles Aqueduct in 1913, under the supervision of William Mulholland, ensured the continued growth of the city.[49] Because of clauses in the city’s charter that prevented the City of Los Angeles from selling or providing water from the aqueduct to any area outside its borders, many adjacent cities and communities felt compelled to join Los Angeles.[50][51][52]

Los Angeles created the first municipal zoning ordinance in the United States. On September 14, 1908, the Los Angeles City Council promulgated residential and industrial land use zones. The new ordinance established three residential zones of a single type, where industrial uses were prohibited. The proscriptions included barns, lumber yards, and any industrial land use employing machine-powered equipment. These laws were enforced against industrial properties after the fact. These prohibitions were in addition to existing activities that were already regulated as nuisances. These included explosives warehousing, gas works, oil drilling, slaughterhouses, and tanneries. Los Angeles City Council also designated seven industrial zones within the city. However, between 1908 and 1915, the Los Angeles City Council created various exceptions to the broad proscriptions that applied to these three residential zones, and as a consequence, some industrial uses emerged within them. There are two differences between the 1908 Residence District Ordinance and later zoning laws in the United States. First, the 1908 laws did not establish a comprehensive zoning map as the 1916 New York City Zoning Ordinance did. Second, the residential zones did not distinguish types of housing; they treated apartments, hotels, and detached-single-family housing equally.[53]

In 1910, Hollywood merged into Los Angeles, with 10 movie companies already operating in the city at the time. By 1921, more than 80 percent of the world’s film industry was concentrated in L.A.[54] The money generated by the industry kept the city insulated from much of the economic loss suffered by the rest of the country during the Great Depression.[55]
By 1930, the population surpassed one million.[56] In 1932, the city hosted the Summer Olympics.

During World War II Los Angeles was a major center of wartime manufacturing, such as shipbuilding and aircraft. Calship built hundreds of Liberty Ships and Victory Ships on Terminal Island, and the Los Angeles area was the headquarters of six of the country’s major aircraft manufacturers (Douglas Aircraft Company, Hughes Aircraft, Lockheed, North American Aviation, Northrop Corporation, and Vultee). During the war, more aircraft were produced in one year than in all the pre-war years since the Wright brothers flew the first airplane in 1903, combined. Manufacturing in Los Angeles skyrocketed, and as William S. Knudsen, of the National Defense Advisory Commission put it, «We won because we smothered the enemy in an avalanche of production, the like of which he had never seen, nor dreamed possible.»[57]

After the end of World War II Los Angeles grew more rapidly than ever, sprawling into the San Fernando Valley.[58] The expansion of the Interstate Highway System during the 1950s and 1960s helped propel suburban growth and signaled the demise of the city’s electrified rail system, once the world’s largest.

As a consequence of World War II, suburban growth, and population density, many amusement parks were built and operated in this area.[59] An example is Beverly Park, which was located at the corner of Beverly Boulevard and La Cienega before being closed and substituted by the Beverly Center.[60]

Racial tensions led to the Watts riots in 1965, resulting in 34 deaths and over 1,000 injuries.[61]

In 1969, California became the birthplace of the Internet, as the first ARPANET transmission was sent from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) to the Stanford Research Institute in Menlo Park.[62]

In 1973, Tom Bradley was elected as the city’s first African American mayor, serving for five terms until retiring in 1993. Other events in the city during the 1970s included the Symbionese Liberation Army’s South Central standoff in 1974 and the Hillside Stranglers murder cases in 1977–1978.[63]

In early 1984, the city surpassed Chicago in population, thus becoming the second largest city in the United States.

In 1984, the city hosted the Summer Olympic Games for the second time. Despite being boycotted by 14 Communist countries, the 1984 Olympics became more financially successful than any previous,[64] and the second Olympics to turn a profit; the other, according to an analysis of contemporary newspaper reports, was the 1932 Summer Olympics, also held in Los Angeles.[65]

Racial tensions erupted on April 29, 1992, with the acquittal by a Simi Valley jury of four Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers captured on videotape beating Rodney King, culminating in large-scale riots.[66][67]

In 1994, the magnitude 6.7 Northridge earthquake shook the city, causing $12.5 billion in damage and 72 deaths.[68] The century ended with the Rampart scandal, one of the most extensive documented cases of police misconduct in American history.[69]

In 2002, Mayor James Hahn led the campaign against secession, resulting in voters defeating efforts by the San Fernando Valley and Hollywood to secede from the city.[70]

In 2022, Karen Bass became the city’s first female mayor, making Los Angeles the largest US city to have ever had a woman as mayor. [71]

Los Angeles will host the 2028 Summer Olympics and Paralympic Games, making Los Angeles the third city to host the Olympics three times.[72][73]

Geography

Topography

Aerial satellite image of Los Angeles in March 2019

The city of Los Angeles covers a total area of 502.7 square miles (1,302 km2), comprising 468.7 square miles (1,214 km2) of land and 34.0 square miles (88 km2) of water.[74] The city extends for 44 miles (71 km) north-south and for 29 miles (47 km) east-west. The perimeter of the city is 342 miles (550 km).

Los Angeles is both flat and hilly. The highest point in the city proper is Mount Lukens at 5,074 ft (1,547 m),[75][76] located at the northeastern end of the San Fernando Valley. The eastern end of the Santa Monica Mountains stretches from Downtown to the Pacific Ocean and separates the Los Angeles Basin from the San Fernando Valley. Other hilly parts of Los Angeles include the Mt. Washington area north of Downtown, eastern parts such as Boyle Heights, the Crenshaw district around the Baldwin Hills, and the San Pedro district.

Surrounding the city are much higher mountains. Immediately to the north lie the San Gabriel Mountains, which is a popular recreation area for Angelenos. Its high point is Mount San Antonio, locally known as Mount Baldy, which reaches 10,064 feet (3,068 m). Further afield, the highest point in southern California is San Gorgonio Mountain, 81 miles (130 km) east of downtown Los Angeles,[77] with a height of 11,503 feet (3,506 m).

The Los Angeles River, which is largely seasonal, is the primary drainage channel. It was straightened and lined in 51 miles (82 km) of concrete by the Army Corps of Engineers to act as a flood control channel.[78] The river begins in the Canoga Park district of the city, flows east from the San Fernando Valley along the north edge of the Santa Monica Mountains, and turns south through the city center, flowing to its mouth in the Port of Long Beach at the Pacific Ocean. The smaller Ballona Creek flows into the Santa Monica Bay at Playa del Rey.

Vegetation

The city’s oldest palm tree, dating to the late 19th century, with the LA Coliseum in the background

Los Angeles is rich in native plant species partly because of its diversity of habitats, including beaches, wetlands, and mountains. The most prevalent plant communities are coastal sage scrub, chaparral shrubland, and riparian woodland.[79] Native plants include: the California poppy, matilija poppy, toyon, Ceanothus, Chamise, Coast Live Oak, sycamore, willow and Giant Wildrye. Many of these native species, such as the Los Angeles sunflower, have become so rare as to be considered endangered. Although it is not native to the area, the official tree of Los Angeles is the Coral Tree (Erythrina caffra)[80] and the official flower of Los Angeles is the Bird of Paradise (Strelitzia reginae).[81] Mexican Fan Palms, Canary Island Palms, Queen Palms, Date Palms, and California Fan Palms are common in the Los Angeles area, although only the last is native to California, though still not native to the City of Los Angeles.

Geology

Los Angeles is subject to earthquakes because of its location on the Pacific Ring of Fire. The geologic instability has produced numerous faults, which cause approximately 10,000 earthquakes annually in Southern California, though most of them are too small to be felt.[82] The strike-slip San Andreas Fault system, which sits at the boundary between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate, passes through the Los Angeles metropolitan area. The segment of the fault passing through Southern California experiences a major earthquake roughly every 110 to 140 years, and seismologists have warned about the next «big one», as the last major earthquake was the 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake.[83] The Los Angeles basin and metropolitan area are also at risk from blind thrust earthquakes.[84] Major earthquakes that have hit the Los Angeles area include the 1933 Long Beach, 1971 San Fernando, 1987 Whittier Narrows, and the 1994 Northridge events. All but a few are of low intensity and are not felt. The USGS has released the UCERF California earthquake forecast, which models earthquake occurrence in California. Parts of the city are also vulnerable to tsunamis; harbor areas were damaged by waves from Aleutian Islands earthquake in 1946, Valdivia earthquake in 1960, Alaska earthquake in 1964, Chile earthquake in 2010 and Japan earthquake in 2011.[85]

Cityscape

The city is divided into many different districts and neighborhoods,[86][87] some of which were incorporated cities that have merged with Los Angeles.[88] These neighborhoods were developed piecemeal, and are well-defined enough that the city has signage which marks nearly all of them.[89]

Overview

The city’s street patterns generally follow a grid plan, with uniform block lengths and occasional roads that cut across blocks. However, this is complicated by rugged terrain, which has necessitated having different grids for each of the valleys that Los Angeles covers. Major streets are designed to move large volumes of traffic through many parts of the city, many of which are extremely long; Sepulveda Boulevard is 43 miles (69 km) long, while Foothill Boulevard is over 60 miles (97 km) long, reaching as far east as San Bernardino. Drivers in Los Angeles suffer from one of the worst rush hour periods in the world, according to an annual traffic index by navigation system maker, TomTom. LA drivers spend an additional 92 hours in traffic each year. During the peak rush hour, there is 80% congestion, according to the index.[90]

Los Angeles is often characterized by the presence of low-rise buildings, in contrast to New York City. Outside of a few centers such as Downtown, Warner Center, Century City, Koreatown, Miracle Mile, Hollywood, and Westwood, skyscrapers and high-rise buildings are not common in Los Angeles. The few skyscrapers built outside of those areas often stand out above the rest of the surrounding landscape. Most construction is done in separate units, rather than wall-to-wall. That being said Downtown Los Angeles itself has many buildings over 30 stories, with fourteen over 50 stories, and two over 70 stories, the tallest of which is the Wilshire Grand Center. Also Los Angeles is increasingly becoming a city of apartments rather than single-family dwellings, especially in the dense inner city and Westside neighborhoods.[citation needed]

Climate

Los Angeles (Downtown)
Climate chart (explanation)

J

F

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M

J

J

A

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3.3

68

49

3.6

68

50

2.2

70

52

0.7

72

55

0.3

74

58

0.1

77

61

0

82

65

0

84

65

0.1

83

64

0.6

79

60

0.8

73

53

2.5

67

48

Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: NOAA[91]
Metric conversion

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

A

S

O

N

D

84

20

9

92

20

10

57

21

11

18

22

13

8.1

23

15

2.3

25

16

0.5

28

18

0

29

19

3.3

28

18

15

26

16

20

23

12

63

20

9

Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

Los Angeles has a two-season Mediterranean climate of dry summer and very mild winter (Köppen Csb on the coast and most of downtown, Csa near the metropolitan region to the west), but it receives less annual precipitation than most other Mediterranean climates, so it is near the boundary of a semi-arid climate (BSh), though narrowly missing it.[92] Daytime temperatures are generally temperate all year round. In winter, they average around 68 °F (20 °C) giving it a tropical feel although it is a few degrees too cool to be a true tropical climate on average due to cool night temperatures.[93][94] Los Angeles has plenty of sunshine throughout the year, with an average of only 35 days with measurable precipitation annually.[95]

Temperatures in the coastal basin exceed 90 °F (32 °C) on a dozen or so days in the year, from one day a month in April, May, June and November to three days a month in July, August, October and to five days in September.[95] Temperatures in the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys are considerably warmer. Temperatures are subject to substantial daily swings; in inland areas the difference between the average daily low and the average daily high is over 30 °F (17 °C).[96] The average annual temperature of the sea is 63 °F (17 °C), from 58 °F (14 °C) in January to 68 °F (20 °C) in August.[97] Hours of sunshine total more than 3,000 per year, from an average of 7 hours of sunshine per day in December to an average of 12 in July.[98]

The Los Angeles area is also subject to phenomena typical of a microclimate, causing extreme variations in temperature in close physical proximity to each other. For example, the average July maximum temperature at the Santa Monica Pier is 70 °F (21 °C) whereas it is 95 °F (35 °C) in Canoga Park, 15 miles (24 km) away.[99] The city, like much of the Southern Californian coast, is subject to a late spring/early summer weather phenomenon called «June Gloom». This involves overcast or foggy skies in the morning that yield to sun by early afternoon.[100]

More recently, statewide droughts in California have further strained the city’s water security.[101] Downtown Los Angeles averages 14.67 in (373 mm) of precipitation annually, mainly occurring between November and March,[102][96] generally in the form of moderate rain showers, but sometimes as heavy rainfall during winter storms. Rainfall is usually higher in the hills and coastal slopes of the mountains because of orographic uplift. Summer days are usually rainless. Rarely, an incursion of moist air from the south or east can bring brief thunderstorms in late summer, especially to the mountains. The coast gets slightly less rainfall, while the inland and mountain areas get considerably more. Years of average rainfall are rare. The usual pattern is a year-to-year variability, with a short string of dry years of 5–10 in (130–250 mm) rainfall, followed by one or two wet years with more than 20 in (510 mm).[96] Wet years are usually associated with warm water El Niño conditions in the Pacific, dry years with cooler water La Niña episodes. A series of rainy days can bring floods to the lowlands and mudslides to the hills, especially after wildfires have denuded the slopes.

Both freezing temperatures and snowfall are extremely rare in the city basin and along the coast, with the last occurrence of a 32 °F (0 °C) reading at the downtown station being January 29, 1979;[96] freezing temperatures occur nearly every year in valley locations while the mountains within city limits typically receive snowfall every winter. The greatest snowfall recorded in downtown Los Angeles was 2.0 inches (5 cm) on January 15, 1932.[96][103] While the most recent snowfall occurred in February 2019, the first snowfall since 1962,[104][105] with snow falling in areas adjacent to Los Angeles as recently as January 2021.[106] At the official downtown station, the highest recorded temperature is 113 °F (45 °C) on September 27, 2010,[96][107] while the lowest is 28 °F (−2 °C),[96] on January 4, 1949.[96] Within the City of Los Angeles, the highest temperature ever officially recorded is 121 °F (49 °C), on September 6, 2020, at the weather station at Pierce College in the San Fernando Valley neighborhood of Woodland Hills.[108] During autumn and winter, Santa Ana winds sometimes bring much warmer and drier conditions to Los Angeles, and raise wildfire risk.

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Climate data for Los Angeles (USC, Downtown), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1877–present

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 95
(35)
95
(35)
99
(37)
106
(41)
103
(39)
112
(44)
109
(43)
106
(41)
113
(45)
108
(42)
100
(38)
92
(33)
113
(45)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 83.0
(28.3)
82.8
(28.2)
85.8
(29.9)
90.1
(32.3)
88.9
(31.6)
89.1
(31.7)
93.5
(34.2)
95.2
(35.1)
99.4
(37.4)
95.7
(35.4)
88.9
(31.6)
81.0
(27.2)
101.5
(38.6)
Average high °F (°C) 68.0
(20.0)
68.0
(20.0)
69.9
(21.1)
72.4
(22.4)
73.7
(23.2)
77.2
(25.1)
82.0
(27.8)
84.0
(28.9)
83.0
(28.3)
78.6
(25.9)
72.9
(22.7)
67.4
(19.7)
74.8
(23.8)
Daily mean °F (°C) 58.4
(14.7)
59.0
(15.0)
61.1
(16.2)
63.6
(17.6)
65.9
(18.8)
69.3
(20.7)
73.3
(22.9)
74.7
(23.7)
73.6
(23.1)
69.3
(20.7)
63.0
(17.2)
57.8
(14.3)
65.8
(18.8)
Average low °F (°C) 48.9
(9.4)
50.0
(10.0)
52.4
(11.3)
54.8
(12.7)
58.1
(14.5)
61.4
(16.3)
64.7
(18.2)
65.4
(18.6)
64.2
(17.9)
59.9
(15.5)
53.1
(11.7)
48.2
(9.0)
56.8
(13.8)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 41.4
(5.2)
42.9
(6.1)
45.4
(7.4)
48.9
(9.4)
53.5
(11.9)
57.4
(14.1)
61.1
(16.2)
61.7
(16.5)
59.1
(15.1)
53.7
(12.1)
45.4
(7.4)
40.5
(4.7)
39.2
(4.0)
Record low °F (°C) 28
(−2)
28
(−2)
31
(−1)
36
(2)
40
(4)
46
(8)
49
(9)
49
(9)
44
(7)
40
(4)
34
(1)
30
(−1)
28
(−2)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 3.29
(84)
3.64
(92)
2.23
(57)
0.69
(18)
0.32
(8.1)
0.09
(2.3)
0.02
(0.51)
0.00
(0.00)
0.13
(3.3)
0.58
(15)
0.78
(20)
2.48
(63)
14.25
(362)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.1 6.3 5.1 2.8 1.9 0.5 0.4 0.1 0.4 2.2 2.8 5.5 34.1
Mean monthly sunshine hours 225.3 222.5 267.0 303.5 276.2 275.8 364.1 349.5 278.5 255.1 217.3 219.4 3,254.2
Percent possible sunshine 71 72 72 78 64 64 83 84 75 73 70 71 73
Source: NOAA (sun 1961–1977)[109][91][110][111]
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Climate data for Los Angeles (LAX), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1944–present

Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 91
(33)
92
(33)
95
(35)
102
(39)
97
(36)
104
(40)
97
(36)
98
(37)
110
(43)
106
(41)
101
(38)
94
(34)
110
(43)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 81.2
(27.3)
80.1
(26.7)
80.6
(27.0)
83.1
(28.4)
80.6
(27.0)
79.8
(26.6)
83.7
(28.7)
86.0
(30.0)
90.7
(32.6)
90.9
(32.7)
87.2
(30.7)
78.8
(26.0)
95.5
(35.3)
Average high °F (°C) 66.3
(19.1)
65.6
(18.7)
66.1
(18.9)
68.1
(20.1)
69.5
(20.8)
72.0
(22.2)
75.1
(23.9)
76.7
(24.8)
76.5
(24.7)
74.4
(23.6)
70.9
(21.6)
66.1
(18.9)
70.6
(21.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 57.9
(14.4)
57.9
(14.4)
59.1
(15.1)
61.1
(16.2)
63.6
(17.6)
66.4
(19.1)
69.6
(20.9)
70.7
(21.5)
70.1
(21.2)
67.1
(19.5)
62.3
(16.8)
57.6
(14.2)
63.6
(17.6)
Average low °F (°C) 49.4
(9.7)
50.1
(10.1)
52.2
(11.2)
54.2
(12.3)
57.6
(14.2)
60.9
(16.1)
64.0
(17.8)
64.8
(18.2)
63.7
(17.6)
59.8
(15.4)
53.7
(12.1)
49.1
(9.5)
56.6
(13.7)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 41.8
(5.4)
42.9
(6.1)
45.3
(7.4)
48.0
(8.9)
52.7
(11.5)
56.7
(13.7)
60.2
(15.7)
61.0
(16.1)
58.7
(14.8)
53.2
(11.8)
46.1
(7.8)
41.1
(5.1)
39.4
(4.1)
Record low °F (°C) 27
(−3)
34
(1)
35
(2)
42
(6)
45
(7)
48
(9)
52
(11)
51
(11)
47
(8)
43
(6)
38
(3)
32
(0)
27
(−3)
Average rainfall inches (mm) 2.86
(73)
2.99
(76)
1.73
(44)
0.60
(15)
0.28
(7.1)
0.08
(2.0)
0.04
(1.0)
0.00
(0.00)
0.11
(2.8)
0.49
(12)
0.82
(21)
2.23
(57)
12.23
(311)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.1 6.3 5.6 2.6 1.7 0.5 0.5 0.1 0.5 2.0 3.2 5.4 34.5
Average relative humidity (%) 63.4 67.9 70.5 71.0 74.0 75.9 76.6 76.6 74.2 70.5 65.5 62.9 70.8
Average dew point °F (°C) 41.4
(5.2)
44.4
(6.9)
46.6
(8.1)
49.1
(9.5)
52.7
(11.5)
56.5
(13.6)
60.1
(15.6)
61.2
(16.2)
59.2
(15.1)
54.1
(12.3)
46.8
(8.2)
41.4
(5.2)
51.1
(10.6)
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and dew point 1961–1990)[109][112][113][114]

Environmental issues

Viewable smog in Los Angeles in December 2005

External audio
audio icon “Fighting Smog in Los Angeles”, Distillations Podcast, 2018 Science History Institute

A Gabrielino settlement in the area was called iyáangẚ (written Yang-na by the Spanish), which has been translated as «poison oak place».[30][31] Yang-na has also been translated as «the valley of smoke».[115][116] Owing to geography, heavy reliance on automobiles, and the Los Angeles/Long Beach port complex, Los Angeles suffers from air pollution in the form of smog. The Los Angeles Basin and the San Fernando Valley are susceptible to atmospheric inversion, which holds in the exhausts from road vehicles, airplanes, locomotives, shipping, manufacturing, and other sources.[117] The percentage of small particle pollution (the kind that penetrates into the lungs) coming from vehicles in the city can get as high as 55 percent.[citation needed]

The smog season lasts from approximately May to October.[118] While other large cities rely on rain to clear smog, Los Angeles gets only 15 inches (380 mm) of rain each year: pollution accumulates over many consecutive days. Issues of air quality in Los Angeles and other major cities led to the passage of early national environmental legislation, including the Clean Air Act. When the act was passed, California was unable to create a State Implementation Plan that would enable it to meet the new air quality standards, largely because of the level of pollution in Los Angeles generated by older vehicles.[119] More recently, the state of California has led the nation in working to limit pollution by mandating low-emission vehicles. Smog is expected to continue to drop in the coming years because of aggressive steps to reduce it, which include electric and hybrid cars, improvements in mass transit, and other measures.

The number of Stage 1 smog alerts in Los Angeles has declined from over 100 per year in the 1970s to almost zero in the new millennium.[120] Despite improvement, the 2006 and 2007 annual reports of the American Lung Association ranked the city as the most polluted in the country with short-term particle pollution and year-round particle pollution.[121] In 2008, the city was ranked the second most polluted and again had the highest year-round particulate pollution.[122] The city met its goal of providing 20 percent of the city’s power from renewable sources in 2010.[123] The American Lung Association’s 2013 survey ranks the metro area as having the nation’s worst smog, and fourth in both short-term and year-round pollution amounts.[124]

Los Angeles is also home to the nation’s largest urban oil field. There are more than 700 active oil wells within 1,500 feet (460 m) of homes, churches, schools and hospitals in the city, a situation about which the EPA has voiced serious concerns.[125]

The city has an urban population of bobcats (Lynx rufus).[126] Mange is a common problem in this population.[126] Although Serieys et al. 2014 find selection of immune genetics at several loci they do not demonstrate that this produces a real difference which helps the bobcats to survive future mange outbreaks.[126]

Demographics

City compared to State & U.S. 
2019 Estimate[127] L.A. CA U.S.
Total population 3,979,576 39,512,223 328,239,523
Population change, 2010 to 2019 +4.9% +6.1% +6.3%
Population density (people/sqmi) 8,514.4 253.9 92.6
Median household income (2018) $58,385 $71,228 $60,293
Bachelor’s degree or higher 33.7% 33.3% 31.5%
Foreign born 37.3% 26.9% 13.5%
White (non-Hispanic) 28.5% 36.8% 60.4%
Black 8.9% 6.5% 13.4%
Hispanic (any race) 48.6% 39.3% 18.3%
Asian 11.6% 15.3% 5.9%
Historical population

Census Pop. Note
1850 1,610
1860 4,385 172.4%
1870 5,728 30.6%
1880 11,183 95.2%
1890 50,395 350.6%
1900 102,479 103.4%
1910 319,198 211.5%
1920 576,673 80.7%
1930 1,238,048 114.7%
1940 1,504,277 21.5%
1950 1,970,358 31.0%
1960 2,479,015 25.8%
1970 2,811,801 13.4%
1980 2,968,528 5.6%
1990 3,485,398 17.4%
2000 3,694,820 6.0%
2010 3,792,621 2.6%
2020 3,898,747 2.8%
2022 (est.) 3,819,538 [128] −2.0%
United States Census Bureau[129]
2010–2020, 2021[7]

The 2010 U.S. census[130] reported Los Angeles had a population of 3,792,621.[131] The population density was 8,092.3 people per square mile (2,913.0/km2). The age distribution was 874,525 people (23.1%) under 18, 434,478 people (11.5%) from 18 to 24, 1,209,367 people (31.9%) from 25 to 44, 877,555 people (23.1%) from 45 to 64, and 396,696 people (10.5%) who were 65 or older.[131] The median age was 34.1 years. For every 100 females, there were 99.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 97.6 males.[131]

There were 1,413,995 housing units—up from 1,298,350 during 2005–2009[131]—at an average density of 2,812.8 households per square mile (1,086.0/km2), of which 503,863 (38.2%) were owner-occupied, and 814,305 (61.8%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 2.1%; the rental vacancy rate was 6.1%. 1,535,444 people (40.5% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 2,172,576 people (57.3%) lived in rental housing units.[131]

According to the 2010 United States Census, Los Angeles had a median household income of $49,497, with 22.0% of the population living below the federal poverty line.[131]

Race and ethnicity

Racial and ethnic composition 1940[132] 1970[132] 1990[132] 2010[133] 2020[133]
Hispanic or Latino (of any race) 7.1% 17.1% 39.9% 48.5% 46.9%
White (non-Hispanic) 86.3% 61.1% 37.3% 28.7% 28.9%
Asian (non-Hispanic) 2.2% 3.6% 9.8% 11.1% 11.7%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 4.2% 17.9% 14.0% 9.2% 8.3%
Other (non-Hispanic) N/A N/A 0.1% 0.3% 0.7%
Two or more races (non-Hispanic) N/A N/A N/A 2.0% 3.3%

Map of racial and ethnic distribution in Los Angeles as of the 2010 U.S. Census. Each dot is 25 people:  White

 Black

 Asian

 Hispanic

 Other

According to the 2010 census, the racial makeup of Los Angeles included: 1,888,158 Whites (49.8%), 365,118 African Americans (9.6%), 28,215 Native Americans (0.7%), 426,959 Asians (11.3%), 5,577 Pacific Islanders (0.1%), 902,959 from other races (23.8%), and 175,635 (4.6%) from two or more races.[131] Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 1,838,822 persons (48.5%). Los Angeles is home to people from more than 140 countries speaking 224 different identified languages.[134] Ethnic enclaves like Chinatown, Historic Filipinotown, Koreatown, Little Armenia, Little Ethiopia, Tehrangeles, Little Tokyo, Little Bangladesh, and Thai Town provide examples of the polyglot character of Los Angeles.

Non-Hispanic Whites were 28.7% of the population in 2010,[131] compared to 86.3% in 1940.[132] The majority of the Non-Hispanic White population is living in areas along the Pacific coast as well as in neighborhoods near and on the Santa Monica Mountains from the Pacific Palisades to Los Feliz.

Mexican ancestry make up the largest ethnic group of Hispanics at 31.9% of the city’s population, followed by those of Salvadoran (6.0%) and Guatemalan (3.6%) heritage. The Hispanic population has a long established Mexican-American and Central American community and is spread well-nigh throughout the entire city of Los Angeles and its metropolitan area. It is most heavily concentrated in regions around Downtown as East Los Angeles, Northeast Los Angeles and Westlake. Furthermore, a vast majority of residents in neighborhoods in eastern South Los Angeles towards Downey are of Hispanic origin.[citation needed]

The largest Asian ethnic groups are Filipinos (3.2%) and Koreans (2.9%), which have their own established ethnic enclaves—Koreatown in the Wilshire Center and Historic Filipinotown.[135] Chinese people, which make up 1.8% of Los Angeles’s population, reside mostly outside of Los Angeles city limits and rather in the San Gabriel Valley of eastern Los Angeles County, but make a sizable presence in the city, notably in Chinatown.[136] Chinatown and Thaitown are also home to many Thais and Cambodians, which make up 0.3% and 0.1% of Los Angeles’s population, respectively. The Japanese comprise 0.9% of LA’s population and have an established Little Tokyo in the city’s downtown, and another significant community of Japanese Americans is in the Sawtelle district of West Los Angeles. Vietnamese make up 0.5% of Los Angeles’s population. Indians make up 0.9% of the city’s population. The city is also home to Armenians, Assyrians, and Iranians, many of whom live in enclaves like Little Armenia and Tehrangeles.[citation needed]

African Americans have been the predominant ethnic group in South Los Angeles, which has emerged as the largest African American community in the western United States since the 1960s. The neighborhoods of South Los Angeles with highest concentration of African Americans include Crenshaw, Baldwin Hills, Leimert Park, Hyde Park, Gramercy Park, Manchester Square and Watts.[137] Apart from South Los Angeles, neighborhoods in the Central region of Los Angeles, as Mid-City and Mid-Wilshire have a moderate concentration of African Americans as well.[citation needed]

Los Angeles has the second largest Mexican, Armenian, Salvadoran, Filipino and Guatemalan population by city in the world, the third largest Canadian population in the world, and has the largest Japanese, Iranian/Persian, Cambodian and Romani (Gypsy) population in the country.[138]

There is an Italian community in Los Angeles. Italians are concentrated in San Pedro.[139]

Religion

According to a 2014 study by the Pew Research Center, Christianity is the most prevalently practiced religion in Los Angeles (65%).[140][141] The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles is the largest archdiocese in the country.[143] Cardinal Roger Mahony, as the archbishop, oversaw construction of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, which opened in September 2002 in Downtown Los Angeles.[144]

In 2011, the once common, but ultimately lapsed, custom of conducting a procession and Mass in honor of Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles, in commemoration of the founding of the City of Los Angeles in 1781, was revived by the Queen of Angels Foundation and its founder Mark Albert, with the support of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles as well as several civic leaders.[145] The recently revived custom is a continuation of the original processions and Masses that commenced on the first anniversary of the founding of Los Angeles in 1782 and continued for nearly a century thereafter.

With 621,000 Jews in the metropolitan area, the region has the second-largest population of Jews in the United States, after New York City.[146] Many of Los Angeles’s Jews now live on the Westside and in the San Fernando Valley, though Boyle Heights once had a large Jewish population prior to World War II due to restrictive housing covenants. Major Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods include Hancock Park, Pico-Robertson, and Valley Village, while Jewish Israelis are well represented in the Encino and Tarzana neighborhoods, and Persian Jews in Beverly Hills. Many varieties of Judaism are represented in the greater Los Angeles area, including Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, and Reconstructionist. The Breed Street Shul in East Los Angeles, built in 1923, was the largest synagogue west of Chicago in its early decades; it is no longer in daily use as a synagogue and is being converted to a museum and community center.[147][148] The Kabbalah Centre also has a presence in the city.[149]

The International Church of the Foursquare Gospel was founded in Los Angeles by Aimee Semple McPherson in 1923 and remains headquartered there to this day. For many years, the church convened at Angelus Temple, which, at its construction, was one of the largest churches in the country.[150]

Los Angeles has had a rich and influential Protestant tradition. The first Protestant service in Los Angeles was a Methodist meeting held in a private home in 1850 and the oldest Protestant church still operating, First Congregational Church, was founded in 1867.[151] In the early 1900s the Bible Institute Of Los Angeles published the founding documents of the Christian Fundamentalist movement and the Azusa Street Revival launched Pentecostalism.[151] The Metropolitan Community Church also had its origins in the Los Angeles area.[152] Important churches in the city include First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, Bel Air Presbyterian Church, First African Methodist Episcopal Church of Los Angeles, West Angeles Church of God in Christ, Second Baptist Church, Crenshaw Christian Center, McCarty Memorial Christian Church, and First Congregational Church.

The Los Angeles California Temple, the second-largest temple operated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is on Santa Monica Boulevard in the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles. Dedicated in 1956, it was the first temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints built in California and it was the largest in the world when completed.[153]

The Hollywood region of Los Angeles also has several significant headquarters, churches, and the Celebrity Center of Scientology.[154][155]

Because of Los Angeles’s large multi-ethnic population, a wide variety of faiths are practiced, including Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Zoroastrianism, Sikhism, Baháʼí, various Eastern Orthodox Churches, Sufism, Shintoism, Taoism, Confucianism, Chinese folk religion and countless others. Immigrants from Asia for example, have formed a number of significant Buddhist congregations making the city home to the greatest variety of Buddhists in the world. The first Buddhist joss house was founded in the city in 1875.[151] Atheism and other secular beliefs are also common, as the city is the largest in the Western U.S. Unchurched Belt.

