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Wikipedia

Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles

Pacific Palisades is a neighborhood in the Westside region of Los Angeles, California, situated about 20 miles (32 km) west of Downtown Los Angeles.[8]

Pacific Palisades
Pacific Palisades and Will Rogers State Beach, California
Nickname(s): 
The Palisades, PacPal, Pali, Palisades
Motto: 
"Where the mountains meet the sea."[1][2]
Pacific Palisades
Location within Los Angeles County
Coordinates: 34°02′53″N 118°31′32″W / 34.04806°N 118.52556°W / 34.04806; -118.52556Coordinates: 34°02′53″N 118°31′32″W / 34.04806°N 118.52556°W / 34.04806; -118.52556
Country United States
State California
County Los Angeles
City Los Angeles
First settlement by Chumash people8,000 BCE
Mexican settlement1838
Established1921
Government
 • TypeNeighborhood of Los Angeles
 • BodyPacific Palisades Community Council/Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce
 • Honorary MayorEugene Levy (D)[4]
Area
 • Total24.31[5] sq mi (62.97[5] km2)
 • Land22.84[5] sq mi (59.15 km2)
 • Water1.47[5] sq mi (3.8[5] km2)
Elevation328 ft (98.5 m)
Highest elevation2,126 ft (648 m)
Lowest elevation0 ft (0 m)
Population
 (2018)
 • Total28,811[3]
 • Density1,185/sq mi (457.5/km2)
Demonym(s)Palisadian, Palisadians
Time zoneUTC-8 (Pacific)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-7 (PDT)
Zip code
90272
Area code(s)310/424
WebsiteCommunity Council

Chamber of Commerce

Pacific Palisades was formally founded in 1921 by a Methodist organization, and in the years that followed became a refuge for Jewish artists and intellectuals fleeing the Holocaust. The Palisades would later be sought after by celebrities and other high-profile individuals seeking privacy.[9] It is known for: its seclusion and for being a close-knit community with a small-town feel, its Mediterranean climate, hilly topography, natural environment, its abundance of parkland and hiking trails, its 3-mile (4.8 km) strip of coastline, and for being home to a number of architecturally significant homes.[10][11]

Pacific Palisades has historically been home to many Hollywood celebrities. Due to its secluded location compared to other affluent areas such as Beverly Hills, notable residents are afforded more privacy, and paparazzi are uncommon. People in the entertainment industry, and other affluent residents, also live throughout the Palisades, mixing with other less affluent residents. As of 2018, the community's population was 28,881.

Pacific Palisades is a largely residential community and does not attract many tourists other than day visitors to Gladstones Malibu, the local beaches, the Getty Villa or the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine.

Nicknamed "the Palisades" and “Pali” by surfers and locals, the three-mile length of the Palisades coast spans from after Sorrento Beach in Santa Monica to the south, and ending at Sunset Point Beach and Malibu to the north. Beaches along the Pacific Palisades coast include: Will Rogers State Beach, Sunset Point Beach, and one of the few gay beaches in Los Angeles, Ginger Rogers Beach. The many parks within the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area lie along the ridges above the community, along with local parks that include Will Rogers State Historic Park.

The Palisades is bounded by Brentwood to the east, Malibu to the west, Santa Monica to the southeast, the Santa Monica Bay to the southwest, Topanga and the Santa Monica Mountains to the north.

Etymology

The name "Pacific Palisades" comes from the term "palisades," a geological formation consisting of a series of cliff-like bluffs situated by a body of water, in this case the Pacific Ocean, and also for the area's purported resemblance to The Palisades on the west side of the lower Hudson River.[12]

History

Native American period

Archeological evidence shows Native American Indians living in the Santa Monica Mountains and the surrounding area including Pacific Palisades for over 10,000 years.[13] Prior to European contact, the western sections of the Santa Monica mountains were inhabited by the Tongva people.[13] The closest Tongva settlement to Pacific Palisades with a written record is the village of Topa'nga.[14] The village of Topa'nga sits on the western-most edge of Tongva territory, neighboring the territory of the Chumash people to the north.[14] Due to this close proximity to the Chumash, the culture in western Tongva territory contained elements of Chumash influence.[14]

Mexican period

The land that became Pacific Palisades was originally located within the boundaries of Rancho Boca de Santa Monica, granted by the governor of California during the Mexican period to Francisco Marquez and Ysidro Reyes in 1839.[14] The Ysidro Reyes Adobe was the first adobe home ever built in Santa Monica Canyon, erected in the year 1838 on land now known as Pampas Ricas Blvd, located in Pacific Palisades.[15] Sketches of adobe dwelling exist in the collection of the UCLA Library.[16][17] A memorial plaque sits in a boulder on Pampas Ricas Blvd commemorating the adobe house, dedicated in the 1950s.[18] Ysidro Reyes died in 1863. Reyes left his portion of Rancho Boca de Santa Monica to his widow, Maria Antonia Villa, who sold it to developer and railroad magnate Robert Symington Baker in 1875.[19]

1911-1922

In 1911, film director Thomas Ince constructed his film studio, "Inceville", which was located on a 460-acre (1.9 km2) tract of land he leased called Bison Ranch located at Sunset Blvd. and Pacific Coast Highway in the Santa Monica Mountains. Today this is where the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine is located.[citation needed] By the following year, Ince had earned enough money to purchase the ranch and was able to lease an additional 18,000 acres (73 km2) lot located in what is now in the Palisades Highlands neighborhood. stretching 7.5 miles (12.1 km) up Santa Ynez Canyon. This was the first major development was built in the Palisades since the Mexican rancho era.[20]

 
"Inceville", Santa Ynez Canyon, California, c. 1919

This was the first studio in the area which featured silent stages, production offices, printing labs, a commissary large enough to serve lunch to hundreds of workers, dressing rooms, props houses, elaborate sets, all in one central location.

When Inceville was completed, the streets were lined with many types of structures, from humble cottages to mansions, mimicking the style and architecture of different countries.[21] Extensive outdoor western sets were built and used on the site for several years. According to Katherine La Hue in her book, Pacific Palisades: Where the Mountains Meet the Sea:

Ince invested $35,000 in building, stages and sets ... a bit of Switzerland, a Puritan settlement, a Japanese village ... beyond the breakers, an ancient brigantine weighed anchor, cutlassed men swarming over the sides of the ship, while on the shore performing cowboys galloped about, twirling their lassos in pursuit of errant cattle ... The main herds were kept in the hills, where Ince also raised feed and garden produce. Supplies of every sort were needed to house and feed a veritable army of actors, directors and subordinates.

While the cowboys, Native Americans and assorted workers lived at "Inceville," the main actors came from Los Angeles and other communities as needed, often taking the red trolley cars to the Long Wharf in what is now the Temescal Canyon neighborhood, where buckboards conveyed them to the set.

Ince lived in a house overlooking the vast studio, located in what is now the Marquez Knolls neighborhood.[22] Indeed, "Inceville" became a prototype for Hollywood film studios of the future, with a studio head (Ince), producers, directors, production managers, production staff, and writers all working together under one organization and under the supervision of a General Manager, Fred J. Balshofer.[23] On January 16, 1916, a fire broke out at Inceville, the first of many that eventually destroyed all of the buildings. Ince later gave up on the studio and sold it to Hart, who renamed it "Hartville." Three years later, Hart sold the lot to Robertson-Cole Pictures Corporation, which continued filming there until 1922. La Hue writes that "the place was virtually a ghost town when the last remnants of "Inceville" were burned on July 4, 1922, leaving only a "weatherworn old church, which stood sentinel over the charred ruins."

1921–1931

 
Santa Monica Canyon, 1921

A decade later, the Rev. Charles H. Scott and the Southern California Methodist Episcopal Church bought the land; in 1922, Scott founded Pacific Palisades, envisioning an elaborate religious-intellectual commune.[24] Believers snapped up choice lots and lived in tents during construction. By 1925, the Palisades had 100 homes. In one subdivision, streets were named in alphabetical order for Methodist missionaries (the "Alphabet Streets"). The tents eventually were replaced by cabins, then by bungalows, and ultimately by multimillion-dollar homes. The climate of the area was a big selling point. Temperatures are much cooler than inland Los Angeles during summer, but usually sunnier and less foggy than areas south along the coast (e.g. Santa Monica).

Pacific Palisades enjoyed steady growth throughout the Roaring 20s, but it was still a small, isolated community out on the edge of Los Angeles. It began to become less isolated with the paving of Sunset Boulevard± in 1925, which brought an increased flow of traffic through the community and offered more convenient accessibility to nearby Westwood and Beverly Hills.[25]

1929 would prove to be a pivotal year in the history of the Palisades,[25] and by that time the town consisted of only about 365 homes and about 1,000 residents who mostly resided in the so-called "Alphabet Streets" neighborhood, although residential construction was now expanding into what would later become the Castellammare, Huntington and Paseo Miramar neighborhoods.[26] On August 18 of that year, the cornerstone was laid for the foundation of the Methodist Episcopal Church on Via de la Paz, which at that time was the community's only church. Directly across the street, planning was underway for the town's first permanent school building which would later become known as "Palisades Elementary", which was dedicated on June 12, 1931.[25]

In 1928, the Los Angeles Police Department began renting temporary office space in the now-historic Business Block building for the price of $10 a month. The following year, a motorcycle officer was assigned to make nightly patrols in the area. The Palisades finally acquired its own fire station in 1929, located on Sunset, adjacent to where the local Chase Bank branch now stands in the Village neighborhood.[25]

By the end of the decade, nearly all remaining open areas of Pacific Palisades were being developed, reflecting the areas booming growth and the Palisades' coastal allure. Golfers were enjoying the already acclaimed Riviera Country Club, opened in 1927. Later in the decade construction started on the Bel-Air Bay Club, opened in March 1930.[25]

1930– present

 
Photo of the devastation from the 1938 flood in what is now The Village.

The Palisades was a refuge for many German-Jewish and Austrian-Jewish intellectuals and artists fleeing from pre-war Germany and, later, from the Holocaust, many of whom associated with the Exilliteratur settled in Pacific Palisades, including Thomas Mann, Lion Feuchtwanger, Theodor W. Adorno, Vicki Baum, Herbert Zipper, and Emil Ludwig. Some of these Jewish refugees had previously sought refuge in the south of France (and had to flee due to the fall of France to the Vichy regime), and were surprised by the similarities with the Mediterranean climate and topography.[27][28] Villa Aurora on Paseo Miramar, the Spanish colonial home of Feuchtwanger and his wife, Marta, became the focal point of the expatriate community, which was nicknamed "Weimar by the Sea".[29] Some non-Jewish exiles who were married to people with Jewish ancestry chose to settle in the Palisades as well, such as Thomas Mann and his wife Katia Mann who resided at 1550 San Remo Drive in the Riviera neighborhood.[30]

For many decades there was a virtual ban on drinking alcohol in the district, and a Chinese restaurant, House of Lee, held the only liquor license. The Methodist Church created a Chautauqua Conference Grounds in Temescal Canyon.[31] The Presbyterian Synod purchased the property in 1943 and used it as a private retreat center until the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy purchased the property in 1994 to become Temescal Gateway Park.

Though the Palisades had a notable Jewish population since at least the 1930s, it was still largely Methodist until the 1970s. This is when the Palisades began to see an explosion of affluent Jewish migration, accompanied by the opening of a local landmark Mort's Deli, in 1972. The beloved landmark closed in 2007 after former LA mayor Richard Riordan purchased the deli and converted it to a bistro.[32]

Geography

Pacific Palisades is about 7 miles (11 kilometers) west of the UCLA campus.[33] The Santa Monica Mountain range runs through the northern and eastern sections of Pacific Palisades, accessible through a series of trailheads.[33]

Topography

The Pacific Palisades covers a total area of 24.31 square miles (63 km2), comprising 22.84 square miles (59.2 km2) of land and 1.47 square miles (3.8 km2) of water.[5] The Palisades covers an area slightly larger than the island of Manhattan.

Climate

Pacific Palisades
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
1.6
 
 
66
52
 
 
1.5
 
 
65
50
 
 
1
 
 
67
52
 
 
0.4
 
 
69
54
 
 
0.4
 
 
71
56
 
 
0.1
 
 
74
59
 
 
0.2
 
 
79
63
 
 
0.1
 
 
81
65
 
 
0.2
 
 
81
65
 
 
0.2
 
 
77
62
 
 
0.4
 
 
71
57
 
 
1.1
 
 
64
51
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches
Source: [34]
Metric conversion
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
41
 
 
19
11
 
 
38
 
 
18
10
 
 
25
 
 
19
11
 
 
10
 
 
21
12
 
 
10
 
 
22
13
 
 
2.5
 
 
23
15
 
 
5.1
 
 
26
17
 
 
2.5
 
 
27
18
 
 
5.1
 
 
27
18
 
 
5.1
 
 
25
17
 
 
10
 
 
22
14
 
 
28
 
 
18
11
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm

Pacific Palisades has a Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csb), and receives just enough annual precipitation to avoid semi-arid climate (BSh),.[35] 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.[36][37] Pacific Palisades has plenty of sunshine throughout the year, with an average of only 35 days with measurable precipitation annually.[38]

Temperatures in the Palisades 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.[38][39] 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.[40] 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.[41] Pacific Palisades, like much of the rest of the southern California 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.[42]

Pacific Palisades averages 14.93 in (379 mm) of precipitation annually, mainly occurring between November and March,[39] generally in the form of moderate rain showers, but sometimes as heavy rainfall during winter storms. Rainfall is usually higher in the neighborhoods located in the hills and coastal slopes of the Santa Monica Mountains, such as the Highlands and Castellammare; due to orographic uplift. Summer days are typically 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 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).[39] 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 hills and canyon ridges and along the coast, with the last occurrence of a 32 °F (0 °C) reading being on. While the most recent snowfall occurred in January 2021, it has also occurred several other times in recorded history, the second-most recent being in February 2019,[43][44] with snow falling in some areas of the Palisades as recently as January 2021.[45] At the official downtown station, the highest recorded temperature is 113 °F (45 °C) on September 27, 2010,[39][46] while the lowest is 28 °F (−2 °C),[39] on January 4, 1949.[39] During autumn and winter, Santa Ana winds sometimes bring much warmer and drier conditions to Pacific Palisades, and raise wildfire risk.

Climate data for Pacific Palisades, California
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 88
(31)
92
(33)
95
(35)
102
(39)
97
(36)
104
(40)
97
(36)
98
(37)
110
(43)
106
(41)
101
(38)
94
(34)
110
(43)
Average high °F (°C) 66
(19)
67
(19)
67
(19)
70
(21)
71
(22)
75
(24)
79
(26)
80
(27)
79
(26)
76
(24)
70
(21)
67
(19)
72
(22)
Average low °F (°C) 48
(9)
49
(9)
50
(10)
52
(11)
55
(13)
58
(14)
61
(16)
62
(17)
61
(16)
57
(14)
52
(11)
49
(9)
55
(13)
Record low °F (°C) 27
(−3)
34
(1)
37
(3)
43
(6)
45
(7)
48
(9)
52
(11)
51
(11)
47
(8)
43
(6)
38
(3)
32
(0)
27
(−3)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 3.41
(87)
3.69
(94)
2.86
(73)
0.65
(17)
0.27
(6.9)
0.04
(1.0)
0.02
(0.51)
0.13
(3.3)
0.21
(5.3)
0.41
(10)
1.14
(29)
1.98
(50)
14.83
(377)
Source 1: [47]
Source 2: [48]
Hottest and coldest, wettest and driest averages for a month (°F/inch and °C/mm), 1895–2019[49]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Hottest 63.9 °F (17.7 °C) 64.2 °F (17.9 °C) 67.5 °F (19.7 °C) 68.2 °F (20.1 °C) 71.5 °F (21.9 °C) 75.9 °F (24.4 °C) 79.8 °F (26.6 °C) 79.0 °F (26.1 °C) 80.3 °F (26.8 °C) 75.4 °F (24.1 °C) 66.9 °F (19.4 °C) 62.2 °F (16.8 °C)
Coldest 46.7 °F (8.2 °C) 51.1 °F (10.6 °C) 52.0 °F (11.1 °C) 55.2 °F (12.9 °C) 57.2 °F (14.0 °C) 62.9 °F (17.2 °C) 66.2 °F (19.0 °C) 66.3 °F (19.1 °C) 63.1 °F (17.3 °C) 57.8 °F (14.3 °C) 55.2 °F (12.9 °C) 49.4 °F (9.7 °C)
Wettest 14.43 inches (367 mm) 15.23 inches (387 mm) 10.44 inches (265 mm) 7.31 inches (186 mm) 3.83 inches (97 mm) 0.98 inches (25 mm) 0.43 inches (11 mm) 2.54 inches (65 mm) 5.13 inches (130 mm) 5.13 inches (130 mm) 9.96 inches (253 mm) 11.46 inches (291 mm)
Driest 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm) 0 inches (0 mm)

Neighborhoods

The Village

The Village is the Pacific Palisades' walkable, vibrant downtown area and small central business district with its center at Sunset Boulevard and Via de la Paz. Pacific Palisades has been known for having an abundance of Italian restaurants. The Village's anchor is the Palisades Village, a shopping center which was opened in 2018 and replaced a number of buildings in the downtown area. This business district is centered around the historic Business Block building located between Antioch and Sunset. The Village consists of a weekly farmers' market, restaurants, cafés, and coffee shops in addition to boutiques, shops, banks, offices, an Erewhon Market, Ralph's, a Gelson's, and a Starbucks, and local events.

The Alphabet Streets

The Alphabet Streets, also known as "The North Village," is the neighborhood that borders the 'village' proper to the north of Sunset Boulevard. This was the first neighborhood to be built in Pacific Palisades, beginning in 1921 by members of the Methodist movement. This neighborhood has the smallest lot sizes of all the neighborhoods in the Palisades, with lots ranging from 5,200 to 7,500 sq ft in size. The Alphabet Streets are within walking distance to The Village, and this area is characterized by its high density of smaller single family homes on lively narrow streets. The streets, named after Methodist Bishops of the late 19th and early 20th century, are consecutively named beginning with A, B, C, D, etc. – hence the name Alphabet Streets. This neighborhood is a destination for trick-or-treaters on Halloween.[50]

The El Medio Mesa

The El Medio Mesa is located south of Sunset Boulevard beginning about a quarter mile west of The Village, across Temescal Canyon – just past Palisades Charter High School. The El Medio Mesa extends for a long distance from Temescal Canyon all the way to where Sunset Boulevard meets the Pacific Coast Highway.

Marquez Knolls

Marquez Knolls is a large area of homes located north of Sunset Boulevard beginning about a quarter mile west of The Village across Temescal Canyon on the mountain upslope known for spectacular ocean views. The lower upslope was first developed in the early 1950s and mid-1960s by the Earl Lachman family. There is a small shopping center on Marquez Street and Sunset Boulevard.

The Via Bluffs and the Huntington Palisades

The Via Bluffs and The Huntington Palisades are the neighborhoods that border the "village" proper to the south of Sunset Boulevard, overlooking the ocean. The Via Mesa is located between Temescal Canyon on the west and Potrero Canyon on the east; the Huntington Palisades is located between Potrero Canyon on the west and Chautauqua Boulevard on the east. Both of these neighborhoods are within walking distance to The Village and sit upon high bluffs that look out over the Pacific Ocean.

The El Medio Bluffs

The El Medio Bluffs, as with The Via Bluffs and The Huntington Palisades, The El Medio Bluffs are located on a high ridge overlooking the Pacific Ocean and much of the neighborhood is afforded ocean views and ocean air.[citation needed]

Castellammare

Castellammare is located along Pacific Coast Highway on small bluffs much closer to sea-level, north of where Sunset Boulevard meets PCH. This is the home of the Getty Villa and the narrow, winding streets in this neighborhood have Italian names and ocean breezes.[citation needed][51]

Rustic Canyon

Rustic Canyon is the neighborhood east of Chautauqua Boulevard that dips into Santa Monica Canyon and includes the Will Rogers State Historic Park.[52] The neighborhood features post-war homes located on the former polo field of The Uplifters, the original site of The Uplifters clubhouse (now a city park), and "cabins" developed as second homes and weekend retreats. This area is also known as Uplifter's Ranch.

The Riviera

 
Aerial view of Pacific Palisades, the Riviera neighborhood can be seen to the right.
 
Finishing hole at Riviera Country Club

The Riviera is a Palisades neighborhood located approximately two miles east of The Palisades Village and features The Riviera Country Club, a high-end country club, and streets named after various locations in the French and Italian Riviera. The neighborhood is divided into north and south sections by Sunset Boulevard. It borders Santa Monica and Brentwood. The Riviera Country Club hosts the Genesis Open on the PGA Tour in February (the tournament has been previously known as the Northern Trust Open and Nissan Open and was originally the "Los Angeles Open"). Riviera has hosted three major championships: the U.S. Open in 1948 and the PGA Championship in 1983 and 1995. Ben Hogan won three times in less than 18 months at the course (1947 and 1948 L.A. Open, 1948 U.S. Open), and it became known as "Hogan's Alley." The country club will also host golf during the 2028 Summer Olympics.[53]

Palisades Highlands

The Palisades Highlands is a neighborhood in Los Angeles, California's Pacific Palisades northern region, located in the upper Santa Ynez Canyon. The Highlands has access to several Topanga State Park trailheads. The Highlands themself have a number of gated communities, housing developments and distinct neighborhoods including the following:[54]

  • Country Estates- a gated community of 80 homes on the farthest west part of the Highlands.
  • Palisades Hills- this is the oldest area and the highest part at around 1,600 feet (490 m) above sea level.
  • The Summit- the newest neighborhood in the Highlands that was completed in the early 2000s. This area includes The Summit Club which is a recreation center.
  • Lower Highlands- includes homes and condominiums as well as a shopping center and various commercial properties, development of which began in the early 1970s.[54]

Santa Monica Canyon

 
Santa Monica Cañon visible on a LAPRR Balloon Route map circa 1903

With winding roads and steep canyon walls this small enclave is home to musicians, movie stars, and aging beach bums. Santa Monica Canyon, named for the historic Rancho Boca de Santa Monica, is within the city of Los Angeles and is considered part of the Los Angeles community of Pacific Palisades. Canyon Charter School in Santa Monica Canyon is one of the most prestigious elementary schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD). The northwestern border of Santa Monica Canyon is Chautauqua Boulevard. The southern border is Adelaide Drive.

Demographics

In 2009 the Los Angeles Times's "Mapping L.A." project supplied these Pacific Palisades statistics: a population of 25,507 residents in the 22.84 sq mi (59.2 km2) neighborhood, giving a population density of 1,048/sq mi (405/km2), among the lowest for the city and the county.[55]

City parks

The Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks operates several recreational facilities in Pacific Palisades.

  • Palisades Park, at 851 Alma Real Drive, has 117 acres (47 hectares) of land and is the Palisades largest park.[56] The Palisades Recreation Center, also at that address, has barbecue pits, four baseball diamonds (two lighted, two unlighted), lighted basketball courts (indoor and outdoor), a children's play area, a football field, an indoor gymnasium (no weights are offered), picnic tables, lighted tennis courts, and lighted volleyball courts. The facility also has a kitchen, a stage, a television area, and various scheduled athletic and non-athletic activities.[57] The Pacific Palisades Tennis Court, also at that address, has eight courts.[58]
  • Rustic Canyon Park is located along Rustic Canyon Road.[59] The Rustic Canyon Pool is located at 601 Latimer Road.[60] The Rustic Canyon Recreation Center, located at the same address, has a multipurpose with a capacity of 150 people that can be used as an auditorium, a gymnasium, or a volleyball court. The center also has barbecue pits, an unlighted baseball diamond, basketball courts (lighted indoor and unlighted outdoor), a children's play area, an indoor gymnasium (no weights are offered), picnic tables, and volleyball courts (lighted and unlighted).[61]
  • Temescal Canyon Park is a non-staffed "pocket park" located along Temescal Canyon Drive from Pacific Coast Highway to Sunset Blvd. The park has barbecue pits, a children's play area, picnic tables, hiking trails, a native garden, and toilets.[62]
  • Santa Ynez Canyon Park is located at Palisades Drive and Avenida de Santa Ynez.[63]
  • Rivas Canyon Park is located at the east terminus of Oracle Place.[64]

Hiking trails

Hiking is common in the Palisades, and the community is home to a number of hiking trails including the following trails:

Backbone Trail

The Backbone Trail is a long distance trail extending 67.79 miles[65] (109.10 km) across the length of the Santa Monica Mountains. The Backbone Trail runs through both Malibu and Pacific Palisades, with its western terminus in Point Mugu State Park in Malibu and its eastern terminus in Will Rogers State Historic Park in Pacific Palisades. The trail is open to hikers throughout its length; dogs, mountain bicyclists and horseback riders are allowed on portions of the trail as posted. The Backbone Trail follows a well-maintained, single-track path with some dirt roads along the route. The trail is very well designed with climbs and descents occurring on well-graded trails full of switchbacks. The trail can be hiked in either the westbound or eastbound direction. There are no major differences between the two directions. Hiking westbound, you will progress towards more remote territory and can end your hike at the Pacific Ocean, but transportation may be more difficult from the Ray Miller Trailhead. There is no permit required for hiking the BBT.[66]

Bushwacker's Delight

Bushwacker's Delight is a 0.8 mile lightly-trafficked point-to-point trail with 528 ft in elevation gain, located within Will Rogers State Historic Park. This trail is frequented by more-experienced hikers as Bushwacker's Delight is an uncleared trail with overgrown vegetation.[67]

Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail

Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail is a 5.5 mile-long loop trail with 1,095 ft in elevation gain, located near the Palisades Highlands neighborhood. The trail is paved and well-maintained as it doubles as a fire road, and offers a number of activity options. It is most popular from September until May.[citation needed] This is one of the few trails in Los Angeles County which is open to those on horseback. This trail offers parking in the nearby lot for $10 a day, and is easily accessible from both the Palisades as well as neighboring Topanga. The Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail leads to Eagle Rock, a rock formation which is a common spot for photography as its peak offers sweeping views of the surrounding area and is home to a variety of native lizards.[68]

High Point Trail

High Point Trail is 2.8 mile-long trail with 1,007 ft of elevation gain located in the Santa Monica Mountains overlooked the Palisades. High Point Trail is a paved trail that begins on private property, and hikers hiking this trail frequently trespass knowingly or unknowingly in order to complete the hike. This trail is noted for its wildlife, and although the trail is paved some parts are overgrown with bushes and other vegetation. The trail leads to "Goat Peak" which is of the highest points in the Palisades and offers sweeping views of the surrounding area.[69]

Inspiration Point Trail

Inspiration Point Trail is a 2.1 mile-long hiking trail with 324 ft in elevation gain located within Will Rogers State Historic Park near the Riviera neighborhood. This is one of the oldest hiking trails in Los Angeles and was created by Will Rogers in the early 20th century. Inspiration Point is one of the few hiking trails in the Palisades which is open to dogs. Inspiration Point Trail is one of the main attractions of Will Rogers State Park, and attracts hikers from across the Palisades and around the area as it is an easy hike with unique vistas of the Los Angeles Basin and Santa Monica Bay. On a clear day one can see views of areas such as Catalina Island, Chino Hills, and Saddleback Peak at the summit of this trail. Inspiration Point Trail also connects to the nearby Backbone Trail.[70]

Los Leones Trail

Los Leones Trail, also known as Los Liones, is a moderately-challenging hiking trail located in the Castellammare neighborhood. Los Leones Trail is 7.3 miles in length, with over 1,300 ft in elevation gain. . Often spelled "Los Liones," the area is named after the mountain lions that are common in the area.[71]

Los Leones is one of the most-popular[citation needed] hiking trails in the entire Westside, and the trail weaves through a lush canyon with abundant green vegetation located in the southern end of Topanga State Park, just a 1/3 mile away from the Pacific Ocean. The ivy and chaparral-lined trail offers some of the best of Santa Monica Bay. After 1.3 miles and 550 feet of elevation gain, Los Liones Trail arrives at a clearing on a ridge with a bench that looks down on the Palisades, Santa Monica city and bay, and the surrounding area. The top of this hiking trail joins East Topanga Fire Road, which leads to the Paseo Miramar Trail which leads you deeper into the Santa Monica Mountains. Continuing on the trail you will reach "Parker Mesa Overlook", which is known for offering some of the best views of the coast of any hiking trail in Los Angeles. the area consists of a flat plateau area with sweeping views of the coastline.[72][73]

Murphy Ranch Trail

Murphy Ranch Trail

Skull Rock Loop

Skull Rock Loop is a 4-mile-long loop trail with 1,141 ft of elevation gain located near the Temescal Canyon neighborhood. This trail is frequented by both rock climbers and birders, as it is home to both rocky terrain and an abundance of different bird species. Skull Rock Loop branches off from the nearby Temescal Canyon Trail, and features a waterfall as well as its namesake "Skull Rock" which is rock formation names for its resemblance to a skull. The entrance to the trail offers free street parking or a daily rate in the nearby parking lot for $12.[74]

 
Temescal Canyon Ridge Trail

Trailer Canyon Fire Road

Trailer Canyon Fire Road is a 4.3 mile-long trail with 925 ft in elevation gain located near the Summit development in the Palisades Highlands neighborhood. This trail is wide and paved as it doubles as a fire road, it is also used by mountain bikers and birdwatchers. After 1.5 miles this trail connects with the nearby Temescal Ridge Trail, which takes hikers to the Temescal Gateway Park. Trailer Canyon Fire Road has views of the ocean and Temescal Canyon.[75]

Will Rogers Trail

Will Rogers Trail is a 4.1 mile trail with 449 ft in elevation gain located within Will Rogers State Historic Park. This trail is one of many trails located within the Will Rogers State Park, near the Riviera neighborhood. Will Rogers Trail is known for being very challenging even for experienced hikers, as it is not very well-maintained, and there are signs on portions of the trail which point this out. Those hiking this trail may have to scramble on stones through the underbrush to avoid falling into the nearby creek. During the winter months the creek often overflows its banks, obscuring the trail and making this trail even more treacherous.[76]

State parks and beaches

The California Department of Parks and Recreation also has locations in Pacific Palisades.

Will Rogers State Beach

Will Rogers State Beach extends 1+34 mi (3 km) along the shore. The beach features swimming and skin diving. Facilities include volleyball courts, playground and gymnastic equipment, as well as a bike path and walkway. A number of movies and TV shows have been filmed at this beach. The beach is located off the Pacific Coast Highway, near the intersection with Temescal Canyon Road. The beach is operated by the County of Los Angeles Department of Beaches & Harbors.[77]

Will Rogers State Historic Park

 
Will Rogers House, one of the park's main attractions.

While Will Rogers made Beverly Hills his home in the late 1920s, in 1922 he bought a large plot of almost 200 acres (80 hectares) of land above Sunset Blvd. to build a weekend cottage. He built a polo field on the property in 1926, and in 1928 he and his family made it their home. In 1944, nine years after Rogers died, the ranch became a state park. In the interest of historical preservation, the home is maintained as it was including the furniture and fixtures. It is open to the public most days with the exception of major holidays, although admission is required. The top of the property's trail includes vistas of the ocean and city.[78]

Temescal Gateway Park

 
Panoramic view from Temescal Peak.

