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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Definitions  



1.1  Los Angeles metropolitan area  





1.2  Greater Los Angeles  







2 History  





3 Geography  



3.1  Urban form  





3.2  Major business districts and edge cities  





3.3  Identity  







4 Component counties, subregions, and cities  



4.1  Los Angeles County  



4.1.1  Subregions in Los Angeles County  





4.1.2  Edge cities in Los Angeles County  



4.1.2.1  Central and Western area  





4.1.2.2  San Fernando Valley  





4.1.2.3  Elsewhere in Los Angeles County  







4.1.3  Cities in Los Angeles County  







4.2  Orange County  



4.2.1  Subregions in Orange County  





4.2.2  Edge cities in Orange County  





4.2.3  Cities in Orange County  







4.3  Inland Empire  



4.3.1  Subregions in the Inland Empire  





4.3.2  Edge cities in the Inland Empire  





4.3.3  Cities in Riverside County  





4.3.4  Cities and towns in San Bernardino County  





4.3.5  Sparsely populated areas in the Inland Empire  







4.4  Ventura County  



4.4.1  Subregions in Ventura County  





4.4.2  Edge cities in Ventura County  





4.4.3  Cities in Ventura County  







4.5  Urban areas within  







5 Demographics  



5.1  Demographics of Los Angeles and Orange counties  



5.1.1  Age and gender  





5.1.2  Race  





5.1.3  Hispanic or Latino origin  









6 Ethnic enclaves  





7 Politics  





8 Economy  



8.1  Economic statistics for Los Angeles and Orange Counties  







9 Utilities and infrastructure  



9.1  Electricity  





9.2  Natural gas  





9.3  Cable television  





9.4  Phone and Internet  





9.5  Medical facilities  







10 Events  



10.1  Awards ceremonies  





10.2  Annual county fairs  





10.3  Annual Conventions  







11 Tourism and attractions  



11.1  Amusement parks  





11.2  Beaches  





11.3  Shopping centers and districts  





11.4  Film and TV Studio Tours  





11.5  Water Parks  





11.6  Zoos and Aquariums  





11.7  Museums  





11.8  Convention Centers  





11.9  State Parks & Beaches  





11.10  National parks, monuments, & refuges  





11.11  Places of Worship  





11.12  Other visitor attractions  







12 Area and ZIP codes  



12.1  Area codes  







13 Media  





14 Education  



14.1  Primary and secondary education  





14.2  Higher education  







15 Transportation  



15.1  Historic streetcar network  





15.2  Commercial airports  





15.3  Bridges  





15.4  Interstate Highways  





15.5  U.S. Highways  





15.6  California State Highways  





15.7  Los Angeles County Metro  





15.8  Other authorities  





15.9  Regional and commuter rail  







16 Sports  



16.1  Professional teams  





16.2  Table of professional teams and venues  





16.3  NCAA Division I college sports  





16.4  Other sports  







17 See also  





18 References  














Greater Los Angeles






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Coordinates: 34°00N 118°12W / 34.0°N 118.2°W / 34.0; -118.2
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Greater Los Angeles
Los Angeles–Long Beach, CA CSA

  Urban areas
  Counties in the Los Angeles MSA
  Counties in the Los Angeles CSA but not the MSA

Coordinates: 34°00′N 118°12′W / 34.0°N 118.2°W / 34.0; -118.2

Country

United States

State

California

Principal city

Los Angeles

Other major cities

  • Burbank
  • Carson
  • Chino
  • Chino Hills
  • Compton
  • Costa Mesa
  • Corona
  • Diamond Bar
  • Fontana
  • Fullerton
  • Garden Grove
  • Glendale
  • Hesperia
  • Huntington Beach
  • Inglewood
  • Irvine
  • Laguna Beach
  • Lancaster
  • La Verne
  • Long Beach
  • Menifee
  • Mission Viejo
  • Moreno Valley
  • Murrieta
  • Newport Beach
  • Norwalk
  • Ontario
  • Orange
  • Oxnard
  • Palmdale
  • Pasadena
  • Pomona
  • Rancho Cucamonga
  • Rialto
  • Riverside
  • San Dimas
  • San Bernardino
  • San Clemente
  • Santa Ana
  • Santa Clarita
  • Santa Monica
  • Simi Valley
  • