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    • Stahl House, Los Angeles. Among all the houses included in the Case Study program that ran from 1945 to 1966, Case Study House #22 (a.k.a. the Stahl House) is the most accessible to the general public.
    • Trousdale Estates, Beverly Hills. The Los Angeles area actually has strong ties to the Modernist housing tracts of Palm Springs, thanks to Paul Trousdale — who bought 410 acres of the former Doheny Ranch in present-day Beverly Hills in 1954 to create an exclusive colony of single-story estates by some of the top modern architects of the time.
    • Balboa Highlands, Granada Hills. 1/3 A slant-roofed modernist home designed by Claude Oakland with A. Quincy Jones & Frederick Emmons, Associates in Balboa Highlands. |
    • Gregory Ain Mar Vista Tract, Mar Vista. The City of Los Angeles adopted its first modern (a.k.a. post-World War II) historic district in 2003: the Gregory Ain Mar Vista Tract, located on the westside of Los Angeles near the borders of Santa Monica, Venice, Marina del Rey, and the Palms neighborhood.
  1. Aug 8, 2011 · The Evolving Urban Form: Los Angeles. by Wendell Cox 08/08/2011. Los Angeles has grown more than any major metropolitan region in the high income world except for Tokyo since the beginning of the twentieth century, and also since 1950. In 1900, the city (municipality, see Note) of Los Angeles had little over 100,000 people and ranked 36th in ...

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  3. Apr 23, 2018 · From the editor: “L.A. Urbanized” is a series of articles exploring why Los Angeles is currently in the midst of an urban revolution and what it means for the city’s future. It documents the evolving development landscape of the region over the past few decades, identifies what key events brought about its urbanist turn, and considers what the impact of this transformation will be.

  4. www.history.com › topics › us-statesLos Angeles: A History

    Feb 28, 2019 · Shabdro Photo/Getty Images. Los Angeles, America’s second largest city and the West Coast’s biggest economic powerhouse, was originally settled by indigenous tribes, including the Chumash and ...

  5. Los Angeles has defied traditional urbanism and retained instead a suburban and privatizing cultural bias even as it has intensified to the point where in places it is denser than Queens, New York. 1 Given the absence of the usual spatial clues that pertain to urban culture, Angelenos are assumed by their counterparts in other cities and regions to be, like their city, anti-urban.

  6. Nov 2, 2023 · Here, we take you on a journey through five of the most beautiful Modernist houses in Los Angeles, each a testament to visionary design and timeless elegance. The Stahl House (Case Study House #22), Photo mbtrama from Upland, CA, USA, via Wikimedia Commons. 1. The Stahl House (Case Study House #22)

    • Overview
    • Character of the city

    Los Angeles , city, seat of Los Angeles county, southern California, U.S. It is the second most populous city and metropolitan area (after New York City) in the United States. The city sprawls across a broad coastal plain situated between mountains and the Pacific Ocean; the much larger Los Angeles county, which encompasses the city, contains some 90 other incorporated cities, including Beverly Hills, Pasadena, and Long Beach. The county also encompasses two of the Channel Islands, Santa Catalina and San Clemente; Mount San Antonio, familiarly known as Mount Baldy or Old Baldy, 10,046 feet (3,062 metres) high; more than 900 square miles (2,330 square km) of desert; and 75 miles (120 km) of seacoast.

    Since the city and the county are interwoven geographically, culturally, and economically, any consideration of Los Angeles must, to some degree, involve both entities. Population density around the metropolitan area varies greatly—as low as one person per square mile in mountainous areas and as high as 50,000 per square mile near downtown Los Angeles. Area city, 466 square miles (1,207 square km); county, 4,070 square miles (10,540 square km). Pop. (2010) 3,792,621; Los Angeles–Long Beach–Glendale Metro Division, 9,818,605; Los Angeles–Long Beach–Santa Ana Metro Area, 12,828,837; (2020) 3,898,747; Los Angeles–Long Beach–Glendale Metro Division, 10,014,009; Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim Metro Area, 13,200,998.

    Los Angeles, the heart of southern California, became a world-class city very recently. At the start of the 20th century it was considered merely “a large village.” This ascendancy is all the more remarkable considering that the city originally lacked some of the essential building blocks associated with cityhood, such as a natural harbour. Yet it overcame natural deficiencies and established itself as an important centre of commerce, agriculture, tourism, and industry. For more than a century it has been indelibly associated with a benign climate, extensive leisure, and outdoor recreation, as well as the special aura of celebrity associated with Hollywood. The lifestyle of Los Angeles residents (who are called Angelenos) relies on the automobile, idealizes the single-family dwelling, and favours informality. With notable exceptions, the skyline is primarily horizontal rather than vertical. Los Angeles is a place of extraordinary ethnic and racial diversity, owing largely to immigration, and, like other world cities, it reflects a growing gap between rich and poor.

    Los Angeles has endured the barbs of many detractors. Critics refer to it either as a laid-back “la-la land” or, conversely, as a place reeling from earthquakes, fire, smog, gang warfare, and riots. The city’s defenders admire its mild climate and geographic variety. They claim that its major social problems are similar to those of all big cities and are perhaps even less severe there than elsewhere. In fact, some observers regard it as the most modern and quintessential American city.

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