Temescal Gateway Park, located at 15601 Sunset Blvd., encompasses 141 acres (57 hectares) of oak and sycamore canyons, ridgetop views, and access to miles of trails in Topanga State Park, Will Rogers State Historic Park, and the 20,000-acre (8,000-hectare) “Big Wild.”[79]

Topanga State Park

Located in the cliffs and canyons of the Santa Monica Mountains and headquartered in nearby Topanga Canyon, Topanga State Park features 36 mi (58 km) of trails through open grassland, live oaks and views of the Pacific Ocean. The park is bound on the south by Pacific Palisades and Brentwood, on the west by Topanga Canyon, and on the east by Rustic Canyon. Numerous geologic formations can be found in the park, including earthquake faults, marine fossils, volcanic intrusions, and a wide variety of sedimentary formations. Trail heads into the park are located throughout Pacific Palisades, including Las Lions Drive, Palisades Highlands, Temescal Gateway Park and Will Rogers State Historic Park.[80]

Government and infrastructure

The most important civic group within the Palisades is the Pacific Palisades Community Council. The Pacific Palisades Community Council usually meets twice each month to discuss a wide range of issues that affect its residents. The council has rejected city offers to become an official part of the city, preferring its independent, non-aligned status. Among the main reasons that Council members cite is that the council would not have the power to appeal decisions of City officials, commissions, and boards and the council could not appear before Federal, State, and County authorities regarding local issues.[citation needed]

Local government

The community is within District 11 of the Los Angeles City Council, represented by Mike Bonin.[81]

The Los Angeles Fire Department operates two fire stations serving Pacific Palisades. Station 69 at 15045 West Sunset Boulevard serves Pacific Palisades and the Pacific Coast.[82] Station 23 at 17281 West Sunset Boulevard serves the Palisades Highlands, Castellammare, and the Pacific Coast.[83]

The Los Angeles Police Department operates the West Los Angeles Community Police Station at 1663 Butler Avenue, serving the neighborhood.[84]

County, state, and federal representation

Pacific Palisades is within Los Angeles County's 3rd Supervisorial District. As of 2014, Sheila Kuehl represents the district.[85]

The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services SPA 5 West Area Health Office serves Pacific Palisades.[86] The department operates the Simms/Mann Health and Wellness Center in Santa Monica, serving Pacific Palisades.[87]

Pacific Palisades is a part of California's 50th State Assembly district. As of 2019, Richard Bloom represents the district.[88] Pacific Palisades is also a part of California's 23rd State Senate district; as of 2019, Ben Allen represents the district.[89] The community is a part of the State Board of Equalization District 4,[90] represented by Mike Schaefer, as of 2019.[91]

In the U.S. House of Representatives, Pacific Palisades is within California's 33rd congressional district, and is currently represented by Ted Lieu.[92][93] The United States Postal Service operates the Pacific Palisades Post Office, at 15243 La Cruz Drive.[94][95]

Fire service

Los Angeles Fire Department Stations 23 and 69 serve the area. Station 23 is located on Sunset Boulevard at the bottom of Los Liones Drive and Station 69 is located on Sunset Boulevard and Carey Street.

Law enforcement and security

Pacific Palisades is served by the West Los Angeles Division of the Los Angeles Police Department. One police car is generally assigned to the neighborhood.[96] Palisades Patrol, a private security company, is contracted by the city and supplements the police presence and provides security for the Palisades. Many residents also rely on private security companies such as ADT, or ACS security.

Politics

Pacific Palisades is a heavily Democratic area, and Democrats tend to win the majority of the vote in each election.

2020 election results

According to a representative from the Los Angeles County Clerk, the results of the 2020 general election in the Pacific Palisades are as follows:

The final vote tally for the Presidential election Pacific Palisades was 12,219 votes cast for the winner Joe Biden and 3,861 votes cast for then-incumbent Donald Trump, a more than 8,000 vote margin in Biden's favor.

The final vote tally for the District Attorney election in Pacific Palisades was 5,795 cast for then-incumbent Jackie Lacey and 6,878 votes cast for challenger George Gascon.

2020 Presidential Election Results
Joe Biden Donald Trump Vote Total
12,219 3,861 16,080
Percentage of the vote per candidate
Joe Biden Donald Trump Other candidates
76% 23.9% 0.1%

2020 results by neighborhood

The Alphabet Streets

There were 349 people who cast their vote in person and 2,042 who cast their vote using mail-in ballots.

Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin, casting 1804 votes in his favor compared to 403 votes that were cast for Trump. For the LA District Attorney's election, residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascón by a narrower margin over then-incumbent DA Jackie Lacey, who received 991 votes compared to the 1,143 received by Gascón.

Proposition 15, which would have taxed properties based on current market value rather than the purchase price, was defeated by just 23 votes, 1,131 to 1,154. (Statewide it was defeated 52 percent to 48 percent.)

Proposition 16, which would have repealed a constitutional provision that made it illegal to discriminate against or grant preferential treatment based on race, lost statewide but was favored in this precinct, 1,164 to 1,093. (Statewide, the yes vote was 42.8 percent and the no vote was 57.2 percent.)

Proposition 19, which allows homeowners over 55, disabled or wildfire victims to transfer primary resident's tax base to replacement residence, was passed statewide (51.1 percent majority), but not by residents in the Alphabet precinct, who voted against it 1,234 to 1,005.

Proposition 22, the “Uber” bill, which allowed app-based drivers as contractors, not employees, saw residents vote 1,179 to 1,100 in favor. The measure was also approved statewide, 58.6 percent to 41.4 percent. (It was the most expensive ballot-measure campaign in the state's history, to date at $225,036,046.)

Proposition 25, which asked to approve replacing cash bail, and received 56.4 percent of the state voting no, saw people in the Alphabets voting to end it with a yes vote of 1,150 to 1,065. (The proposition was opposed statewide by 55.4 percent of voters.)

Castellammare

There were 302 people who cast their vote in person and 1,850 who cast their vote using mail-in ballots.

Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin, casting 1,573 votes in his favor compared to 508 votes that were cast for Trump. For the LA District Attorney's election, residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascón by a narrower margin over then-incumbent DA Jackie Lacey, who received 783 votes compared to the 1,074 received by Gascón.

Prop. 15 passed here 1,051 to 1,026.

Prop. 16 saw 1,036 vote yes and 1,001 vote no.

Prop. 19 lost 914 to 1,128.

Prop. 22 passed 1,082 to 970.

Prop. 25, 1026 voted to do away with cash bail, 1005 said no.

The Huntington

There were 282 people who cast their vote in person and 1,900 who cast their vote using mail-in ballots

Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin, casting 1,558 votes in his favor compared to 552 votes that were cast for Trump. For the LA District Attorney's election, residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascón by a narrower margin over then-incumbent DA Jackie Lacey, who received 801 votes compared to the 1,060 received by Gascón.

Prop. 15, taxing properties based on current market value. was defeated with 934 (yes) and 1,138 no.

Prop. 16, repealing the discrimination provision, was defeated 971 (yes) to 1,004 (no).

Prop. 19, primary tax transfer, 771 (yes) to 1,256 (no).

Prop. 22, the “Uber” bill, passed 1071 (yes) to 973 (no).

Prop. 25, seeking to replace cash bail, was defeated 971 (yes) to 1044 (no)

Lower Marquez and the Via Bluffs

There were 298 people who cast their vote in person and 2,178 who cast their vote using mail-in ballots.

Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin, casting 1,872 votes in his favor compared to 512 votes that were cast for Trump. For the LA District Attorney's election, residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascón by a narrower margin over then-incumbent DA Jackie Lacey, who received 933 votes compared to the 1,205 received by Gascón.

Proposition 15, which would have taxed properties based on current market value rather than the purchase price, was defeated by one vote: 1,186 to 1,185.

Proposition 16, repealing the constitutional provision, which makes it illegal to discriminate (and voted against statewide), found favor here: 1,199 to 1,128.

Proposition 19, allowing those over 55 to transfer primary tax to replacement residence (and passed statewide), went down 953 to 1,373 to 953.

Proposition 22, the “Uber” bill, also suffered a defeat here: 1,178 to 1,165, but passed statewide.

Proposition 25, to replace cash bail, found a slim margin in favor here: 1,150 to 1,141.

Palisades Highlands

There were 316 people who cast their vote in person and 2,111 who cast their vote using mail-in ballots.

Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin, casting 1,611 votes in his favor compared to 727 votes that were cast for Trump. For the LA District Attorney's election, this was the only neighborhood in the Palisades where residents voted for Lacey than Gascón, who received 983 votes compared to the 1,080 received by Lacey.

Prop. 15 went down here 993 to 1,332.

Prop. 16, Highlands residents also voted against repealing the discrimination provision, 989 to 1,306.

Prop. 19 lost 991 to 1,274.

Prop. 21 passed 1,353 to 951.

Prop. 25 had 1,007 vote to do away with cash bail, 1,248 vote against the idea.

Paseo Miramar and Upper Marquez

There were 330 people who cast their vote in person and 2,422 who cast their vote using mail-in ballots

Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin, casting 1,945 votes in his favor compared to 682 votes that were cast for Trump. For the LA District Attorney's election, residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascón by a narrower margin over then-incumbent DA Jackie Lacey, who received 1,135 votes compared to the 1,232 received by Gascón.

Prop. 15, taxing properties based on current market value, was defeated 1,154 yes to 1.478 no.

Prop. 16, repealing the discrimination provision, was defeated 1,226 yes to 1,370 no.

Prop. 19, allowing the residential property tax to transfer, also lost 1,099 yes to 1462 no.

Prop. 22, the “Uber” bill, passed 1,483 yes to 1,132 no.

Prop. 25, seeking to replace cash bail, was defeated 1,192 yes to 1,337 no.

The Riviera

There were 302 people who cast their vote in person and 1,850 who cast their vote using mail-in ballots.

Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden, casting 1,856 votes in his favor compared to 477 votes that were cast for Trump. For the LA District Attorney's election, residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascón over then-incumbent DA Jackie Lacey, who receives 855 votes compared to the 1,255 received by Gascón.

Prop. 15 was defeated 1,125 in favor and 1,203 against.

Prop. 16 found favor here: 1,257 to 1,022 (although defeated statewide).

Prop. 19 lost 955 to 1,318.

Prop. 22 passed by one vote, 1,153 to 1,152.

Prop. 25 passed here: 1,162 to 1,095 (although defeated statewide).

Education

Public schools

Residents are zoned to Los Angeles Unified School District schools. The area is within Board District 4.[97] As of 2017, Nick Melvoin represents the district.[98][99]

Some residents are assigned to Pacific Palisades Elementary School, some residents are assigned to Canyon Elementary School, and some are assigned to Marquez Elementary School. All residents are zoned to Paul Revere Charter Middle School and Palisades Charter High School.[100][101]

  • Canyon Elementary School opened in 1910.[102]
  • Pacific Palisades Elementary opened in 1922.[103]
 
Pacific Palisades Charter Elementary School front tower.
  • Marquez Elementary School opened in 1955.[104]
 
Marquez Elementary School. Pacific Palisades, CA
  • Paul Revere Middle School first opened as Palisades-Brentwood Junior High School on September 12, 1955; it chose its current name during its first year of operation. It became an internal charter in 1994.[105]
  • Palisades Charter High School, commonly known as "Pali High", opened in 1961.[106] Pali High later became a charter school in 1994.[107]

Private schools

Private schools in the area include:

  • Palisades Jewish Early Childhood Center (preschool-kindergarten) – is a Jewish private school associated with the Chabad movement offering private preschool, kindergarten, daycare and Hebrew school education.[108]
  • Calvary Christian (K–8)[109]
  • Village School[110] (pre-K–6)
  • Corpus Christi (K–8)
  • St. Matthew's Parish School (PS–8)
  • Seven Arrows (K–6)[111]
  • Westside Waldorf (K–8)
  • Lycée Français de Los Angeles Pacific Palisades Campus[112]

Public libraries

 
Palisades branch

Los Angeles Public Library operates the Palisades Branch at 861 Alma Real Drive.[113]

Culture

Menorah lighting

Beginning in 1988, each year on the first night of Hanukkah a public menorah lighting ceremony is held at the Palisades Village, the downtown area of the Palisades. The menorah lighting is organized by Chabad of Pacific Palisades as well as other leaders in the local Jewish community, and the Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce. It is hosted by Palisades Chabad Rabbi Zushe Cunin, as well as the honorary mayor, the city councilman representing the area, and local developer Rick Caruso. It is accompanied by a community event featuring live Hanukkah music, complimentary Hanukkah foods such as latkes, chocolate gelt and sufganiyot, Hanukkah-themed arts and crafts, face painting and balloon twisting.

On December 2, 2018, the 30th Annual Pacific Palisades Menorah Lighting was held at its new location, the Palisades Village shopping center. This was the highest-attended menorah lighting in Palisades history and was attended by over 1,000 people, including actors and Co-honorary Mayors Janice and Billy Crystal, Rabbi Zushe Cunin, Palisades Village developer Rick Caruso, and councilman Mike Bonin. The Crystals also helped in the planning of the event. The event performances of Hanukkah and other traditional Jewish music by the Marquez Elementary Choir, Paul Revere Music Club and the Westside Waldorf School.[114]

Pacific Palisades is also home to one of the few vegan Hanukkah celebrations in Los Angeles, "Lights and Latkes", hosted by vegan Rabbi Jonathan Klein and JewishVeg Los Angeles.[115]

Palisades Rocks The Fourth!

 
Fireworks during the 2006 Palisades Rocks The Fourth! event.

Palisades Rocks The Fourth is a Palisadian tradition that first began in 1967. Every Fourth of July, the community's Chamber of Commerce sponsors day-long events which include 5K and 10K runs, a home decorating contest, a parade down Sunset Boulevard, and a concert accompanied by a fireworks display at Palisades High School baseball field.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Palisades Rocks The Fourth! was held mostly virtually beginning in 2020. A virtual concert accompanied by fireworks and a flyover by World War II fighter pilots flying AT-6 fighter jets over the Palisades.[116]

Synagogues

The Pacific Palisades is home to a large Jewish population and has a number of synagogues including the following:

  • Chabad of Pacific Palisades- local Chabad center located at 17315 Sunset Blvd in the Castlellammare neighborhood, offering religious services, Hebrew school and early Jewish education. Chabad of the Palisades hosts a number of Jewish events, and is also responsible for the annual Menorah lighting and Hanukkah celebration at the Palisades Village.[117][118]
  • Kehillat Israel- Reconstructionist synagogue, this is the oldest synagogue in the Palisades.

Sports and recreation

Bel Air Bay Club

 
wedding st the Bel-Air Bay Club.

The Bel-Air Bay Club is both an event venue (Upper Club) and a private beach club (Lower Club) located in the area.

The Upper Club, includes an ocean view and on-site accommodations available for private parties. The interior of the Bel-Air Bay Club Upper Club includes large windows, a fireplace, and iron chandeliers. The Bel-Air Bay Club is primarily used as a wedding, social, and corporate event venue.[citation needed]

Riviera Country Club

 
Par 3 on the course.

The Riviera Country Club is a private club with a championship golf course and tennis courts in the Riviera neighborhood of Pacific Palisades. It is just a block south of Sunset Boulevard.

The Riviera was designed by golf course architects George C. Thomas, Jr. and William P. Bell,[citation needed] it has been the primary host for the Genesis Invitational (originally the Los Angeles Open), an annual event on the PGA Tour in February. The 2021 edition was the 58th held at Riviera.

The Riviera has hosted three major championships: the U.S. Open in 1948, and the PGA Championship in 1983 and 1995. In addition, it was site of the U.S. Senior Open, a senior major, in 1998 and the U.S. Amateur in August 2017.[119] The club is scheduled to host the Olympics in 2028.[53]

Will Rogers Polo Club

 
Match at the Will Rogers Polo Club in 2013.

The Will Rogers Polo Club is a polo club located at 1501 Will Rogers State Park Road, Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, California.,[120][121][122][123] which is within Will Rogers State Historic Park, and is Southern California's only remaining polo club.