Homelessness

As of January 2020, there are 41,290 homeless people in the City of Los Angeles, comprising roughly 62% of the homeless population of LA County.[156] This is an increase of 14.2% over the previous year (with a 12.7% increase in the overall homeless population of LA County).[157][158] The epicenter of homelessness in Los Angeles is the Skid Row neighborhood, which contains 8,000 homeless people, one of the largest stable populations of homeless people in the United States.[159][160] The increased homeless population in Los Angeles has been attributed to lack of housing affordability[161] and to substance abuse.[162] Almost 60 percent of the 82,955 people who became newly homeless in 2019 said their homelessness was because of economic hardship.[157] In Los Angeles, black people are roughly four times more likely to experience homelessness.[157][163]

Crime

LAPD on May Day 2006 in front of the new Caltrans District 7 Headquarters

In 1992, the city of Los Angeles recorded 1,092 murders.[164] Los Angeles experienced a significant decline in crime in the 1990s and late 2000s and reached a 50-year low in 2009 with 314 homicides.[165][166] This is a rate of 7.85 per 100,000 population—a major decrease from 1980 when a homicide rate of 34.2 per 100,000 was reported.[167][168] This included 15 officer-involved shootings. One shooting led to the death of a SWAT team member, Randal Simmons, the first in LAPD’s history.[169] Los Angeles in the year of 2013 totaled 251 murders, a decrease of 16 percent from the previous year. Police speculate the drop resulted from a number of factors, including young people spending more time online.[170] In 2021, murders rose to the highest level since 2008 and there were 348.[171]

In 2015, it was revealed that the LAPD had been under-reporting crime for eight years, making the crime rate in the city appear much lower than it really is.[172][173]

The Dragna crime family and the Cohen crime family dominated organized crime in the city during the Prohibition era[174] and reached its peak during the 1940s and 1950s with the battle of Sunset Strip as part of the American Mafia, but has gradually declined since then with the rise of various black and Hispanic gangs in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[174]

According to the Los Angeles Police Department, the city is home to 45,000 gang members, organized into 450 gangs.[175] Among them are the Crips and Bloods, which are both African American street gangs that originated in the South Los Angeles region. Latino street gangs such as the Sureños, a Mexican American street gang, and Mara Salvatrucha, which has mainly members of Salvadoran descent, all originated in Los Angeles. This has led to the city being referred to as the «Gang Capital of America».[176]

Economy

Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles County

Los Angeles gas prices before taxes (2003 through 2022)

Median housing prices by U.S. metro area; the Los Angeles metropolitan area is the third most expensive as of 2022.

The economy of Los Angeles is driven by international trade, entertainment (television, motion pictures, video games, music recording, and production), aerospace, technology, petroleum, fashion, apparel, and tourism.[citation needed] Other significant industries include finance, telecommunications, law, healthcare, and transportation. In the 2017 Global Financial Centres Index, Los Angeles was ranked the 19th most competitive financial center in the world and sixth most competitive in the U.S. after New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, and Washington, D.C..[177]

One of the five major film studios, only Paramount Pictures is within Los Angeles’ city limits;[178] it is located in the so-called Thirty-Mile Zone of entertainment headquarters in Southern California.

Los Angeles is the largest manufacturing center in the United States.[179] The contiguous ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach together comprise the busiest port in the United States by some measures and the fifth-busiest port in the world, vital to trade within the Pacific Rim.[179]

The Los Angeles metropolitan area has a gross metropolitan product of over $1.0 trillion (as of 2018),[20] making it the third-largest economic metropolitan area in the world after Tokyo and New York.[20] Los Angeles has been classified an «alpha world city» according to a 2012 study by a group at Loughborough University.[180]

The Department of Cannabis Regulation enforces cannabis legislation after the legalization of the sale and distribution of cannabis in 2016.[181] As of October 2019, more than 300 existing cannabis businesses (both retailers and their suppliers) have been granted approval to operate in what is considered the nation’s largest market.[182][183]

As of 2018, Los Angeles is home to three Fortune 500 companies: AECOM, CBRE Group, and Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co.[184] Other companies headquartered in Los Angeles and the surrounding metropolitan area include The Aerospace Corporation, California Pizza Kitchen,[185] Capital Group Companies, Deluxe Entertainment Services Group, Dine Brands Global, DreamWorks Animation, Dollar Shave Club, Fandango Media, Farmers Insurance Group, Forever 21, Hulu, Panda Express, SpaceX, Ubisoft Film & Television, The Walt Disney Company, Universal Pictures, Warner Bros., Warner Music Group, and Trader Joe’s.

Largest non-government employers in Los Angeles County, August 2018[186]
Rank Employer Employees
1 Kaiser Permanente 37,468
2 University of Southern California 21,055
3 Northrop Grumman Corp. 16,600
4 Providence Health and Services Southern California 15,952
5 Target Corp. 15,000
6 Ralphs/Food 4 Less (Kroger Co. Division) 14,970
7 Cedars-Sinai Medical Center 14,903
8 Walt Disney Co. 13,000
9 Allied Universal 12,879
10 NBC Universal 12,000

Arts and culture

Los Angeles is often billed as the creative capital of the world because one in every six of its residents works in a creative industry[187] and there are more artists, writers, filmmakers, actors, dancers and musicians living and working in Los Angeles than any other city at any other time in world history.[188] The city is also known for its prolific murals.[189]

Movies and the performing arts

The performing arts play a major role in Los Angeles’s cultural identity. According to the USC Stevens Institute for Innovation, «there are more than 1,100 annual theatrical productions and 21 openings every week.»[188] The Los Angeles Music Center is «one of the three largest performing arts centers in the nation», with more than 1.3 million visitors per year.[190] The Walt Disney Concert Hall, centerpiece of the Music Center, is home to the prestigious Los Angeles Philharmonic.[191] Notable organizations such as Center Theatre Group, the Los Angeles Master Chorale, and the Los Angeles Opera are also resident companies of the Music Center.[192][193][194] Talent is locally cultivated at premier institutions such as the Colburn School and the USC Thornton School of Music.
The city’s Hollywood neighborhood has been recognized as the center of the motion picture industry, having held this distinction since the early 20th century, and the Los Angeles area is also associated with being the center of the television industry.[195] The city is home to major film studios as well as major record labels. Los Angeles plays host to the annual Academy Awards, the Primetime Emmy Awards, the Grammy Awards as well as many other entertainment industry awards shows. Los Angeles is the site of the USC School of Cinematic Arts which is the oldest film school in the United States.[196]

Museums and galleries

There are 841 museums and art galleries in Los Angeles County,[197] more museums per capita than any other city in the U.S.[197] Some of the notable museums are the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (the largest art museum in the Western United States[198]), the Getty Center (part of the J. Paul Getty Trust, the world’s wealthiest art institution[199]), the Petersen Automotive Museum,[200] the Huntington Library,[201] the Natural History Museum,[202] the Battleship Iowa,[203] and the Museum of Contemporary Art.[204] A significant number of art galleries are on Gallery Row, and tens of thousands attend the monthly Downtown Art Walk there.[205]

Libraries

The Los Angeles Public Library system operates 72 public libraries in the city.[206] Enclaves of unincorporated areas are served by branches of the County of Los Angeles Public Library, many of which are within walking distance to residents.[207]

Landmarks

Important landmarks in Los Angeles include the Hollywood Sign,[208] Walt Disney Concert Hall, Capitol Records Building,[209] the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels,[210] Angels Flight,[211] Grauman’s Chinese Theatre,[212] Dolby Theatre,[213] Griffith Observatory,[214] Getty Center,[215] Getty Villa,[216] Stahl House,[217] the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, L.A. Live,[218] the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Venice Canal Historic District and boardwalk, Theme Building, Bradbury Building, U.S. Bank Tower, Wilshire Grand Center, Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles City Hall, Hollywood Bowl,[219] battleship USS Iowa, Watts Towers,[220] Staples Center, Dodger Stadium, and Olvera Street.[221]

