Highland Avenue (Los Angeles)

Queen and Washingtonia Robusta Palm Trees and Median Strip
Location of Queen and Washingtonia Robusta Palm Trees and Median Strip in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Location Highland Ave between Wilshire Blvd and Melrose Ave
Coordinates 34°06′02″N 118°20′19″W / 34.100556°N 118.338611°W / 34.100556; -118.338611Coordinates: 34°06′02″N 118°20′19″W / 34.100556°N 118.338611°W / 34.100556; -118.338611
Designated 1972[1]
Reference no. 94

Highland Avenue is a major north/south road that runs from Cahuenga Boulevard and the US 101 Freeway in Hollywood, Los Angeles from the north end to Olympic Boulevard in Mid-City Los Angeles on the south end. (However, it is not a major thoroughfare in its southernmost portion ; it is a small residential street from Olympic Boulevard to Adams Boulevard. For through access, Highland swerves west into Edgewood Place which accesses La Brea Avenue)

Highland runs parallel to La Brea Avenue on the east and Vine Street on the west. The neighborhood east of Highland on Wilshire Boulevard and Melrose Avenue is officially known as Hancock Park.

At the northern end of Highland is the Hollywood Bowl, a major amphitheater and Los Angeles landmark.

To the south is the famous intersection of Hollywood and Highland, location of the Hollywood & Highland Center and its Kodak Theater (venue of the Academy Awards since 2002), and the Hollywood/Highland Metro station for the Red Line subway to Downtown and the Valley.

Half a block further south is the Hollywood Museum, located in the historic Max Factor Building, which houses a collection of items from the history of motion pictures and television.

Hollywood High School, the alma mater for many celebrities, is located on the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Highland.

Further south, near Beverly Boulevard, Highland is adjacent to the Wilshire Country Club in Hancock Park. Highland Avenue's median parkway with historic palm trees, between Melrose Avenue and Wilshire Boulevard, was designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1972.[1] The Queen palms (Syagrus romanzoffiana) and Mexican fan palms (Washingtonia robusta) were planted in 1928.

For most of its length Highland is four lanes wide, but narrows to two lanes south of Wilshire Boulevard. Metro Local line 237 runs along Highland Avenue from Santa Monica Boulevard north, and on to the Valley.

The segment from the US 101 Freeway south to Santa Monica Boulevard used to be designated as part of California State Route 170. California's legislature has since relinquished state control of that segment, and thus that portion is now maintained by the City of Los Angeles.[2]

Landmarks

References

  1. 1 2 3 Department of City Planning. "Designated Historic-Cultural Monuments". City of Los Angeles. Retrieved 2010-06-08.
  2. "CA Codes (shc:300-635)". Leginfo.ca.gov. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
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