Media

  • The Los Angeles Times is the citywide newspaper.
  • The Palisadian-Post, founded in 1928, is the oldest newspaper to serve the Pacific Palisades community.
  • The Palisades News, first published in 2014, is a Palisades-based newspaper published twice monthly for the residents of Pacific Palisades.[124]
  • Circling The News, is a local news site established in 2017 by Sue Perscoe, a former writer for The Palisades News, and featuring a number of guest writers and columnists.[125]
  • Perspective Palisades, is a local magazine founded by local historian and realtor Michael Edlen in 2020, the magazine is published each quarter and features real estate-related news as well as historical information, news in the community, and interviews with notable Palisadians.[126]

Landmarks

Burns House

Architect Charles W. Moore designed his first house in Los Angeles for the UCLA economist and urban planning professor, Leland Burns. The house was completed in 1974. It occupies a narrow ledge on a steep slope of the Santa Monica canyon. The house is composed of an interlocking set of shed roofs and tower, its forms reminiscent of The Sea Ranch Condominium, but adapted for a sense of the Mediterranean climate and Hollywood allusions. An interior staircase climbs up through a vertical cleft in the narrow house, and then at the very top of the third story, the stair descends outside, back down into a swimming pool court. Designer Tina Beebe developed with Moore the color scheme, whereby exterior planes were painted in a range of ochres, pinks, roses, and golds, so as the light and shade shifts during the day, the house itself seems to change like a chameleon. The house was built around a tracker organ hand built by Jürgen Ahrend, an instrument known as Opus 1, U.S.A.

Bradbury House

 
Bradbury House

The Bradbury House is a historic house in the Huntington Palisades neighborhood. It was designed in the Spanish Revival style by architect John Byers, and completed in 1923.[127] The home was built for Lewis L Bradbury Jr[128] whose father, Lewis L Bradbury, commissioned the construction of the Bradbury Building in Downtown Los Angeles.[127] It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 22, 2010.[129]

Business Block

The Business Block building is a historic building located in the Palisades downtown area called the Village. It serves as the anchor of the downtown area, and was designed by architect Clifton Nourse and dedicated in 1924. The building is 30,000 square feet (2,800 m2) and sits on 36,000 square feet (3,300 m2) of land. The Business Block building is located between Antioch, Swarthmore and Sunset in the Village neighborhood of Pacific Palisades, an area in the Westside of Los Angeles, California.[130]

Dolores del Río House

The Dolores Del Rio House is located at 757 Kingman Avenue was designed for Mexican-American actress Dolores del Río and her husband, production designer Cedric Gibbons, by architects Douglas Honnold and George Vernon Russell in 1929.[131][132][133][134]

Eames House

Eames House is the 1949 home and studio of husband-and-wife design pioneers Charles and Ray Eames.

The Getty Villa

 
Art on display at the Getty.

The Getty Villa is an educational center and museum dedicated to the study of the arts and cultures of Ancient Greece, Rome, and Etruria.

Gladstones

 
Aerial view of Will Rogers State Beach with Gladstones in the center.

Gladstones is a seafood restaurant located along Will Rogers State Beach on Pacific Coast Highway. Despite its name Gladstones Malibu is located in Pacific Palisades, it is not actually located within the Malibu city limits. Gladstones is known for their seafood and is a tourist attraction.[citation needed] It has been owned by Richard Riordan, former Mayor of Los Angeles, since the mid-1990s. In 2008, Gladstones was the 37th highest grossing independent restaurant in the country.[135] In 2009, the private company SBE assumed day-to-day operations as part of a management contract with Riordan which expired in 2014. Gladstone's re-assumed management of day-to-day operations thereafter.[136] The beachfront restaurant has undergone several name changes. When Robert J. Morris opened the restaurant at the site of Ted's Grill, he named it Gladstone's 4 Fish. The restaurant is frequently cited as Gladstone's. It is now called simply Gladstones.

Kappe Residence

The Kappe Residence is a house located in the Rustic Canyon section of Pacific Palisades, that was designed by architect Raymond Kappe, FAIA, and was intended to be his own private residence. The house is a modern design built into a heavily treed hillside. The Kappe Residence was designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1996, and in 2008 it was named one of the top ten houses in Los Angeles by an expert panel selected by the Los Angeles Times.

Mort's Palisades Deli

Mort's Palisades Deli, more commonly referred to as Mort's Deli, was a Jewish delicatessen located at 1035 Swarthmore Ave on the corner of Sunset Boulevard in the Village. Mort's was a neighborhood fixture and local landmark, which first opened in 1972 and closed in 2008 upon the buildings sale to former mayor Richard Riordan, who closed the deli to make way for a bistro, which itself closed after a few months. The deli was known for their Reuben sandwiches and celebrity clientele including Larry David, Walter Matthau, and Larry King among others, as well as being featured in numerous episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm as "Leo's Deli".

Old Santa Monica Forestry Station

The Old Santa Monica Forestry Station is the nation's first experimental forestry station, built in 1887. The Old Santa Monica Forestry Station was designated a California Historic Landmark (No.840) on March 20, 1970.[137] Old Santa Monica Forestry Station is located in the Rustic Canyon neighborhood of Pacific Palisades. It is south of what is now called Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. The hills and canyons around the Santa Monica Canyon were a land boom in the late 1880s. In 1971 the state placed a marker near the entrance of the Rustic Canyon Recreation Center at the NW corner of Latimer and Hilltree Roads, at 601 Latimer Road; which reads:[138][139]

In 1887, the State Board of Forestry established the nation's first experimental forestry station. Located in Rustic Canyon, the station tested exotic trees for planting in California, established plantations for management studies, and produced planting stock for scientific and conservation purposes. The station was operated by the Board of Forestry until 1893 and by the University of California until 1923.

Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine

 
Temple located at the Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine.

Self-Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine[29] is a10-acre (4-hectare) spiritual center on Sunset Boulevard founded in 1950 by Paramahansa Yogananda, whose classic book “Autobiography of a Yogi” introduced many Westerners to yoga and Eastern mysticism.

Thomas Mann House

 
Thomas Mann House

Thomas Mann House was Thomas Mann's home during his exile from 1942 to 1952 designed by JR Davidson.

Villa Aurora

 
Villa Aurora

Villa Aurora is an artists residence and historic landmark located in the former home of exiled German-Jewish writer Lion Feuchtwanger and his wife Marta.

Wildlife

Pacific Palisades is home to a variety of species of wildlife, both native to the area and introduced from elsewhere.

Wild Parrots

 
Nanday parakeets resting in a tree in Pacific Palisades

Pacific Palisades has been noted for its large population of California wild parrots, and is one of the main areas in Southern California where wild parrots can be found. Parrots mainly live in the sycamore-lined canyons of the Palisades. Wild parrots have lived in the Palisades since the 1960s, and are said to descend from pet parrots that were released by their owners in the area in the wake of the 1961 Bel Air fire, and the closing of Busch Gardens in Van Nuys.[140][141]

Pacific Palisades is home to numerous species of parrots, and the most commonly-sighted species is the Nanday parakeet.[142] Other species of parrots found in the Palisades include the mitred parakeet, yellow-chevroned parakeet, white-winged parakeet, rose-ringed parakeet, red-masked parakeet, blue-crowned parakeet, red-crowned parrot, lilac-crowned parrot, white-fronted parrot, blue-fronted parrot, yellow-headed parrot, and the red-lored parrot.[143]

In popular culture

Filming locations

Notable people

See List of people from Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles

See also

References

  1. ^ Kamin, Debra (February 11, 2020). "Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles: Where Mountains Meet the Sea". The New York Times. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
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Further reading

  • Young, Betty Lou, Pacific Palisades: Where the Mountains Meet the Sea , Pacific Palisades Historical Society Press (1983)

External links

  • Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce
  • Pacific Palisades Community Council

pacific, palisades, angeles, other, uses, pacific, palisades, pacific, palisades, neighborhood, westside, region, angeles, california, situated, about, miles, west, downtown, angeles, pacific, palisadesneighborhood, angelespacific, palisades, will, rogers, sta. For other uses see Pacific Palisades Pacific Palisades is a neighborhood in the Westside region of Los Angeles California situated about 20 miles 32 km west of Downtown Los Angeles 8 Pacific PalisadesNeighborhood of Los AngelesPacific Palisades and Will Rogers State Beach CaliforniaFlagNickname s The Palisades PacPal Pali PalisadesMotto Where the mountains meet the sea 1 2 Pacific PalisadesLocation within Los Angeles CountyCoordinates 34 02 53 N 118 31 32 W 34 04806 N 118 52556 W 34 04806 118 52556 Coordinates 34 02 53 N 118 31 32 W 34 04806 N 118 52556 W 34 04806 118 52556Country United StatesState CaliforniaCountyLos AngelesCity Los AngelesFirst settlement by Chumash people8 000 BCEMexican settlement1838Established1921Government TypeNeighborhood of Los Angeles BodyPacific Palisades Community Council Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce Honorary MayorEugene Levy D 4 Area Total24 31 5 sq mi 62 97 5 km2 Land22 84 5 sq mi 59 15 km2 Water1 47 5 sq mi 3 8 5 km2 Elevation 6 328 ft 98 5 m Highest elevation 7 2 126 ft 648 m Lowest elevation 7 0 ft 0 m Population 2018 Total28 811 3 Density1 185 sq mi 457 5 km2 Demonym s Palisadian PalisadiansTime zoneUTC 8 Pacific Summer DST UTC 7 PDT Zip code90272Area code s 310 424WebsiteCommunity CouncilChamber of CommercePacific Palisades was formally founded in 1921 by a Methodist organization and in the years that followed became a refuge for Jewish artists and intellectuals fleeing the Holocaust The Palisades would later be sought after by celebrities and other high profile individuals seeking privacy 9 It is known for its seclusion and for being a close knit community with a small town feel its Mediterranean climate hilly topography natural environment its abundance of parkland and hiking trails its 3 mile 4 8 km strip of coastline and for being home to a number of architecturally significant homes 10 11 Pacific Palisades has historically been home to many Hollywood celebrities Due to its secluded location compared to other affluent areas such as Beverly Hills notable residents are afforded more privacy and paparazzi are uncommon People in the entertainment industry and other affluent residents also live throughout the Palisades mixing with other less affluent residents As of 2018 the community s population was 28 881 Pacific Palisades is a largely residential community and does not attract many tourists other than day visitors to Gladstones Malibu the local beaches the Getty Villa or the Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine Nicknamed the Palisades and Pali by surfers and locals the three mile length of the Palisades coast spans from after Sorrento Beach in Santa Monica to the south and ending at Sunset Point Beach and Malibu to the north Beaches along the Pacific Palisades coast include Will Rogers State Beach Sunset Point Beach and one of the few gay beaches in Los Angeles Ginger Rogers Beach The many parks within the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area lie along the ridges above the community along with local parks that include Will Rogers State Historic Park The Palisades is bounded by Brentwood to the east Malibu to the west Santa Monica to the southeast the Santa Monica Bay to the southwest Topanga and the Santa Monica Mountains to the north Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Native American period 2 2 Mexican period 2 3 1911 1922 2 4 1921 1931 2 5 1930 present 3 Geography 3 1 Topography 3 2 Climate 4 Neighborhoods 4 1 The Village 4 2 The Alphabet Streets 4 3 The El Medio Mesa 4 4 Marquez Knolls 4 5 The Via Bluffs and the Huntington Palisades 4 6 The El Medio Bluffs 4 7 Castellammare 4 8 Rustic Canyon 4 9 The Riviera 4 10 Palisades Highlands 4 11 Santa Monica Canyon 5 Demographics 6 City parks 7 Hiking trails 7 1 Backbone Trail 7 2 Bushwacker s Delight 7 3 Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail 7 4 High Point Trail 7 5 Inspiration Point Trail 7 6 Los Leones Trail 7 7 Murphy Ranch Trail 7 8 Skull Rock Loop 7 9 Trailer Canyon Fire Road 7 10 Will Rogers Trail 8 State parks and beaches 8 1 Will Rogers State Beach 8 2 Will Rogers State Historic Park 8 3 Temescal Gateway Park 8 4 Topanga State Park 9 Government and infrastructure 9 1 Local government 9 2 County state and federal representation 9 3 Fire service 9 4 Law enforcement and security 10 Politics 10 1 2020 election results 10 2 2020 results by neighborhood 10 2 1 The Alphabet Streets 10 2 2 Castellammare 10 2 3 The Huntington 10 2 4 Lower Marquez and the Via Bluffs 10 2 5 Palisades Highlands 10 2 6 Paseo Miramar and Upper Marquez 10 2 7 The Riviera 11 Education 11 1 Public schools 11 2 Private schools 11 3 Public libraries 12 Culture 12 1 Menorah lighting 12 2 Palisades Rocks The Fourth 12 3 Synagogues 13 Sports and recreation 13 1 Bel Air Bay Club 13 2 Riviera Country Club 13 3 Will Rogers Polo Club 14 Media 15 Landmarks 15 1 Burns House 15 2 Bradbury House 15 3 Business Block 15 4 Dolores del Rio House 15 5 Eames House 15 6 The Getty Villa 15 7 Gladstones 15 8 Kappe Residence 15 9 Mort s Palisades Deli 15 10 Old Santa Monica Forestry Station 15 11 Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine 15 12 Thomas Mann House 15 13 Villa Aurora 16 Wildlife 16 1 Wild Parrots 17 In popular culture 17 1 Filming locations 18 Notable people 19 See also 20 References 21 Further reading 22 External linksEtymology EditThe name Pacific Palisades comes from the term palisades a geological formation consisting of a series of cliff like bluffs situated by a body of water in this case the Pacific Ocean and also for the area s purported resemblance to The Palisades on the west side of the lower Hudson River 12 History EditNative American period Edit Archeological evidence shows Native American Indians living in the Santa Monica Mountains and the surrounding area including Pacific Palisades for over 10 000 years 13 Prior to European contact the western sections of the Santa Monica mountains were inhabited by the Tongva people 13 The closest Tongva settlement to Pacific Palisades with a written record is the village of Topa nga 14 The village of Topa nga sits on the western most edge of Tongva territory neighboring the territory of the Chumash people to the north 14 Due to this close proximity to the Chumash the culture in western Tongva territory contained elements of Chumash influence 14 Mexican period Edit The land that became Pacific Palisades was originally located within the boundaries of Rancho Boca de Santa Monica granted by the governor of California during the Mexican period to Francisco Marquez and Ysidro Reyes in 1839 14 The Ysidro Reyes Adobe was the first adobe home ever built in Santa Monica Canyon erected in the year 1838 on land now known as Pampas Ricas Blvd located in Pacific Palisades 15 Sketches of adobe dwelling exist in the collection of the UCLA Library 16 17 A memorial plaque sits in a boulder on Pampas Ricas Blvd commemorating the adobe house dedicated in the 1950s 18 Ysidro Reyes died in 1863 Reyes left his portion of Rancho Boca de Santa Monica to his widow Maria Antonia Villa who sold it to developer and railroad magnate Robert Symington Baker in 1875 19 1911 1922 Edit In 1911 film director Thomas Ince constructed his film studio Inceville which was located on a 460 acre 1 9 km2 tract of land he leased called Bison Ranch located at Sunset Blvd and Pacific Coast Highway in the Santa Monica Mountains Today this is where the Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine is located citation needed By the following year Ince had earned enough money to purchase the ranch and was able to lease an additional 18 000 acres 73 km2 lot located in what is now in the Palisades Highlands neighborhood stretching 7 5 miles 12 1 km up Santa Ynez Canyon This was the first major development was built in the Palisades since the Mexican rancho era 20 Inceville Santa Ynez Canyon California c 1919 This was the first studio in the area which featured silent stages production offices printing labs a commissary large enough to serve lunch to hundreds of workers dressing rooms props houses elaborate sets all in one central location When Inceville was completed the streets were lined with many types of structures from humble cottages to mansions mimicking the style and architecture of different countries 21 Extensive outdoor western sets were built and used on the site for several years According to Katherine La Hue in her book Pacific Palisades Where the Mountains Meet the Sea Ince invested 35 000 in building stages and sets a bit of Switzerland a Puritan settlement a Japanese village beyond the breakers an ancient brigantine weighed anchor cutlassed men swarming over the sides of the ship while on the shore performing cowboys galloped about twirling their lassos in pursuit of errant cattle The main herds were kept in the hills where Ince also raised feed and garden produce Supplies of every sort were needed to house and feed a veritable army of actors directors and subordinates While the cowboys Native Americans and assorted workers lived at Inceville the main actors came from Los Angeles and other communities as needed often taking the red trolley cars to the Long Wharf in what is now the Temescal Canyon neighborhood where buckboards conveyed them to the set Ince lived in a house overlooking the vast studio located in what is now the Marquez Knolls neighborhood 22 Indeed Inceville became a prototype for Hollywood film studios of the future with a studio head Ince producers directors production managers production staff and writers all working together under one organization and under the supervision of a General Manager Fred J Balshofer 23 On January 16 1916 a fire broke out at Inceville the first of many that eventually destroyed all of the buildings Ince later gave up on the studio and sold it to Hart who renamed it Hartville Three years later Hart sold the lot to Robertson Cole Pictures Corporation which continued filming there until 1922 La Hue writes that the place was virtually a ghost town when the last remnants of Inceville were burned on July 4 1922 leaving only a weatherworn old church which stood sentinel over the charred ruins 1921 1931 Edit Santa Monica Canyon 1921 A decade later the Rev Charles H Scott and the Southern California Methodist Episcopal Church bought the land in 1922 Scott founded Pacific Palisades envisioning an elaborate religious intellectual commune 24 Believers snapped up choice lots and lived in tents during construction By 1925 the Palisades had 100 homes In one subdivision streets were named in alphabetical order for Methodist missionaries the Alphabet Streets The tents eventually were replaced by cabins then by bungalows and ultimately by multimillion dollar homes The climate of the area was a big selling point Temperatures are much cooler than inland Los Angeles during summer but usually sunnier and less foggy than areas south along the coast e g Santa Monica Pacific Palisades enjoyed steady growth throughout the Roaring 20s but it was still a small isolated community out on the edge of Los Angeles It began to become less isolated with the paving of Sunset Boulevard in 1925 which brought an increased flow of traffic through the community and offered more convenient accessibility to nearby Westwood and Beverly Hills 25 1929 would prove to be a pivotal year in the history of the Palisades 25 and by that time the town consisted of only about 365 homes and about 1 000 residents who mostly resided in the so called Alphabet Streets neighborhood although residential construction was now expanding into what would later become the Castellammare Huntington and Paseo Miramar neighborhoods 26 On August 18 of that year the cornerstone was laid for the foundation of the Methodist Episcopal Church on Via de la Paz which at that time was the community s only church Directly across the street planning was underway for the town s first permanent school building which would later become known as Palisades Elementary which was dedicated on June 12 1931 25 In 1928 the Los Angeles Police Department began renting temporary office space in the now historic Business Block building for the price of 10 a month The following year a motorcycle officer was assigned to make nightly patrols in the area The Palisades finally acquired its own fire station in 1929 located on Sunset adjacent to where the local Chase Bank branch now stands in the Village neighborhood 25 By the end of the decade nearly all remaining open areas of Pacific Palisades were being developed reflecting the areas booming growth and the Palisades coastal allure Golfers were enjoying the already acclaimed Riviera Country Club opened in 1927 Later in the decade construction started on the Bel Air Bay Club opened in March 1930 25 1930 present Edit Photo of the devastation from the 1938 flood in what is now The Village The Palisades was a refuge for many German Jewish and Austrian Jewish intellectuals and artists fleeing from pre war Germany and later from the Holocaust many of whom associated with the Exilliteratur settled in Pacific Palisades including Thomas Mann Lion Feuchtwanger Theodor W Adorno Vicki Baum Herbert Zipper and Emil Ludwig Some of these Jewish refugees had previously sought refuge in the south of France and had to flee due to the fall of France to the Vichy regime and were surprised by the similarities with the Mediterranean climate and topography 27 28 Villa Aurora on Paseo Miramar the Spanish colonial home of Feuchtwanger and his wife Marta became the focal point of the expatriate community which was nicknamed Weimar by the Sea 29 Some non Jewish exiles who were married to people with Jewish ancestry chose to settle in the Palisades as well such as Thomas Mann and his wife Katia Mann who resided at 1550 San Remo Drive in the Riviera neighborhood 30 For many decades there was a virtual ban on drinking alcohol in the district and a Chinese restaurant House of Lee held the only liquor license The Methodist Church created a Chautauqua Conference Grounds in Temescal Canyon 31 The Presbyterian Synod purchased the property in 1943 and used it as a private retreat center until the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy purchased the property in 1994 to become Temescal Gateway Park Though the Palisades had a notable Jewish population since at least the 1930s it was still largely Methodist until the 1970s This is when the Palisades began to see an explosion of affluent Jewish migration accompanied by the opening of a local landmark Mort s Deli in 1972 The beloved landmark closed in 2007 after former LA mayor Richard Riordan purchased the deli and converted it to a bistro 32 Geography EditPacific Palisades is about 7 miles 11 kilometers west of the UCLA campus 33 The Santa Monica Mountain range runs through the northern and eastern sections of Pacific Palisades accessible through a series of trailheads 33 Topography Edit The Pacific Palisades covers a total area of 24 31 square miles 63 km2 comprising 22 84 square miles 59 2 km2 of land and 1 47 square miles 3 8 km2 of water 5 The Palisades covers an area slightly larger than the island of Manhattan Climate Edit Pacific PalisadesClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 1 6 66 52 1 5 65 50 1 67 52 0 4 69 54 0 4 71 56 0 1 74 59 0 2 79 63 0 1 81 65 0 2 81 65 0 2 77 62 0 4 71 57 1 1 64 51Average max and min temperatures in FPrecipitation totals in inchesSource 34 Metric conversionJ F M A M J J A S O N D 41 19 11 38 18 10 25 19 11 10 21 12 10 22 13 2 5 23 15 5 1 26 17 2 5 27 18 5 1 27 18 5 1 25 17 10 22 14 28 18 11Average max and min temperatures in CPrecipitation totals in mmPacific Palisades has a Mediterranean climate Koppen Csb and receives just enough annual precipitation to avoid semi arid climate BSh 35 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 36 37 Pacific Palisades has plenty of sunshine throughout the year with an average of only 35 days with measurable precipitation annually 38 Temperatures in the Palisades 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 38 39 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 40 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 41 Pacific Palisades like much of the rest of the southern California 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 42 Pacific Palisades averages 14 93 in 379 mm of precipitation annually mainly occurring between November and March 39 generally in the form of moderate rain showers but sometimes as heavy rainfall during winter storms Rainfall is usually higher in the neighborhoods located in the hills and coastal slopes of the Santa Monica Mountains such as the Highlands and Castellammare due to orographic uplift Summer days are typically 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 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 39 Wet years are usually associated with warm water El Nino conditions in the Pacific dry years with cooler water La Nina 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 hills and canyon ridges and along the coast with the last occurrence of a 32 F 0 C reading being on While the most recent snowfall occurred in January 2021 it has also occurred several other times in recorded history the second most recent being in February 2019 43 44 with snow falling in some areas of the Palisades as recently as January 2021 45 At the official downtown station the highest recorded temperature is 113 F 45 C on September 27 2010 39 46 while the lowest is 28 F 2 C 39 on January 4 1949 39 During autumn and winter Santa Ana winds sometimes bring much warmer and drier conditions to Pacific Palisades and raise wildfire risk Climate data for Pacific Palisades CaliforniaMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 88 31 92 33 95 35 102 39 97 36 104 40 97 36 98 37 110 43 106 41 101 38 94 34 110 43 Average high F C 66 19 67 19 67 19 70 21 71 22 75 24 79 26 80 27 79 26 76 24 70 21 67 19 72 22 Average low F C 48 9 49 9 50 10 52 11 55 13 58 14 61 16 62 17 61 16 57 14 52 11 49 9 55 13 Record low F C 27 3 34 1 37 3 43 6 45 7 48 9 52 11 51 11 47 8 43 6 38 3 32 0 27 3 Average precipitation inches mm 3 41 87 3 69 94 2 86 73 0 65 17 0 27 6 9 0 04 1 0 0 02 0 51 0 13 3 3 0 21 5 3 0 41 10 1 14 29 1 98 50 14 83 377 Source 1 47 Source 2 48 Hottest and coldest wettest and driest averages for a month F inch and C mm 1895 2019 49 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov DecHottest 63 9 F 17 7 C 64 2 F 17 9 C 67 5 F 19 7 C 68 2 F 20 1 C 71 5 F 21 9 C 75 9 F 24 4 C 79 8 F 26 6 C 79 0 F 26 1 C 80 3 F 26 8 C 75 4 F 24 1 C 66 9 F 19 4 C 62 2 F 16 8 C Coldest 46 7 F 8 2 C 51 1 F 10 6 C 52 0 F 11 1 C 55 2 F 12 9 C 57 2 F 14 0 C 62 9 F 17 2 C 66 2 F 19 0 C 66 3 F 19 1 C 63 1 F 17 3 C 57 8 F 14 3 C 55 2 F 12 9 C 49 4 F 9 7 C Wettest 14 43 inches 367 mm 15 23 inches 387 mm 10 44 inches 265 mm 7 31 inches 186 mm 3 83 inches 97 mm 0 98 inches 25 mm 0 43 inches 11 mm 2 54 inches 65 mm 5 13 inches 130 mm 5 13 inches 130 mm 9 96 inches 253 mm 11 46 inches 291 mm Driest 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm 0 inches 0 mm Neighborhoods EditThis section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Village Edit The Village is the Pacific Palisades walkable vibrant downtown area and small central business district with its center at Sunset Boulevard and Via de la Paz Pacific Palisades has been known for having an abundance of Italian restaurants The Village s anchor is the Palisades Village a shopping center which was opened in 2018 and replaced a number of buildings in the downtown area This business district is centered around the historic Business Block building located between Antioch and Sunset The Village consists of a weekly farmers market restaurants cafes and coffee shops in addition to boutiques shops banks offices an Erewhon Market Ralph s a Gelson s and a Starbucks and local events The Alphabet Streets Edit The Alphabet Streets also known as The North Village is the neighborhood that borders the village proper to the north of Sunset Boulevard This was the first neighborhood to be built in Pacific Palisades beginning in 1921 by members of the Methodist movement This neighborhood has the smallest lot sizes of all the neighborhoods in the Palisades with lots ranging from 5 200 to 7 500 sq ft in size The Alphabet Streets are within walking distance to The Village and this area is characterized by its high density of smaller single family homes on lively narrow streets The streets named after Methodist Bishops of the late 19th and early 20th century are consecutively named beginning with A B C D etc hence the name Alphabet Streets This neighborhood is a destination for trick or treaters on Halloween 50 The El Medio Mesa Edit The El Medio Mesa is located south of Sunset Boulevard beginning about a quarter mile west of The Village across Temescal Canyon just past Palisades Charter High School The El Medio Mesa extends for a long distance from Temescal Canyon all the way to where Sunset Boulevard meets the Pacific Coast Highway Marquez Knolls Edit Marquez Knolls is a large area of homes located north of Sunset Boulevard beginning about a quarter mile west of The Village across Temescal Canyon on the mountain upslope known for spectacular ocean views The lower upslope was first developed in the early 1950s and mid 1960s by the Earl Lachman family There is a small shopping center on Marquez Street and Sunset Boulevard The Via Bluffs and the Huntington Palisades Edit The Via Bluffs and The Huntington Palisades are the neighborhoods that border the village proper to the south of Sunset Boulevard overlooking the ocean The Via Mesa is located between Temescal Canyon on the west and Potrero Canyon on the east the Huntington Palisades is located between Potrero Canyon on the west and Chautauqua Boulevard on the east Both of these neighborhoods are within walking distance to The Village and sit upon high bluffs that look out over the Pacific Ocean The El Medio Bluffs Edit The El Medio Bluffs as with The Via Bluffs and The Huntington Palisades The El Medio Bluffs are located on a high ridge overlooking the Pacific Ocean and much of the neighborhood is afforded ocean views and ocean air citation needed Castellammare Edit Castellammare is located along Pacific Coast Highway on small bluffs much closer to sea level north of where Sunset Boulevard meets PCH This is the home of the Getty Villa and the narrow winding streets in this neighborhood have Italian names and ocean breezes citation needed 51 Rustic Canyon Edit Main article Rustic Canyon Rustic Canyon is the neighborhood east of Chautauqua Boulevard that dips into Santa Monica Canyon and includes the Will Rogers State Historic Park 52 The neighborhood features post war homes located on the former polo field of The Uplifters the original site of The Uplifters clubhouse now a city park and cabins developed as second homes and weekend retreats This area is also known as Uplifter s Ranch The Riviera Edit Aerial view of Pacific Palisades the Riviera neighborhood can be seen to the right Finishing hole at Riviera Country Club The Riviera is a Palisades neighborhood located approximately two miles east of The Palisades Village and features The Riviera Country Club a high end country club and streets named after various locations in the French and Italian Riviera The neighborhood is divided into north and south sections by Sunset Boulevard It borders Santa Monica and Brentwood The Riviera Country Club hosts the Genesis Open on the PGA Tour in February the tournament has been previously known as the Northern Trust Open and Nissan Open and was originally the Los Angeles Open Riviera has hosted three major championships the U S Open in 1948 and the PGA Championship in 1983 and 1995 Ben Hogan won three times in less than 18 months at the course 1947 and 1948 L A Open 1948 U S Open and it became known as Hogan s Alley The country club will also host golf during the 2028 Summer Olympics 53 Palisades Highlands Edit Main article Palisades Highlands The Palisades Highlands is a neighborhood in Los Angeles California s Pacific Palisades northern region located in the upper Santa Ynez Canyon The Highlands has access to several Topanga State Park trailheads The Highlands themself have a number of gated communities housing developments and distinct neighborhoods including the following 54 Country Estates a gated community of 80 homes on the farthest west part of the Highlands Palisades Hills this is the oldest area and the highest part at around 1 600 feet 490 m above sea level The Summit the newest neighborhood in the Highlands that was completed in the early 2000s This area includes The Summit Club which is a recreation center Lower Highlands includes homes and condominiums as well as a shopping center and various commercial properties development of which began in the early 1970s 54 Santa Monica Canyon Edit Santa Monica Canon visible on a LAPRR Balloon Route map circa 1903 With winding roads and steep canyon walls this small enclave is home to musicians movie stars and aging beach bums Santa Monica Canyon named for the historic Rancho Boca de Santa Monica is within the city of Los Angeles and is considered part of the Los Angeles community of Pacific Palisades Canyon Charter School in Santa Monica Canyon is one of the most prestigious elementary schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District LAUSD The northwestern border of Santa Monica Canyon is Chautauqua Boulevard The southern border is Adelaide Drive Demographics EditIn 2009 the Los Angeles Times s Mapping L A project supplied these Pacific Palisades statistics a population of 25 507 residents in the 22 84 sq mi 59 2 km2 neighborhood giving a population density of 1 048 sq mi 405 km2 among the lowest for the city and the county 55 City parks EditThe Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks operates several recreational facilities in Pacific Palisades Palisades Park at 851 Alma Real Drive has 117 acres 47 hectares of land and is the Palisades largest park 56 The Palisades Recreation Center also at that address has barbecue pits four baseball diamonds two lighted two unlighted lighted basketball courts indoor and outdoor a children s play area a football field an indoor gymnasium no weights are offered picnic tables lighted tennis courts and lighted volleyball courts The facility also has a kitchen a stage a television area and various scheduled athletic and non athletic activities 57 The Pacific Palisades Tennis Court also at that address has eight courts 58 Rustic Canyon Park is located along Rustic Canyon Road 59 The Rustic Canyon Pool is located at 601 Latimer Road 60 The Rustic Canyon Recreation Center located at the same address has a multipurpose with a capacity of 150 people that can be used as an auditorium a gymnasium or a volleyball court The center also has barbecue pits an unlighted baseball diamond basketball courts lighted indoor and unlighted outdoor a children s play area an indoor gymnasium no weights are offered picnic tables and volleyball courts lighted and unlighted 61 Temescal Canyon Park is a non staffed pocket park located along Temescal Canyon Drive from Pacific Coast Highway to Sunset Blvd The park has barbecue pits a children s play area picnic tables hiking trails a native garden and toilets 62 Santa Ynez Canyon Park is located at Palisades Drive and Avenida de Santa Ynez 63 Rivas Canyon Park is located at the east terminus of Oracle Place 64 Hiking trails EditThis section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page March 2021 Hiking is common in the Palisades and the community is home to a number of hiking trails including the following trails Backbone Trail Edit Main article Backbone Trail The Backbone Trail is a long distance trail extending 67 79 miles 65 109 10 km across the length of the Santa Monica Mountains The Backbone Trail runs through both Malibu and Pacific Palisades with its western terminus in Point Mugu State Park in Malibu and its eastern terminus in Will Rogers State Historic Park in Pacific Palisades The trail is open to hikers throughout its length dogs mountain bicyclists and horseback riders are allowed on portions of the trail as posted The Backbone Trail follows a well maintained single track path with some dirt roads along the route The trail is very well designed with climbs and descents occurring on well graded trails full of switchbacks The trail can be hiked in either the westbound or eastbound direction There are no major differences between the two directions Hiking westbound you will progress towards more remote territory and can end your hike at the Pacific Ocean but transportation may be more difficult from the Ray Miller Trailhead There is no permit required for hiking the BBT 66 Bushwacker s Delight Edit Bushwacker s Delight is a 0 8 mile lightly trafficked point to point trail with 528 ft in elevation gain located within Will Rogers State Historic Park This trail is frequented by more experienced hikers as Bushwacker s Delight is an uncleared trail with overgrown vegetation 67 Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail Edit Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail is a 5 5 mile long loop trail with 1 095 ft in elevation gain located near the Palisades Highlands neighborhood The trail is paved and well maintained as it doubles as a fire road and offers a number of activity options It is most popular from September until May citation needed This is one of the few trails in Los Angeles County which is open to those on horseback This trail offers parking in the nearby lot for 10 a day and is easily accessible from both the Palisades as well as neighboring Topanga The Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail leads to Eagle Rock a rock formation which is a common spot for photography as its peak offers sweeping views of the surrounding area and is home to a variety of native lizards 68 High Point Trail Edit High Point Trail is 2 8 mile long trail with 1 007 ft of elevation gain located in the Santa Monica Mountains overlooked the Palisades High Point Trail is a paved trail that begins on private property and hikers hiking this trail frequently trespass knowingly or unknowingly in order to complete the hike This trail is noted for its wildlife and although the trail is paved some parts are overgrown with bushes and other vegetation The trail leads to Goat Peak which is of the highest points in the Palisades and offers sweeping views of the surrounding area 69 Inspiration Point Trail Edit Inspiration Point Trail is a 2 1 mile long hiking trail with 324 ft in elevation gain located within Will Rogers State Historic Park near the Riviera neighborhood This is one of the oldest hiking trails in Los Angeles and was created by Will Rogers in the early 20th century Inspiration Point is one of the few hiking trails in the Palisades which is open to dogs Inspiration Point Trail is one of the main attractions of Will Rogers State Park and attracts hikers from across the Palisades and around the area as it is an easy hike with unique vistas of the Los Angeles Basin and Santa Monica Bay On a clear day one can see views of areas such as Catalina Island Chino Hills and Saddleback Peak at the summit of this trail Inspiration Point Trail also connects to the nearby Backbone Trail 70 Los Leones Trail Edit Los Leones Trail also known as Los Liones is a moderately challenging hiking trail located in the Castellammare neighborhood Los Leones Trail is 7 3 miles in length with over 1 300 ft in elevation gain Often spelled Los Liones the area is named after the mountain lions that are common in the area 71 Los Leones is one of the most popular citation needed hiking trails in the entire Westside and the trail weaves through a lush canyon with abundant green vegetation located in the southern end of Topanga State Park just a 1 3 mile away from the Pacific Ocean The ivy and chaparral lined trail offers some of the best of Santa Monica Bay After 1 3 miles and 550 feet of elevation gain Los Liones Trail arrives at a clearing on a ridge with a bench that looks down on the Palisades Santa Monica city and bay and the surrounding area The top of this hiking trail joins East Topanga Fire Road which leads to the Paseo Miramar Trail which leads you deeper into the Santa Monica Mountains Continuing on the trail you will reach Parker Mesa Overlook which is known for offering some of the best views of the coast of any hiking trail in Los Angeles the area consists of a flat plateau area with sweeping views of the coastline 72 73 Murphy Ranch Trail Edit Murphy Ranch Trail Skull Rock Loop Edit Skull Rock Loop is a 4 mile long loop trail with 1 141 ft of elevation gain located near the Temescal Canyon neighborhood This trail is frequented by both rock climbers and birders as it is home to both rocky terrain and an abundance of different bird species Skull Rock Loop branches off from the nearby Temescal Canyon Trail and features a waterfall as well as its namesake Skull Rock which is rock formation names for its resemblance to a skull The entrance to the trail offers free street parking or a daily rate in the nearby parking lot for 12 74 Temescal Canyon Ridge Trail Trailer Canyon Fire Road Edit Trailer Canyon Fire Road is a 4 3 mile long trail with 925 ft in elevation gain located near the Summit development in the Palisades Highlands neighborhood This trail is wide and paved as it doubles as a fire road it is also used by mountain bikers and birdwatchers After 1 5 miles this trail connects with the nearby Temescal Ridge Trail which takes hikers to the Temescal Gateway Park Trailer Canyon Fire Road has views of the ocean and Temescal Canyon 75 Will Rogers Trail Edit Will Rogers Trail is a 4 1 mile trail with 449 ft in elevation gain located within Will Rogers State Historic Park This trail is one of many trails located within the Will Rogers State Park near the Riviera neighborhood Will Rogers Trail is known for being very challenging even for experienced hikers as it is not very well maintained and there are signs on portions of the trail which point this out Those hiking this trail may have to scramble on stones through the underbrush to avoid falling into the nearby creek During the winter months the creek often overflows its banks obscuring the trail and making this trail even more treacherous 76 State parks and beaches EditThe California Department of Parks and Recreation also has locations in Pacific Palisades Will Rogers State Beach Edit Will Rogers State Beach extends 1 3 4 mi 3 km along the shore The beach features swimming and skin diving Facilities include volleyball courts playground and gymnastic equipment as well as a bike path and walkway A number of movies and TV shows have been filmed at this beach The beach is located off the Pacific Coast Highway near the intersection with Temescal Canyon Road The beach is operated by the County of Los Angeles Department of Beaches amp Harbors 77 Will Rogers State Historic Park Edit Will Rogers House one of the park s main attractions While Will Rogers made Beverly Hills his home in the late 1920s in 1922 he bought a large plot of almost 200 acres 80 hectares of land above Sunset Blvd to build a weekend cottage He built a polo field on the property in 1926 and in 1928 he and his family made it their home In 1944 nine years after Rogers died the ranch became a state park In the interest of historical preservation the home is maintained as it was including the furniture and fixtures It is open to the public most days with the exception of major holidays although admission is required The top of the property s trail includes vistas of the ocean and city 78 Temescal Gateway Park Edit Panoramic view from Temescal Peak Temescal Gateway Park located at 15601 Sunset Blvd encompasses 141 acres 57 hectares of oak and sycamore canyons ridgetop views and access to miles of trails in Topanga State Park Will Rogers State Historic Park and the 20 000 acre 8 000 hectare Big Wild 79 Topanga State Park Edit Located in the cliffs and canyons of the Santa Monica Mountains and headquartered in nearby Topanga Canyon Topanga State Park features 36 mi 58 km of trails through open grassland live oaks and views of the Pacific Ocean The park is bound on the south by Pacific Palisades and Brentwood on the west by Topanga Canyon and on the east by Rustic Canyon Numerous geologic formations can be found in the park including earthquake faults marine fossils volcanic intrusions and a wide variety of sedimentary formations Trail heads into the park are located throughout Pacific Palisades including Las Lions Drive Palisades Highlands Temescal Gateway Park and Will Rogers State Historic Park 80 Main article Topanga State ParkGovernment and infrastructure EditThe most important civic group within the Palisades is the Pacific Palisades Community Council The Pacific Palisades Community Council usually meets twice each month to discuss a wide range of issues that affect its residents The council has rejected city offers to become an official part of the city preferring its independent non aligned status Among the main reasons that Council members cite is that the council would not have the power to appeal decisions of City officials commissions and boards and the council could not appear before Federal State and County authorities regarding local issues citation needed Local government Edit The community is within District 11 of the Los Angeles City Council represented by Mike Bonin 81 The Los Angeles Fire Department operates two fire stations serving Pacific Palisades Station 69 at 15045 West Sunset Boulevard serves Pacific Palisades and the Pacific Coast 82 Station 23 at 17281 West Sunset Boulevard serves the Palisades Highlands Castellammare and the Pacific Coast 83 The Los Angeles Police Department operates the West Los Angeles Community Police Station at 1663 Butler Avenue serving the neighborhood 84 County state and federal representation Edit Pacific Palisades is within Los Angeles County s 3rd Supervisorial District As of 2014 Sheila Kuehl represents the district 85 The Los Angeles County Department of Health Services SPA 5 West Area Health Office serves Pacific Palisades 86 The department operates the Simms Mann Health and Wellness Center in Santa Monica serving Pacific Palisades 87 Pacific Palisades is a part of California s 50th State Assembly district As of 2019 Richard Bloom represents the district 88 Pacific Palisades is also a part of California s 23rd State Senate district as of 2019 Ben Allen represents the district 89 The community is a part of the State Board of Equalization District 4 90 represented by Mike Schaefer as of 2019 91 In the U S House of Representatives Pacific Palisades is within California s 33rd congressional district and is currently represented by Ted Lieu 92 93 The United States Postal Service operates the Pacific Palisades Post Office at 15243 La Cruz Drive 94 95 Fire service Edit Los Angeles Fire Department Stations 23 and 69 serve the area Station 23 is located on Sunset Boulevard at the bottom of Los Liones Drive and Station 69 is located on Sunset Boulevard and Carey Street Law enforcement and security Edit Pacific Palisades is served by the West Los Angeles Division of the Los Angeles Police Department One police car is generally assigned to the neighborhood 96 Palisades Patrol a private security company is contracted by the city and supplements the police presence and provides security for the Palisades Many residents also rely on private security companies such as ADT or ACS security Politics EditPacific Palisades is a heavily Democratic area and Democrats tend to win the majority of the vote in each election 2020 election results Edit According to a representative from the Los Angeles County Clerk the results of the 2020 general election in the Pacific Palisades are as follows The final vote tally for the Presidential election Pacific Palisades was 12 219 votes cast for the winner Joe Biden and 3 861 votes cast for then incumbent Donald Trump a more than 8 000 vote margin in Biden s favor The final vote tally for the District Attorney election in Pacific Palisades was 5 795 cast for then incumbent Jackie Lacey and 6 878 votes cast for challenger George Gascon 2020 Presidential Election Results Joe Biden Donald Trump Vote Total12 219 3 861 16 080Percentage of