Cuisine

Los Angeles’ food culture is a fusion of global cuisine brought on by the city’s rich immigrant history and population. Latin American immigrants, particularly Mexican immigrants, brought tacos, burritos, quesadillas, tortas, tamales, and enchiladas served from food trucks and stands, taquerias, and cafés. Asian restaurants, many immigrant-owned, exist throughout the city with hotspots in Chinatown,[222] Koreatown,[223] and Little Tokyo.[224] Los Angeles also carries an outsized offering of vegan, vegetarian, and plant-based options. As of 2022, the Michelin Guide recognized 10 restaurants granting 2 restaurants two stars and eight restaurants one star. [225]

Sports

Los Angeles and its metropolitan area are the home of eleven top-level professional sports teams, several of which play in neighboring communities but use Los Angeles in their name. These teams include the Los Angeles Dodgers[226] and Los Angeles Angels[227] of Major League Baseball (MLB), the Los Angeles Rams[228] and Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League (NFL), the Los Angeles Lakers[229] and Los Angeles Clippers[230] of the National Basketball Association (NBA), the Los Angeles Kings[231] and Anaheim Ducks[232] of the National Hockey League (NHL), the Los Angeles Galaxy[233] and Los Angeles FC[234] of Major League Soccer (MLS), and the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA).[235]

Other notable sports teams include the UCLA Bruins and the USC Trojans in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), both of which are Division I teams in the Pac-12 Conference, but will soon be moved to the Big Ten Conference.[236]

Los Angeles is the second-largest city in the United States but hosted no NFL team between 1995 and 2015. At one time, the Los Angeles area hosted two NFL teams: the Rams and the Raiders. Both left the city in 1995, with the Rams moving to St. Louis, and the Raiders moving back to their original home of Oakland. After 21 seasons in St. Louis, on January 12, 2016, the NFL announced the Rams would be moving back to Los Angeles for the 2016 NFL season with its home games played at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for four seasons.[237][238][239] Prior to 1995, the Rams played their home games in the Coliseum from 1946 to 1979 which made them the first professional sports team to play in Los Angeles, and then moved to Anaheim Stadium from 1980 until 1994. The San Diego Chargers announced on January 12, 2017, that they would also relocate back to Los Angeles (the first since its inaugural season in 1960) and become the Los Angeles Chargers beginning in the 2017 NFL season and played at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California for three seasons.[240] The Rams and the Chargers would soon move to the newly built SoFi Stadium, located in nearby Inglewood during the 2020 season.[241]

Los Angeles boasts a number of sports venues, including Dodger Stadium,[242] the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum,[243] BMO Stadium[244] and the Crypto.com Arena.[245] The Forum, SoFi Stadium, Dignity Health Sports Park, the Rose Bowl, Angel Stadium, and the Honda Center are also in adjacent cities and cities in Los Angeles’s metropolitan area.[246]

Los Angeles has twice hosted the Summer Olympic Games: in 1932 and in 1984, and will host the games for a third time in 2028.[247] Los Angeles will be the third city after London (1908, 1948 and 2012) and Paris (1900, 1924 and 2024) to host the Olympic Games three times. When the tenth Olympic Games were hosted in 1932, the former 10th Street was renamed Olympic Blvd. Los Angeles also hosted the Deaflympics in 1985[248] and Special Olympics World Summer Games in 2015.[249]

8 NFL Super Bowls were also held in the city and its surrounding areas- 2 at the Memorial Coliseum (the first Super Bowl, I and VII), 5 at the Rose Bowl in suburban Pasadena (XI, XIV, XVII, XXI, and XXVII), and 1 at the suburban Inglewood (LVI) .[250] The Rose Bowl also hosts an annual and highly prestigious NCAA college football game called the Rose Bowl, which happens every New Year’s Day.

Los Angeles also hosted 8 FIFA World Cup soccer games at the Rose Bowl in 1994, including the final, where Brazil won. The Rose Bowl also hosted 4 matches in the 1999 FIFA Women’s World Cup, including the final, where the United States won against China on penalty kicks. This was the game where Brandi Chastain took her shirt off after she scored the tournament-winning penalty kick, creating an iconic image. Los Angeles will be one of eleven US host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup with matches set to be held at SoFi Stadium.[251]

Los Angeles is one of six North American cities to have won championships in all five of its major leagues (MLB, NFL, NHL, NBA and MLS), having completed the feat with the Kings’ 2012 Stanley Cup title.[252]

Government

Los Angeles is a charter city as opposed to a general law city. The current charter was adopted on June 8, 1999, and has been amended many times.[253] The elected government consists of the Los Angeles City Council and the mayor of Los Angeles, which operate under a mayor–council government, as well as the city attorney (not to be confused with the district attorney, a county office) and controller. The mayor is Karen Bass.[254] There are 15 city council districts.

The city has many departments and appointed officers, including the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD),[255] the Los Angeles Board of Police Commissioners,[256] the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD),[257] the Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA),[258] the Los Angeles Department of Transportation (LADOT),[259] and the Los Angeles Public Library (LAPL).[260]

The charter of the City of Los Angeles ratified by voters in 1999 created a system of advisory neighborhood councils that would represent the diversity of stakeholders, defined as those who live, work or own property in the neighborhood. The neighborhood councils are relatively autonomous and spontaneous in that they identify their own boundaries, establish their own bylaws, and elect their own officers. There are about 90 neighborhood councils.

Residents of Los Angeles elect supervisors for the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th supervisorial districts.

Federal and state representation

In the California State Assembly, Los Angeles is split between fourteen districts.[261] In the California State Senate, the city is split between eight districts.[262] In the United States House of Representatives, it is split among ten congressional districts.[263]

Education

Colleges and universities

There are three public universities within the city limits: California State University, Los Angeles (CSULA), California State University, Northridge (CSUN) and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).[264]

Private colleges in the city include:

  • American Film Institute Conservatory[265]
  • Alliant International University[266]
  • American Academy of Dramatic Arts (Los Angeles Campus)[267]
  • American Jewish University[268]
  • Abraham Lincoln University[269]
  • The American Musical and Dramatic Academy – Los Angeles campus
  • Antioch University’s Los Angeles campus[270]
  • Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science[271]
  • Colburn School[272]
  • Columbia College Hollywood[273]
  • Emerson College (Los Angeles Campus)[274]
  • Emperor’s College[275]
  • Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising’s Los Angeles campus (FIDM)
  • Los Angeles Film School[276]
  • Loyola Marymount University (LMU is also the parent university of Loyola Law School in Los Angeles)[277]
  • Mount St. Mary’s College[278]
  • National University of California[279]
  • Occidental College («Oxy»)[280]
  • Otis College of Art and Design (Otis)[281]
  • Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc)[282]
  • Southwestern Law School[283]
  • University of Southern California (USC)[284]
  • Woodbury University[285]

The community college system consists of nine campuses governed by the trustees of the Los Angeles Community College District:

  • East Los Angeles College (ELAC)[286]
  • Los Angeles City College (LACC)[287]
  • Los Angeles Harbor College[288]
  • Los Angeles Mission College[289]
  • Los Angeles Pierce College[290]
  • Los Angeles Valley College (LAVC)[291]
  • Los Angeles Southwest College[292]
  • Los Angeles Trade-Technical College[293]
  • West Los Angeles College[294]

There are numerous additional colleges and universities outside the city limits in the Greater Los Angeles area, including the Claremont Colleges consortium, which includes the most selective liberal arts colleges in the U.S., and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), one of the top STEM-focused research institutions in the world.

Schools

Los Angeles Unified School District serves almost all of the city of Los Angeles, as well as several surrounding communities, with a student population around 800,000.[295] After Proposition 13 was approved in 1978, urban school districts had considerable trouble with funding. LAUSD has become known for its underfunded, overcrowded and poorly maintained campuses, although its 162 Magnet schools help compete with local private schools.

Several small sections of Los Angeles are in the Inglewood Unified School District,[296] and the Las Virgenes Unified School District.[297] The Los Angeles County Office of Education operates the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts.

