Downtown Long Beach
Downtown Long Beach | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 33°46′20″N 118°11′37″W / 33.7721°N 118.1935°W | |
Country | United States |
State | California |
County | Los Angeles |
City | Long Beach |
Downtown Long Beach, California, United States is the location for most of the city's major tourist attractions, municipal services and for numerous businesses. There are many hotels and restaurants in the area that serve locals, tourists, and convention visitors.
Location
Downtown Long Beach is bounded by the Los Angeles River to the west, and Ocean Boulevard to the south (south of Ocean is considered the "Downtown Shoreline", a separate area[1]). Alamitos Avenue roughly delimits downtown to the east, although the City's actual downtown zoning extends a few blocks east of Alamitos.[2] Similarly, downtown effectively ends around 7th Street to the north, but the City's downtown zoning carries as far north as Anaheim Street between Pacific Avenue and Long Beach Boulevard, and up to 10th Street east of that.[2]
The greater downtown area includes the neighborhoods of the East Village Arts District, the West End, North Pine, the Civic Center, and the "Downtown Core" or central business and entertainment area.[2]
Tourist attractions and shopping
- Aquarium of the Pacific
- Catalina Express – boats to Catalina Island
- East Village Arts District
- Long Beach Convention and Entertainment Center
- Terrace Theater
- Long Beach Sports Arena (which has one of Wyland's Whaling Walls)
- Long Beach Plaza – shopping
- Museum of Latin American Art
- The Pike – shopping
- Pine Avenue — restaurants and nightclubs
- Queen Mary – historic ship, hotel, restaurants & conventions (nearby)
- Rainbow Harbor – shopping and restaurants
- Shoreline Village – shopping and restaurants
- Harvey Milk Promenade Park
Events
- Second Saturday Art Walk (East Village)
- Third Fridays Twilight Walk (Historic Pine Avenue)
- Certified Organic Farmers Market (Fridays)
- Bob Marley Reggae Festival (February)
- Queen Mary Scottish Festival (February)
- Congressional Cup (sailing races, April)
- Long Beach Grand Prix & Formula DRIFT (April)
- Cajun & Zydeco Festival (May)
- Long Beach Lesbian & Gay Pride Parade & Festival (May)
- Aloha Concert Jam (Hawaiian music, June)
- Anime Expo or AX (SPJA) (Promotion of Japanese Animation & Culture July 2 to July 6)
- Catalina Ski Race (July)
2028 Summer Olympics
During the 2028 Summer Olympics, downtown Long Beach will host Sailing, water polo, triathlon and open water swimming.[3]
Government and infrastructure
Local government
- Long Beach City Hall
- Long Beach Police Dept. Headquarters
- Municipal Library
County, state, and federal representation
- Long Beach Main Post Office, located at 300 Long Beach Boulevard[4]
- Los Angeles Superior Court Governor George Deukmejian Courthouse[5]
Businesses
The Downtown Long Beach Alliance manages the business- and commercial property-based improvement districts in Downtown Long Beach. There are approximately 1,500 businesses in Downtown Long Beach, including several law firms given the proximity of the Los Angeles County Courthouse, as well as over 150 restaurants, wine bars, performing arts venues, and the Long Beach Convention and Entertainment Center. A complete and frequently updated business directory is available online at Downtown Long Beach Alliance's website.
The California State University system headquarters are at 401 Golden Shore in Downtown Long Beach.[6]
- Long Beach Rescue Mission
- Long Beach World Trade Center
- Port of Long Beach (nearby)
- Molina Healthcare
Revitalization Projects
Outdated office buildings that have reached the end of their competitive life-cycle are finding a new beginning as residential conversions.[7] In 2014 the city's Municipal Code provided for Adaptive Reuse, which is a "construction or remodeling project that reconfigures existing spaces, structures or buildings to accommodate a new use or to accommodate another purpose than what it was originally designed for."[8] The City created the Adaptive Reuse Incentive Program to guide developers through the process.[9] Re-purposing a building avoids demolition, sending the structure to landfills, while preserving the historic value and unique architecture of downtown Long Beach. Examples of buildings converted for reuse include the Verizon office building on 200 W. Ocean Blvd. in Long Beach which is changed into a mixed-use apartment building over retail.[10]
The Long Beach Professional Building, an eight story poured in place concrete Art Deco medical office tower constructed in 1929 and once in danger of being torn down,[11] was most recently renovated in 2018. The historic building is on the List of City of Long Beach Historic Landmarks and the California Office of Historic Preservation.[12] The building was accepted in 2005 into the National Register of Historic Places.[13] The restoration project was conducted by Global Premier Development and KTGY Architecture + Planning. The structure is now called The Regency Palms, an assisted living and memory care facility.[14]
Refer to the Downtown Update of the Long Beach Development Services for a presentation document showing completed, approved and pending projects.[15]
Transportation
The following are located in Long Beach's downtown area:
- A transit center of Long Beach Transit (bus)
- The southern terminus of the Los Angeles Metro Rail A Line: Downtown Long Beach station
- The southern end of Interstate 710 (Long Beach Freeway)
- Bus service of Greyhound Lines, Amtrak Thruway, Torrance Transit, LADOT, and LACMTA
From 1902 to 1961, the neighborhood was served by the Pacific Electric Long Beach Line.