the vote per candidate Joe Biden Donald Trump Other candidates76 23 9 0 1 2020 results by neighborhood Edit The Alphabet Streets Edit There were 349 people who cast their vote in person and 2 042 who cast their vote using mail in ballots Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin casting 1804 votes in his favor compared to 403 votes that were cast for Trump For the LA District Attorney s election residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascon by a narrower margin over then incumbent DA Jackie Lacey who received 991 votes compared to the 1 143 received by Gascon Proposition 15 which would have taxed properties based on current market value rather than the purchase price was defeated by just 23 votes 1 131 to 1 154 Statewide it was defeated 52 percent to 48 percent Proposition 16 which would have repealed a constitutional provision that made it illegal to discriminate against or grant preferential treatment based on race lost statewide but was favored in this precinct 1 164 to 1 093 Statewide the yes vote was 42 8 percent and the no vote was 57 2 percent Proposition 19 which allows homeowners over 55 disabled or wildfire victims to transfer primary resident s tax base to replacement residence was passed statewide 51 1 percent majority but not by residents in the Alphabet precinct who voted against it 1 234 to 1 005 Proposition 22 the Uber bill which allowed app based drivers as contractors not employees saw residents vote 1 179 to 1 100 in favor The measure was also approved statewide 58 6 percent to 41 4 percent It was the most expensive ballot measure campaign in the state s history to date at 225 036 046 Proposition 25 which asked to approve replacing cash bail and received 56 4 percent of the state voting no saw people in the Alphabets voting to end it with a yes vote of 1 150 to 1 065 The proposition was opposed statewide by 55 4 percent of voters Castellammare Edit There were 302 people who cast their vote in person and 1 850 who cast their vote using mail in ballots Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin casting 1 573 votes in his favor compared to 508 votes that were cast for Trump For the LA District Attorney s election residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascon by a narrower margin over then incumbent DA Jackie Lacey who received 783 votes compared to the 1 074 received by Gascon Prop 15 passed here 1 051 to 1 026 Prop 16 saw 1 036 vote yes and 1 001 vote no Prop 19 lost 914 to 1 128 Prop 22 passed 1 082 to 970 Prop 25 1026 voted to do away with cash bail 1005 said no The Huntington Edit There were 282 people who cast their vote in person and 1 900 who cast their vote using mail in ballotsResidents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin casting 1 558 votes in his favor compared to 552 votes that were cast for Trump For the LA District Attorney s election residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascon by a narrower margin over then incumbent DA Jackie Lacey who received 801 votes compared to the 1 060 received by Gascon Prop 15 taxing properties based on current market value was defeated with 934 yes and 1 138 no Prop 16 repealing the discrimination provision was defeated 971 yes to 1 004 no Prop 19 primary tax transfer 771 yes to 1 256 no Prop 22 the Uber bill passed 1071 yes to 973 no Prop 25 seeking to replace cash bail was defeated 971 yes to 1044 no Lower Marquez and the Via Bluffs Edit There were 298 people who cast their vote in person and 2 178 who cast their vote using mail in ballots Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin casting 1 872 votes in his favor compared to 512 votes that were cast for Trump For the LA District Attorney s election residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascon by a narrower margin over then incumbent DA Jackie Lacey who received 933 votes compared to the 1 205 received by Gascon Proposition 15 which would have taxed properties based on current market value rather than the purchase price was defeated by one vote 1 186 to 1 185 Proposition 16 repealing the constitutional provision which makes it illegal to discriminate and voted against statewide found favor here 1 199 to 1 128 Proposition 19 allowing those over 55 to transfer primary tax to replacement residence and passed statewide went down 953 to 1 373 to 953 Proposition 22 the Uber bill also suffered a defeat here 1 178 to 1 165 but passed statewide Proposition 25 to replace cash bail found a slim margin in favor here 1 150 to 1 141 Palisades Highlands Edit There were 316 people who cast their vote in person and 2 111 who cast their vote using mail in ballots Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin casting 1 611 votes in his favor compared to 727 votes that were cast for Trump For the LA District Attorney s election this was the only neighborhood in the Palisades where residents voted for Lacey than Gascon who received 983 votes compared to the 1 080 received by Lacey Prop 15 went down here 993 to 1 332 Prop 16 Highlands residents also voted against repealing the discrimination provision 989 to 1 306 Prop 19 lost 991 to 1 274 Prop 21 passed 1 353 to 951 Prop 25 had 1 007 vote to do away with cash bail 1 248 vote against the idea Paseo Miramar and Upper Marquez Edit There were 330 people who cast their vote in person and 2 422 who cast their vote using mail in ballotsResidents of this neighborhood preferred Biden by a wide margin casting 1 945 votes in his favor compared to 682 votes that were cast for Trump For the LA District Attorney s election residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascon by a narrower margin over then incumbent DA Jackie Lacey who received 1 135 votes compared to the 1 232 received by Gascon Prop 15 taxing properties based on current market value was defeated 1 154 yes to 1 478 no Prop 16 repealing the discrimination provision was defeated 1 226 yes to 1 370 no Prop 19 allowing the residential property tax to transfer also lost 1 099 yes to 1462 no Prop 22 the Uber bill passed 1 483 yes to 1 132 no Prop 25 seeking to replace cash bail was defeated 1 192 yes to 1 337 no The Riviera Edit There were 302 people who cast their vote in person and 1 850 who cast their vote using mail in ballots Residents of this neighborhood preferred Biden casting 1 856 votes in his favor compared to 477 votes that were cast for Trump For the LA District Attorney s election residents preferred progressive challenger George Gascon over then incumbent DA Jackie Lacey who receives 855 votes compared to the 1 255 received by Gascon Prop 15 was defeated 1 125 in favor and 1 203 against Prop 16 found favor here 1 257 to 1 022 although defeated statewide Prop 19 lost 955 to 1 318 Prop 22 passed by one vote 1 153 to 1 152 Prop 25 passed here 1 162 to 1 095 although defeated statewide Education EditPublic schools Edit Palisades Charter High School Residents are zoned to Los Angeles Unified School District schools The area is within Board District 4 97 As of 2017 Nick Melvoin represents the district 98 99 Some residents are assigned to Pacific Palisades Elementary School some residents are assigned to Canyon Elementary School and some are assigned to Marquez Elementary School All residents are zoned to Paul Revere Charter Middle School and Palisades Charter High School 100 101 Canyon Elementary School opened in 1910 102 Pacific Palisades Elementary opened in 1922 103 Pacific Palisades Charter Elementary School front tower Marquez Elementary School opened in 1955 104 Marquez Elementary School Pacific Palisades CA Paul Revere Middle School first opened as Palisades Brentwood Junior High School on September 12 1955 it chose its current name during its first year of operation It became an internal charter in 1994 105 Palisades Charter High School commonly known as Pali High opened in 1961 106 Pali High later became a charter school in 1994 107 Private schools Edit Private schools in the area include Palisades Jewish Early Childhood Center preschool kindergarten is a Jewish private school associated with the Chabad movement offering private preschool kindergarten daycare and Hebrew school education 108 Calvary Christian K 8 109 Village School 110 pre K 6 Corpus Christi K 8 St Matthew s Parish School PS 8 Seven Arrows K 6 111 Westside Waldorf K 8 Lycee Francais de Los Angeles Pacific Palisades Campus 112 Public libraries Edit Palisades branch Los Angeles Public Library operates the Palisades Branch at 861 Alma Real Drive 113 Culture EditMenorah lighting Edit Beginning in 1988 each year on the first night of Hanukkah a public menorah lighting ceremony is held at the Palisades Village the downtown area of the Palisades The menorah lighting is organized by Chabad of Pacific Palisades as well as other leaders in the local Jewish community and the Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce It is hosted by Palisades Chabad Rabbi Zushe Cunin as well as the honorary mayor the city councilman representing the area and local developer Rick Caruso It is accompanied by a community event featuring live Hanukkah music complimentary Hanukkah foods such as latkes chocolate gelt and sufganiyot Hanukkah themed arts and crafts face painting and balloon twisting On December 2 2018 the 30th Annual Pacific Palisades Menorah Lighting was held at its new location the Palisades Village shopping center This was the highest attended menorah lighting in Palisades history and was attended by over 1 000 people including actors and Co honorary Mayors Janice and Billy Crystal Rabbi Zushe Cunin Palisades Village developer Rick Caruso and councilman Mike Bonin The Crystals also helped in the planning of the event The event performances of Hanukkah and other traditional Jewish music by the Marquez Elementary Choir Paul Revere Music Club and the Westside Waldorf School 114 Pacific Palisades is also home to one of the few vegan Hanukkah celebrations in Los Angeles Lights and Latkes hosted by vegan Rabbi Jonathan Klein and JewishVeg Los Angeles 115 Palisades Rocks The Fourth Edit Fireworks during the 2006 Palisades Rocks The Fourth event Palisades Rocks The Fourth is a Palisadian tradition that first began in 1967 Every Fourth of July the community s Chamber of Commerce sponsors day long events which include 5K and 10K runs a home decorating contest a parade down Sunset Boulevard and a concert accompanied by a fireworks display at Palisades High School baseball field Due to the COVID 19 pandemic Palisades Rocks The Fourth was held mostly virtually beginning in 2020 A virtual concert accompanied by fireworks and a flyover by World War II fighter pilots flying AT 6 fighter jets over the Palisades 116 Synagogues Edit The Pacific Palisades is home to a large Jewish population and has a number of synagogues including the following Chabad of Pacific Palisades local Chabad center located at 17315 Sunset Blvd in the Castlellammare neighborhood offering religious services Hebrew school and early Jewish education Chabad of the Palisades hosts a number of Jewish events and is also responsible for the annual Menorah lighting and Hanukkah celebration at the Palisades Village 117 118 Kehillat Israel Reconstructionist synagogue this is the oldest synagogue in the Palisades Sports and recreation EditBel Air Bay Club Edit Main article Bel Air Bay Club wedding st the Bel Air Bay Club The Bel Air Bay Club is both an event venue Upper Club and a private beach club Lower Club located in the area The Upper Club includes an ocean view and on site accommodations available for private parties The interior of the Bel Air Bay Club Upper Club includes large windows a fireplace and iron chandeliers The Bel Air Bay Club is primarily used as a wedding social and corporate event venue citation needed Riviera Country Club Edit Main article Riviera Country Club Par 3 on the course The Riviera Country Club is a private club with a championship golf course and tennis courts in the Riviera neighborhood of Pacific Palisades It is just a block south of Sunset Boulevard The Riviera was designed by golf course architects George C Thomas Jr and William P Bell citation needed it has been the primary host for the Genesis Invitational originally the Los Angeles Open an annual event on the PGA Tour in February The 2021 edition was the 58th held at Riviera The Riviera has hosted three major championships the U S Open in 1948 and the PGA Championship in 1983 and 1995 In addition it was site of the U S Senior Open a senior major in 1998 and the U S Amateur in August 2017 119 The club is scheduled to host the Olympics in 2028 53 Will Rogers Polo Club Edit Main article Will Rogers Polo Club Match at the Will Rogers Polo Club in 2013 The Will Rogers Polo Club is a polo club located at 1501 Will Rogers State Park Road Pacific Palisades Los Angeles California 120 121 122 123 which is within Will Rogers State Historic Park and is Southern California s only remaining polo club Media EditThe Los Angeles Times is the citywide newspaper The Palisadian Post founded in 1928 is the oldest newspaper to serve the Pacific Palisades community The Palisades News first published in 2014 is a Palisades based newspaper published twice monthly for the residents of Pacific Palisades 124 Circling The News is a local news site established in 2017 by Sue Perscoe a former writer for The Palisades News and featuring a number of guest writers and columnists 125 Perspective Palisades is a local magazine founded by local historian and realtor Michael Edlen in 2020 the magazine is published each quarter and features real estate related news as well as historical information news in the community and interviews with notable Palisadians 126 Landmarks EditBurns House Edit Architect Charles W Moore designed his first house in Los Angeles for the UCLA economist and urban planning professor Leland Burns The house was completed in 1974 It occupies a narrow ledge on a steep slope of the Santa Monica canyon The house is composed of an interlocking set of shed roofs and tower its forms reminiscent of The Sea Ranch Condominium but adapted for a sense of the Mediterranean climate and Hollywood allusions An interior staircase climbs up through a vertical cleft in the narrow house and then at the very top of the third story the stair descends outside back down into a swimming pool court Designer Tina Beebe developed with Moore the color scheme whereby exterior planes were painted in a range of ochres pinks roses and golds so as the light and shade shifts during the day the house itself seems to change like a chameleon The house was built around a tracker organ hand built by Jurgen Ahrend an instrument known as Opus 1 U S A Bradbury House Edit Main article Bradbury House Los Angeles California Bradbury House The Bradbury House is a historic house in the Huntington Palisades neighborhood It was designed in the Spanish Revival style by architect John Byers and completed in 1923 127 The home was built for Lewis L Bradbury Jr 128 whose father Lewis L Bradbury commissioned the construction of the Bradbury Building in Downtown Los Angeles 127 It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since March 22 2010 129 Business Block Edit Main article Pacific Palisades Business Block The Business Block building is a historic building located in the Palisades downtown area called the Village It serves as the anchor of the downtown area and was designed by architect Clifton Nourse and dedicated in 1924 The building is 30 000 square feet 2 800 m2 and sits on 36 000 square feet 3 300 m2 of land The Business Block building is located between Antioch Swarthmore and Sunset in the Village neighborhood of Pacific Palisades an area in the Westside of Los Angeles California 130 Dolores del Rio House Edit Main article Dolores del Rio House The Dolores Del Rio House is located at 757 Kingman Avenue was designed for Mexican American actress Dolores del Rio and her husband production designer Cedric Gibbons by architects Douglas Honnold and George Vernon Russell in 1929 131 132 133 134 Eames House Edit Main article Eames House Eames House Eames House is the 1949 home and studio of husband and wife design pioneers Charles and Ray Eames The Getty Villa Edit Main article Getty Villa Art on display at the Getty The Getty Villa is an educational center and museum dedicated to the study of the arts and cultures of Ancient Greece Rome and Etruria Gladstones Edit Main article Gladstones Malibu Aerial view of Will Rogers State Beach with Gladstones in the center Gladstones is a seafood restaurant located along Will Rogers State Beach on Pacific Coast Highway Despite its name Gladstones Malibu is located in Pacific Palisades it is not actually located within the Malibu city limits Gladstones is known for their seafood and is a tourist attraction citation needed It has been owned by Richard Riordan former Mayor of Los Angeles since the mid 1990s In 2008 Gladstones was the 37th highest grossing independent restaurant in the country 135 In 2009 the private company SBE assumed day to day operations as part of a management contract with Riordan which expired in 2014 Gladstone s re assumed management of day to day operations thereafter 136 The beachfront restaurant has undergone several name changes When Robert J Morris opened the restaurant at the site of Ted s Grill he named it Gladstone s 4 Fish The restaurant is frequently cited as Gladstone s It is now called simply Gladstones Kappe Residence Edit Main article Kappe Residence The Kappe Residence is a house located in the Rustic Canyon section of Pacific Palisades that was designed by architect Raymond Kappe FAIA and was intended to be his own private residence The house is a modern design built into a heavily treed hillside The Kappe Residence was designated a Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument in 1996 and in 2008 it was named one of the top ten houses in Los Angeles by an expert panel selected by the Los Angeles Times Mort s Palisades Deli Edit Main article Mort s Palisades Deli Mort s Palisades Deli more commonly referred to as Mort s Deli was a Jewish delicatessen located at 1035 Swarthmore Ave on the corner of Sunset Boulevard in the Village Mort s was a neighborhood fixture and local landmark which first opened in 1972 and closed in 2008 upon the buildings sale to former mayor Richard Riordan who closed the deli to make way for a bistro which itself closed after a few months The deli was known for their Reuben sandwiches and celebrity clientele including Larry David Walter Matthau and Larry King among others as well as being featured in numerous episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm as Leo s Deli Old Santa Monica Forestry Station Edit Main article Old Santa Monica Forestry Station The Old Santa Monica Forestry Station is the nation s first experimental forestry station built in 1887 The Old Santa Monica Forestry Station was designated a California Historic Landmark No 840 on March 20 1970 137 Old Santa Monica Forestry Station is located in the Rustic Canyon neighborhood of Pacific Palisades It is south of what is now called Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area The hills and canyons around the Santa Monica Canyon were a land boom in the late 1880s In 1971 the state placed a marker near the entrance of the Rustic Canyon Recreation Center at the NW corner of Latimer and Hilltree Roads at 601 Latimer Road which reads 138 139 In 1887 the State Board of Forestry established the nation s first experimental forestry station Located in Rustic Canyon the station tested exotic trees for planting in California established plantations for management studies and produced planting stock for scientific and conservation purposes The station was operated by the Board of Forestry until 1893 and by the University of California until 1923 Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine Edit Main article Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine Temple located at the Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine Self Realization Fellowship Lake Shrine 29 is a10 acre 4 hectare spiritual center on Sunset Boulevard founded in 1950 by Paramahansa Yogananda whose classic book Autobiography of a Yogi introduced many Westerners to yoga and Eastern mysticism Thomas Mann House Edit Main article Thomas Mann House