Media

The Los Angeles metro area is the second-largest broadcast designated market area in the U.S. (after New York) with 5,431,140 homes (4.956% of the U.S.), which is served by a wide variety of local AM and FM radio and television stations. Los Angeles and New York City are the only two media markets to have seven VHF allocations assigned to them.[298]

As part of the region’s aforementioned creative industry, the Big Four major broadcast television networks, ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC, all have production facilities and offices throughout various areas of Los Angeles. All four major broadcast television networks, plus major Spanish-language networks Telemundo and Univision, also own and operate stations that both serve the Los Angeles market and serve as each network’s West Coast flagship station: ABC’s KABC-TV (Channel 7),[299] CBS’s KCBS-TV (Channel 2), Fox’s KTTV-TV (Channel 11),[300] NBC’s KNBC-TV (Channel 4),[301] MyNetworkTV’s KCOP-TV (Channel 13), Telemundo’s KVEA-TV (Channel 52), and Univision’s KMEX-TV (Channel 34). The region also has four PBS stations, with KCET, re-joining the network as secondary affiliate in August 2019, after spending the previous eight years as the nation’s largest independent public television station. KTBN (Channel 40) is the flagship station of the religious Trinity Broadcasting Network, based out of Santa Ana. A variety of independent television stations, such as KCAL-TV (Channel 9) and KTLA-TV (Channel 5), also operate in the area.

The major daily English-language newspaper in the area is the Los Angeles Times.[302] La Opinión is the city’s major daily Spanish-language paper.[303] The Korea Times is the city’s major daily Korean-language paper while The World Journal is the city and county’s major Chinese newspaper. The Los Angeles Sentinel is the city’s major African-American weekly paper, boasting the largest African-American readership in the Western United States.[304] Investor’s Business Daily is distributed from its LA corporate offices, which are headquartered in Playa del Rey.[305]

There are also a number of smaller regional newspapers, alternative weeklies and magazines, including the Los Angeles Register, Los Angeles Community News, (which focuses on coverage of the greater Los Angeles area), Los Angeles Daily News (which focuses coverage on the San Fernando Valley), LA Weekly, L.A. Record (which focuses coverage on the music scene in the Greater Los Angeles Area), Los Angeles Magazine, the Los Angeles Business Journal, the Los Angeles Daily Journal (legal industry paper), The Hollywood Reporter, Variety (both entertainment industry papers), and Los Angeles Downtown News.[306] In addition to the major papers, numerous local periodicals serve immigrant communities in their native languages, including Armenian, English, Korean, Persian, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew, and Arabic. Many cities adjacent to Los Angeles also have their own daily newspapers whose coverage and availability overlaps with certain Los Angeles neighborhoods. Examples include The Daily Breeze (serving the South Bay), and The Long Beach Press-Telegram.

Los Angeles arts, culture and nightlife news is also covered by a number of local and national online guides, including Time Out Los Angeles, Thrillist, Kristin’s List, DailyCandy, Diversity News Magazine, LAist, and Flavorpill.[307][308][309][310]

Infrastructure

Transportation

Freeways

The city and the rest of the Los Angeles metropolitan area are served by an extensive network of freeways and highways. Texas Transportation Institute’s annual Urban Mobility Report ranked Los Angeles area roads the most congested in the United States in 2019 as measured by annual delay per traveler, area residents experiencing a cumulative average of 119 hours waiting in traffic that year.[311] Los Angeles was followed by San Francisco/Oakland, Washington, D.C., and Miami. Despite the congestion in the city, the mean daily travel time for commuters in Los Angeles is shorter than other major cities, including New York City, Philadelphia and Chicago. Los Angeles’s mean travel time for work commutes in 2006 was 29.2 minutes, similar to those of San Francisco and Washington, D.C.[312]

The major highways that connect LA to the rest of the nation include Interstate 5, which runs south through San Diego to Tijuana in Mexico and north through Sacramento, Portland, and Seattle to the Canada–US border; Interstate 10, the southernmost east–west, coast-to-coast Interstate Highway in the United States, going to Jacksonville, Florida; and U.S. Route 101, which heads to the California Central Coast, San Francisco, the Redwood Empire, and the Oregon and Washington coasts.

Transit systems

The LA County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (LA County Metro) and other agencies operate an extensive system of bus lines, as well as subway and light rail lines across Los Angeles County, with a combined monthly ridership (measured in individual boardings) of 38.8 million as of September 2011. The majority of this (30.5 million) is taken up by the city’s bus system,[313] the second busiest in the country. The subway and light rail combined average the remaining roughly 8.2 million boardings per month.[313] LA County Metro recorded over 397 million boardings for the 2017 calendar year, including about 285 million bus riders and about 113 million riding on rail transit.[314] For the first quarter of 2018, there were just under 95 million system-wide boardings, down from about 98 million in 2017, and about 105 million in 2016.[315] In 2005, 10.2% of Los Angeles commuters rode some form of public transportation.[316] According to the 2016 American Community Survey, 9.2% of working Los Angeles (city) residents made the journey to work via public transportation.[317]

The city’s subway system is the ninth busiest in the United States and its light rail system is the country’s busiest.[318] The rail system includes the B and D subway lines, as well as the A, C, E, and L light rail lines. In 2016, the E Line was extended to the Pacific Ocean at Santa Monica. The Metro G and J lines are bus rapid transit lines with stops and frequency similar to those of light rail. As of 2022, the total number of light rail stations is 99. The city is also central to the commuter rail system Metrolink, which links Los Angeles to all neighboring counties as well as many suburbs.[319]

Besides the rail service provided by Metrolink and the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, Los Angeles is served by inter-city passenger trains from Amtrak. The main rail station in the city is Union Station just north of Downtown.

In addition, the city directly contracts for local and commuter bus service through the Los Angeles Department of Transportation, or LADOT.

Airports

The main international and domestic airport serving Los Angeles is Los Angeles International Airport (IATA: LAX, ICAO: KLAX), commonly referred to by its airport code, LAX.[320] It is located on the Westside of Los Angeles near the Sofi Stadium in Inglewood.

Other major nearby commercial airports include:

  • (IATA: ONT, ICAO: KONT) Ontario International Airport, owned by the city of Ontario, CA; serves the Inland Empire.[321]
  • (IATA: BUR, ICAO: KBUR) Hollywood Burbank Airport, jointly owned by the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and Pasadena. Formerly known as Bob Hope Airport and Burbank Airport, the closest airport to Downtown Los Angeles serves the San Fernando, San Gabriel, and Antelope Valleys.[322]
  • (IATA: LGB, ICAO: KLGB) Long Beach Airport, serves the Long Beach/Harbor area.[323]
  • (IATA: SNA, ICAO: KSNA) John Wayne Airport of Orange County.

One of the world’s busiest general-aviation airports is also in Los Angeles: Van Nuys Airport (IATA: VNY, ICAO: KVNY).[324]

Seaports

Port of Los Angeles traffic

  Loaded Exports

  Empty Imports

The Port of Los Angeles is in San Pedro Bay in the San Pedro neighborhood, approximately 20 miles (32 km) south of Downtown. Also called Los Angeles Harbor and WORLDPORT LA, the port complex occupies 7,500 acres (30 km2) of land and water along 43 miles (69 km) of waterfront. It adjoins the separate Port of Long Beach.[325]

The sea ports of the Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach together make up the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor.[326][327] Together, both ports are the fifth busiest container port in the world, with a trade volume of over 14.2 million TEU’s in 2008.[328] Singly, the Port of Los Angeles is the busiest container port in the United States and the largest cruise ship center on the West Coast of the United States – The Port of Los Angeles’s World Cruise Center served about 590,000 passengers in 2014.[329]

There are also smaller, non-industrial harbors along Los Angeles’s coastline. The port includes four bridges: the Vincent Thomas Bridge, Henry Ford Bridge, Long Beach International Gateway Bridge, and Commodore Schuyler F. Heim Bridge. Passenger ferry service from San Pedro to the city of Avalon (and Two Harbors) on Santa Catalina Island is provided by Catalina Express.