Education
Downtown Long Beach is within the Long Beach Unified School District.
Architecture
- Farmers and Merchants Bank Office Tower, Alexander Curlett, Claud Beelman, William Horace Austin[18]
- International Tower (700 E. Ocean Blvd.)
- Ocean Club (1310 E. Ocean Blvd.)
- The Edison Building (100 Long Beach Blvd.)[16]
- Adelaide M. Tichenor House (Greene and Greene) (852 E. Ocean Blvd.)[17]
- Breakers Hotel (200-220 E. Ocean Blvd.)
- Walker's Department Store
- First National Bank of Long Beach
- Masonic Temple (Long Beach, California) (230 Pine Ave.)
- Ocean Center Building (110 W. Ocean Blvd.)
- Scottish Rite Cathedral
- The Willmore (315 West Third Street)
- Villa Riviera (800 E. Ocean Blvd.)
Gallery
- Downtown Long Beach
- Golden Shore and Ocean Boulevard
- Downtown Shoreline, 2009
- Pine Avenue
- Dr. Rowan Building, constructed 1930[19]
- Security Pacific National Bank Building, constructed 1924[20]
- Californian Apartments[26]
- Lincoln Park, the city's oldest park,[27] depicted on a postcard, c. 1930-1945
- Aerial view, c. 1930
- Bird's-eye view looking west on Ocean Avenue, probably photographed from Cooper Arms Apartments, 1924
- Armistice Day parade on Pine Ave. and Ocean Blvd., 1922
- Looking north on Pine Avenue, showing First National Bank, 1911
- Ocean Avenue looking southeast from Pine Avenue, c. 1910
See also
- East Village, Long Beach, California
- Willmore, Long Beach, California
- Long Beach Shoreline Marina
- Neighborhoods of Long Beach, California
References
- ^ "Downtown Shoreline Planned Development District (PD-6)". lbds.longbeach.gov. City of Long Beach. Retrieved 2014-06-18.
- ^ a b c "Downtown Plan (PD-30)". lbds.longbeach.gov. City of Long Beach. Retrieved 2014-06-18.
- ^ "GOVERNANCE, LEGAL and VENUE FUNDING - Olympics Watch" (PDF).
- ^ "Post Office Location - DOWNTOWN LONG BEACH." United States Postal Service. Retrieved on December 6, 2008.
- ^ "Courthouses in Los Angeles County – Contacts and Locations – LA Court". www.lacourt.org. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
- ^ Home Page. California State University. Retrieved on December 6, 2008.
- ^ Nahigyan, Pierce (5 October 2018). "Transforming Downtown Long Beach: Converting Office Space To Living Space". www.lbbusinessjournal.com. Long Beach Business Journal. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
- ^ Long Beach Municipal Code Definition of Adaptive Reuse - eLaws.us
- ^ Long Beach Adaptive Reuse Incentive Program
- ^ More apartments added to plan for Long Beach Verizon building
- ^ Preservation: Lost Long Beach Landmarks
- ^ California Office of Historic Preservation
- ^ National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
- ^ Regency Palms Renovation Information
- ^ 2018 in Review, Downtown Plan Update
- ^ Edwards, Andrew (25 August 2016). "Former Edison building in downtown Long Beach converted to high-end apartments". Press Telegram.
- ^ "PCAD - Tichenor, Adelaide M., House, Long Beach, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
- ^ "Farmers & Merchants Bank Tower". City of Long Beach.
- ^ "Rowan Bradley Building". City of Long Beach.
- ^ Van Dyke, Jonathan. "Downtown Security Pacific National Bank Converting To Condominums Above Federal Bar". www.Gazettes.com.
- ^ "PCAD - Farmers and Merchants National Bank of Los Angeles, Office Building, Long Beach, CA". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
- ^ Keller, Harvey (3 August 2021). "Long Beach Treasures: Farmers and Merchants Bank". YouTube.
- ^ "Pacific Tower". City of Long Beach.
- ^ "PCAD - William Horace Austin Jr". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
- ^ "Walker building". Loftway.
- ^ "Municode Library". library.municode.com.
- ^ "Lincoln Park". www.longbeach.gov.