Thomas Mann House Thomas Mann House was Thomas Mann s home during his exile from 1942 to 1952 designed by JR Davidson Villa Aurora Edit Main article Villa Aurora Villa Aurora Villa Aurora is an artists residence and historic landmark located in the former home of exiled German Jewish writer Lion Feuchtwanger and his wife Marta Wildlife EditPacific Palisades is home to a variety of species of wildlife both native to the area and introduced from elsewhere Wild Parrots Edit Nanday parakeets resting in a tree in Pacific Palisades Pacific Palisades has been noted for its large population of California wild parrots and is one of the main areas in Southern California where wild parrots can be found Parrots mainly live in the sycamore lined canyons of the Palisades Wild parrots have lived in the Palisades since the 1960s and are said to descend from pet parrots that were released by their owners in the area in the wake of the 1961 Bel Air fire and the closing of Busch Gardens in Van Nuys 140 141 Pacific Palisades is home to numerous species of parrots and the most commonly sighted species is the Nanday parakeet 142 Other species of parrots found in the Palisades include the mitred parakeet yellow chevroned parakeet white winged parakeet rose ringed parakeet red masked parakeet blue crowned parakeet red crowned parrot lilac crowned parrot white fronted parrot blue fronted parrot yellow headed parrot and the red lored parrot 143 In popular culture EditJerry Lewis lived on Amalfi Drive in Pacific Palisades during the 1950s He shot several Gar Ron Productions home movies at that house with neighbors Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh 144 He became the honorary mayor of the Palisades in 1953 145 The Beach Boys 1963 hit Surfin U S A mentions Pacific Palisades in its list of Southern California surf spots The 1976 book What Really Happened to the Class of 65 is about members of one of Palisades High School s early graduating classes and how their once privileged lives turned out years later often disastrously The book by author David Wallechinsky the son of novelist Irving Wallace and his Pali classmate film critic Michael Medved described Pacific Palisades as a microcosm of America during the tumultuous Summer of Love era 146 The West Coast Avengers a California based branch of the Marvel Comics superhero team were depicted as based out of an estate in Pacific Palisades 147 Pacific Palisades a 1997 TV series produced by Aaron Spelling was named after the area The characters on the teen show Saved by the Bell 1989 1993 mention on several occasions that their school is located in Pacific Palisades Popular show 90210 mentions Palisades High as their rivals and has filmed some episodes on the beach and at a local restaurant Cafe Vida British alternative rock band Ash included a song entitled Pacific Palisades on their 2001 album Free All Angels Rapper Childish Gambino mentions Pacific Palisades in his song IV Sweatpants saying got a glass house in the Palisades In Modern Family the Dunphy children attend Palisades Charter High School Alex Dunphy was crowned school valedictorian in the episode Patriot Games The main character of the TV series Transparent lives in a house in Pacific Palisades untitled 02 06 23 2014 the second track of Kendrick Lamar s 2016 compilation album untitled unmastered mentions the area in the third verse Palisade views with some sex The Hyundai Palisade is named after Pacific Palisades Filming locations Edit The 1985 Jack Nicholson Kathleen Turner film Prizzi s Honor was partly filmed at a private house located at 15025 Corona Del Mar which was repainted for the occasion and then turned back to its original colours after the shooting That house was demolished later and now only exists in film history It belonged to Joyce R Proctor The 2005 Anne Hathaway Bijou Phillips film Havoc was set in the Palisades and filmed at Palisades Charter High School The 2003 Disney film Freaky Friday with Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan was filmed at Palisades Charter High School The 2001 film Crazy Beautiful starring Kirsten Dunst was filmed at Palisades Charter High School The house used for the exterior shots of the Pearson residence in the 1979 film Phantasm is located at 1232 Corsica Drive in Pacific Palisades The 1985 music video for Slip It In by the hardcore punk band Black Flag was filmed at Palisades High School The 1977 NBC television program James at 16 starring Lance Kerwin was filmed at the same school which was then called Palisades High School or more commonly Pali High The 1976 film Carrie was filmed at Palisades High School The 1957 film No Down Payment has several sequences around Pacific Palisades posing as a Los Angeles suburb Food Network s Everyday Italian is filmed on El Medio The TV series Baywatch was filmed at Lifeguard Headquarters by tower 15 of Will Rogers State Beach in Pacific Palisades The TV series The Rockford Files was often filmed in and around the Palisades in the 1970s The TV series Popular filmed at Palisades Charter High School The TV series Modern Family filmed some scenes at Palisades Charter High School The first season residence of the television series The Golden Girls was a home in Pacific Palisades For subsequent seasons a facade house was built on the Disney MGM back lot 148 The HBO series Curb Your Enthusiasm is filmed in the real life Pacific Palisades residence of Larry David as the home of his character Larry David The TV series Teen Wolf was filmed at Palisades Charter High School The original 2014 movie God s Not Dead had scenes filmed at 1033 Ravoli Drive in Pacific Palisades The 2014 movie Redeemed starring Pacific Palisades resident Ted McGinley also was filmed at 1033 Ravoli Drive An episode of HBO s Silicon Valley was filmed in the Palisades Highlands at 1268 Piedra Morada Drive It was used as the home of Big Head after he became rich Notable people EditSee List of people from Pacific Palisades Los AngelesSee also EditList of districts and neighborhoods of Los Angeles Old Santa Monica Forestry Station in Pacific Palisades References Edit Kamin Debra February 11 2020 Pacific Palisades Los Angeles Where Mountains Meet the Sea The New York Times Retrieved February 8 2021 Pacific Palisades Morningside Plumbers Retrieved February 8 2021 Pacific Palisades City Data Retrieved February 8 2021 Creei Toi Eugene Levy Named as Honorary Mayor of Pacific Palisades Palisades News Palisades News Retrieved February 8 2021 a b c d e f Pacific Palisades The LA Times Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 8 2021 Los Angeles City Hall Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior Retrieved October 16 2014 a b About Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce Retrieved February 12 2021 Hotels and Motels near Riviera Country Club Los Angeles Pacific Palisades CA Hotelguides Retrieved February 11 2021 Fear amp Lerner Jeffrey amp Paul June 17 2016 Behind the Screens Immigrants emigres and exiles in mid twentieth century Los Angeles Small Town Adventures Pacific Palisades Los Angeles Magazine LAMag Retrieved February 14 2021 Haskell Josh Pacific Palisades Scenic and vibrant with a small town feel ABC Los Angeles ABC7 Retrieved February 14 2021 How Los Angeles Neighborhoods Got Their Names Mental Floss November 18 2014 Retrieved February 12 2021 a b NativeLand ca Chumash Native land ca Our home on native land Retrieved November 30 2020 a b c d TRIBAL CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT FOR THE 17346 SUNSET BOULEVARD PROJECT CITY OF LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA PDF LA City Plaque Commemorating the Ysidro Reyes Adobe Santa Monica History Museum Ysidro Reyes half owner of Rancho Boca de Santa Monica and descendant of Juan Francisco Reyes circa 1853 1861 UCLA Library Digital Collections Photograph of 1890s drawing of Ysidro Reyes adobe Santa Monica 1939 UCLA Library Dedication of the Ysidro Reyes Family plaque at Pampas Ricas and Sunset Blvd September 14 1952 Calisphere Retrieved November 30 2020 Ingersoll Luther A 2007 Ingersoll s century history santa monica bay cities prefaced with a brief Place of publication not identified Read Books ISBN 978 1 4086 2367 1 OCLC 946583429 Inceville movielocationsplus com Soares Andre January 24 2014 Inceville Film Pioneer Thomas Ince s Studios Altfg com Retrieved February 15 2014 Thomas H Ince Encyclopaedia Britannica www britannica com The Backlot Film Festival History Thomas Ince Biography Archived 2008 02 10 at the Wayback Machine at www backlotfilmfestival com Loomis Jan 2009 Pacific Palisades Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738569482 a b c d e Perscoe amp Bruns Sue amp Bill Pivotal Moments in Pacific Palisades History The Year 1929 Circling The News Retrieved February 20 2021 HISTORY OF PALISADES VILLAGE GREEN PALISADES VILLAGE GREEN Retrieved February 19 2021 Garner Scott Neighborhood Spotlight Pacific Palisades LA Times The Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 9 2021 Feuchtwanger Memorial Library Researching German Exiles usc edu Archived from the original on May 27 2011 Retrieved October 7 2010 a b Finn Olaf Jonas November 25 2007 A Scenic Los Angeles Enclave Without Glitter New York Times David Laskin October 3 2008 When Weimar Luminaries Went West Coast New York Times Waldie D J April 5 2017 TED Talks of the Late 1800s When the Chautauqua Movement Came to California KCET Retrieved January 29 2019 Jewish Journal Staff Deli Stories No Schmaltz JJ The Jewish Journal Retrieved February 20 2021 a b Temescal Gateway Park MRCA Retrieved November 30 2020 Pacific Palisades Climate WeatherWX Retrieved February 13 2021 Peel M C Finlayson B L amp McMahon T A 2007 Updated world map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification Hydrol Earth Syst Sci 11 5 1633 1644 Bibcode 2007HESS 11 1633P doi 10 5194 hess 11 1633 2007 ISSN 1027 5606 The Myth of a Desert Metropolis Los Angeles was not built in a desert but are we making it one Boom California May 22 2017 Retrieved March 8 2019 Interactive North America Koppen Geiger Climate Classification Map www plantmaps com Retrieved March 8 2019 a b Historical Weather for Los Angeles California United States of America Weatherbase com Retrieved December 15 2011 a b c d e f Climatography of the United States No 20 1971 2000 PDF National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 2004 Archived from the original PDF on September 2 2013 Retrieved October 5 2011 Pacific Ocean Temperatures on California Coast beachcalifornia com Retrieved October 5 2011 Los Angeles Climate Guide weather2travel com Retrieved October 5 2011 Poole Matthew R September 22 2010 Frommer s Los Angeles 2011 John Wiley amp Sons p 22 ISBN 978 0 470 62619 1 Retrieved October 5 2011 Frazin Rachel February 21 2019 Los Angeles sees first snow in years thehill com Capitol Hill Publishing Corp Retrieved April 6 2019 Snow falling in Los Angeles Pasadena and California s coastal cities nbcnews com NBC Universal February 22 2019 Retrieved April 6 2019 Snow in Malibu Weather provides surprise in Southern California KUSA com January 25 2021 Pool Bob Lin II Rong Gong September 27 2010 L A s hottest day ever Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 5 2011 Zipcode 90272 www plantmaps com Retrieved March 14 2021 Pacific Palisades CA Climate www myforecast co Retrieved March 14 2021 PRISM Climate Group Oregon State U prism oregonstate edu Retrieved March 28 2019 A Brief History of the Pacific Palisades Alphabet Streets Youtube Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved February 9 2021 Will Rogers State Park a b http la24 prod s3 amazonaws com assets pdf LA2024 canditature part2 english pdf bare URL PDF a b Vincent Roger March 13 2018 Amazon Books heading to Pacific Palisades as new village center takes shape Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 30 2018 Pacific Palisades entry on the Los Angeles Times Mapping L A website Palisades Park Archived 2016 02 07 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Palisades Recreation Center Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Pacific Palisades Tennis Court Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Rustic Canyon Park Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Rustic Canyon Pool Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Rustic Canyon Recreation Center Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Temescal Canyon Park Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Santa Ynez Canyon Park Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Rivas Canyon Park Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks Retrieved November 29 2008 Backbone Trail System Mileage GPS Chart National Park Service Archived February 16 2010 at the Wayback Machine Santa Monica Mountains NRA Backbone Trail U S National Park Service Accessed June 9 2010 Bushwacker s Delight AllTrails Retrieved February 13 2021 Eagle Springs Fire Road Loop Trail AllTrails Retrieved February 13 2021 Goat Peak via High Point Trail PRIVATE PROPERTY moderate AllTrails Retrieved February 13 2021 Inspiration Point Trail AllTrails Retrieved February 13 2021 Topanga State Park Los Leones Trail to Parker Mesa Hiking RootsRated March 17 2016 Retrieved February 13 2021 Los Liones Trail HikeSpeak Retrieved February 13 2021 Singer Susan Los Liones Trail AFAR Retrieved February 13 2021 Skull Rock Loop AllTrails Retrieved February 13 2021 Trailer Canyon Fire Road AllTrails Retrieved February 13 2021 Will Rogers Trail AllTrails Retrieved February 13 2021 County of Los Angeles Department of Beaches amp Harbors Retrieved August 13 2015 1 California Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved August 13 2015 2 Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy Retrieved August 13 2015 3 California Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved August 13 2015 Council District 11 City of Los Angeles Retrieved August 6 2013 Fire Station 69 Los Angeles Fire Department Retrieved November 26 2008 Fire Station 23 Los Angeles Fire Department Retrieved November 26 2008 West LA Community Police Station Los Angeles Police Department Retrieved November 26 2008 Map of 3rd Supervisorial District Los Angeles County California Retrieved November 28 2008 About Us Los Angeles County Department of Health Services Retrieved March 18 2010 Simms Mann Health and Wellness Center Los Angeles County Department of Health Services Retrieved March 27 2010 District Map 2017 January 04 Retrieved March 25 2019 from https a50 asmdc org district map Senate District 26 2017 October 02 Retrieved March 25 2019 from https sd26 senate ca gov district Business Taxes Law Guide Board of Equalization Districts Archived from the original on March 26 2019 Retrieved March 26 2019 Mike Schaefer California n d Retrieved March 26 2019 from https ballotpedia org Mike Schaefer California Ted Lieu Sworn in as Representative of California s 33rd Congressional District house gov January 6 2015 Our District house gov December 4 2012 Post Office Location PACIFIC PALISADES United States Postal Service Retrieved November 26 2008 Post Office Location PACIFIC PALISADES United States Postal Service Retrieved November 26 2008 LAPD lapdonline org Board District 4 Map Los Angeles Unified School District Retrieved November 24 2008 Board Members Los Angeles Unified School District https boe lausd net Two LAUSD board members retire Friedlander wins Shoah scholarship prize The Jewish Journal November 12 2008 Gillespie Danielle Revere PaliHi Show Best API Gains Palisadian Post September 11 2008 Palisades Charter High School Attendance Zone Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Unified School District Retrieved November 27 2008 Canyon EL Los Angeles Unified School District Retrieved November 27 2008 Pacific Palisades EL Los Angeles Unified School District Retrieved November 27 2008 Marquez EL Los Angeles Unified School District Retrieved November 27 2008 Paul Revere History n d Retrieved June 30 2017 from https web archive org web 20170630144853 https www paulreverems com domain 6 Archived from the original Palisades CHTR HS Los Angeles Unified School District Retrieved November 27 2008 School Profile Palisades Charter High School Retrieved November 27 2008 About Palisades Jewish Early Childhood Center Retrieved February 12 2021 Calvary Christian School Independent Private Christian School West Los Angeles CA Calvarychristian org Retrieved July 31 2015 Home Village School Retrieved July 31 2015 Seven Arrows Seven Arrows Retrieved July 31 2015 Pacific Palisades Campus Archived 2015 07 01 at the Wayback Machine Lycee Francais de Los Angeles Retrieved June 28 2015 Palisades Branch Library Los Angeles Public Library Retrieved November 26 2008 Menorah Lighting in the Palisades Palisades News Retrieved February 22 2021 Lights and Latkes JewishVeg Retrieved February 17 2021 Home Palisades Rocks The Fourth Retrieved February 15 2021 Menorah Lighting 2019 Palisades Village Pacific Palisades Patch Retrieved February 9 2021 About Chabad of Pacific Palisades Retrieved February 9 2021 U S Amateur U S Golf Association August 2017 Retrieved February 14 2017 Matthew Poole Frommer s California 2010 Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons 2010 p 570 4 Mary Moore The Long and Short of the Game The Los Angeles Times September 22 1994 Michael P Lucas His Home on the Range At Will Rogers State Historical Park the cowboy philosopher s charm and way of life are preserved The Los Angeles Times March 3 1995 Mary Moore WESTSIDE COVER STORY Hard Times ON THE Polo Circuit The Los Angeles Times September 22 1994 About us About Circling The News Retrieved February 19 2021 Perspective Palisades Michael Edlen Retrieved February 21 2021 a b Groves Martha January 22 2010 Bradbury House in Pacific Palisades is proposed for listing on the National Register of Historic Places The Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 11 2016 Bradbury House AsNotedIn Bradbury House National Park Service Retrieved May 11 2016 Edlen Michael Pacific Palisades Business Block Building Examined Palisades News Retrieved February 21 2021 Gebhard David Winter Robert 2009 An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles Layton Utah Gibbs Smith p 48 ISBN 9781586853082 OCLC 51559096 Brown Patricia Leigh February 29 2008 A Moderne Masterpiece Revived Architectural Digest Retrieved January 14 2017 Del Rio Delores House 2 Pacific Palisades Los Angeles CA 1929 Pacific Coast Architecture Database University of Washington Retrieved January 14 2017 Bingen Steven Sylvester Stephen X Troyan Michael February 25 2011 MGM Hollywood s Greatest Backlot Santa Monica Press ISBN 978 1 59580 893 6 Top Grossing Restaurants in U S Eater LA The new wave for Gladstone s Los Angeles Times California Parks Historic Landmark 840 Historical Marker database Old Santa Monica Forestry Station californiahistoricallandmarks com Old Santa Monica Forestry Station 840 Squawk Parrots are here to stay Patch January 9 2016 Retrieved February 14 2021 Immigrating Parrots Find Asylum in L A Messenger Mountain News Retrieved February 14 2021 Parrots in the Palisades Egrets Nest April 14 2009 Retrieved February 14 2021 California s Naturalized Parrots The California Parrot Project Retrieved February 14 2021 Home Movies and More from the Jerry Lewis Collection at the Library of Congress MoMA Retrieved March 6 2019 Meyer Matthew August 24 2017 Former Palisadian Mayor Jerry Lewis Dies at 91 Palisadian Post Palisadian Post Retrieved March 6 2019 SIMROSS LYNN June 30 1985 Script Has Changed What Really Happened to That Golden Class of 65 Los Angeles Times p 1 Avengers West Coast vol 1 1 cover date September 1984 The Golden Girls 1985 1992 Trivia IMDb Retrieved July 31 2015 Further reading EditYoung Betty Lou Pacific Palisades Where the Mountains Meet the Sea Pacific Palisades Historical Society Press 1983 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pacific Palisades Los Angeles Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Pacific Palisades Pacific Palisades Chamber of Commerce Pacific Palisades Community Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pacific Palisades Los Angeles amp oldid 1128831642, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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