Notable people

Sister cities

A sign near City Hall pointing Los Angeles’ sister cities

Los Angeles has 25 sister cities,[330] listed chronologically by year joined:

  • Eilat, Israel (1959)
  • Nagoya, Japan (1959)
  • Salvador, Brazil (1962)
  • Bordeaux, France (1964)[331][332]
  • Berlin, Germany (1967)[333]
  • Lusaka, Zambia (1968)
  • Mexico City, Mexico (1969)
  • Auckland, New Zealand (1971)
  • Busan, South Korea (1971)
  • Mumbai, India (1972)
  • Tehran, Iran (1972)
  • Taipei, Taiwan (1979)
  • Guangzhou, China (1981)[334]
  • Athens, Greece (1984)
  • Saint Petersburg, Russia (1984)
  • Vancouver, Canada (1986)[335]
  • Giza, Egypt (1989)
  • Jakarta, Indonesia (1990)
  • Kaunas, Lithuania (1991)
  • Makati, Philippines (1992)
  • Split, Croatia (1993)[336]
  • San Salvador, El Salvador (2005)
  • Beirut, Lebanon (2006)
  • Ischia, Campania, Italy (2006)
  • Yerevan, Armenia (2007)[337]

In addition, Los Angeles has the following «friendship cities»:

See also

  • Largest cities in Southern California
  • Largest cities in the Americas
  • List of hotels in Los Angeles
  • List of largest houses in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area
  • List of museums in Los Angeles
  • List of museums in Los Angeles County, California
  • List of music venues in Los Angeles
  • List of people from Los Angeles
  • List of tallest buildings in Los Angeles
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles, California

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ loss AN-jih-leez, -⁠liz, -⁠liss[13]

References

  1. ^ a b c Gollust, Shelley (April 18, 2013). «Nicknames for Los Angeles». Voice of America. Retrieved June 26, 2014.
  2. ^ Barrows, H.D. (1899). «Felepe de Neve». Historical Society of Southern California Quarterly. Vol. 4. p. 151ff. Retrieved September 28, 2011.
  3. ^ «This 1835 Decree Made the Pueblo of Los Angeles a Ciudad – And California’s Capital». KCET. April 2016. Retrieved January 27, 2018.
  4. ^ «California Cities by Incorporation Date». California Association of Local Agency Formation Commissions. Archived from the original (DOC) on February 21, 2013. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  5. ^ «About the City Government». City of Los Angeles. Archived from the original on February 8, 2015. Retrieved February 8, 2015.
  6. ^ a b «2021 U.S. Gazetteer Files». United States Census Bureau. Retrieved September 7, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d «QuickFacts: Los Angeles city, California». U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  8. ^ «List of 2020 Census Urban Areas». census.gov. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
  9. ^ «2020 Population and Housing State Data». United States Census Bureau. Retrieved August 22, 2021.
  10. ^ «Angelino, Angeleno, and Angeleño». KCET. January 10, 2011.
  11. ^ «Definition of ANGELENO». www.merriam-webster.com.
  12. ^ Zip Codes Within the City of Los Angeles – LAHD
  13. ^ Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
  14. ^ «Nicknames for Los Angeles, California». www.laalmanac.com.
  15. ^ «Slowing State Population Decline puts Latest Population at 39,185,000» (PDF). dof.ca.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 12, 2022. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
  16. ^ a b Estrada, William David (2009). The Los Angeles Plaza: Sacred and Contested Space. University of Texas Press. pp. 15–50. ISBN 978-0-292-78209-9.
  17. ^ «Subterranean L.A.: The Urban Oil Fields». The Getty Iris. July 16, 2013. Retrieved December 31, 2015.
  18. ^ «Top 50 World Container Ports». World Shipping Council. Archived from the original on July 4, 2012. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  19. ^ Karlamangla, Soumya (November 4, 2021). «The Busiest Port in the U.S.» The New York Times. Retrieved July 26, 2022.
  20. ^ a b c «Table 3.1. GDP & Personal Income». U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. 2018. Retrieved April 6, 2019.
  21. ^ Hayley Smith (October 13, 2022). «Los Angeles is running out of water, and time. Are leaders willing to act?». Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 14, 2022.
  22. ^ Smith, Hayley (March 1, 2022). «California drought continues after state has its driest January and February on record». Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 23, 2022.
  23. ^ a b Stein, David Allen (1953). «Los Angeles: A Noble Fight Nobly Lost». Names. 1 (1): 35–38. doi:10.1179/nam.1953.1.1.35.
  24. ^ Masters, Nathan (February 24, 2011). «The Crusader in Corduroy, the Land of Soundest Philosophy, and the ‘G’ That Shall Not Be Jellified». KCET. Public Media Group of Southern California. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  25. ^ Masters, Nathan (May 6, 2016). «How to Pronounce «Los Angeles,» According to Charles Lummis». KCET. Public Media Group of Southern California. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  26. ^ Lummis, Charles Fletcher (June 29, 1908). «This Is the Way to Pronounce Los Angeles». Nebraska State Journal. p. 4.
  27. ^ a b c Harvey, Steve (June 26, 2011). «Devil of a time with City of Angels’ name». Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  28. ^ Kenyon, John Samuel; Knott, Thomas Albert (1944). A Pronouncing Dictionary of American English. Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam. p. 260.
  29. ^ Buntin, John (2009). L.A. Noir: The Struggle for the Soul of America’s Most Seductive City. New York: Harmony Books. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-307-35207-1.
  30. ^ a b Bright, William (1998). Fifteen Hundred California Place Names. University of California Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-520-21271-8. LCCN 97043147. Founded on the site of a Gabrielino Indian village called Yang-na, or iyáangẚ, ‘poison-oak place.’
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Further reading

General

  • Carey McWilliams (2009). Southern California: An Island on the Land (9th ed.). Peregrine Smith. ISBN 978-0-87905-007-8.
  • Richard White (1991). It’s Your Misfortune and None of My Own: A New History of the American West. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-2567-1.
  • David Rieff (1992). Los Angeles: Capital of the Third World. Touchstone. ISBN 978-0-671-79210-7.
  • Peter Theroux (1994). Translating LA: A Tour of the Rainbow City. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-31394-9.
  • Paul Glover (1995). Los Angeles: A History of the Future. Greenplanners. ISBN 978-0-9622911-0-4.
  • Leonard Pitt & Dale Pitt (2000). Los Angeles A to Z: An Encyclopedia of the City and County. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20530-7.
  • Kevin Starr and David Ulin (2009). Jim Heimann (ed.). Los Angeles: Portrait of a City. Taschen America. ISBN 978-3-8365-0291-7.

Architecture and urban theory

  • Reyner Banham (2009). Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-26015-3.
  • Mike Davis (2006). City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles. Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-568-5.
  • Robert M. Fogelson (1993). The Fragmented Metropolis: Los Angeles 1850–1930. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08230-4.
  • Norman M. Klein (1997). The History of Forgetting: Los Angeles and the Erasure of Memory. Verso. ISBN 978-1-84467-242-4.
  • Sam Hall Kaplan (2000). L.A. Lost & Found: An Architectural History of Los Angeles. Hennessey and Ingalls. ISBN 978-0-940512-23-8.
  • Wim de Wit and Christopher James Alexander (2013). Overdrive: L.A. Constructs the Future, 1940–1990. Getty Publications. ISBN 978-1-60606-128-2.

Race relations

  • Acuña, Rodolfo (1996). Anything but Mexican: Chicanos in contemporary Los Angeles. Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-031-3. Retrieved September 30, 2011.
  • George, Lynell (1992). No Crystal Stair: African Americans in the City of Angels. Verso. ISBN 978-0-86091-389-4.
  • Sides, Josh (2006). L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24830-4.
  • Eduardo Obregón Pagán (2006). Murder at the Sleepy Lagoon: Zoot Suits, Race, and Riot in Wartime L.A. The University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-5494-5.
  • R. J. Smith (2007). The Great Black Way: L.A. in the 1940s and the Last African American Renaissance. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-58648-521-4.

LGBT

  • Lillian Faderman and Stuart Timmons (2006). Gay L. A.: A History of Sexual Outlaws, Power Politics, And Lipstick Lesbians. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02288-5.
  • Hurewitz, Daniel (2007). Bohemian Los Angeles: and the Making of Modern Politics. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-24925-7.

Environment

  • Marc Reisner (1986). Cadillac Desert: The American West and its Disappearing Water. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-017824-1.
  • Chip Jacobs and William Kelly (2008). Smogtown: The Lung-Burning History of Pollution in Los Angeles. Outlook Hardcover. ISBN 978-1-58567-860-0.

  • Mike Davis and Jon Wiener (2020). Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties. Verso. ISBN 978-1-78478-024-1.

Art and literature

  • David L. Ulin, ed. (2002). Writing Los Angeles: A Literary Anthology. Library of America. ISBN 978-1-931082-27-3.
  • Whiting, Cécile (2008). Pop L.A.: Art and the City in the 1960s. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25634-7.

External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

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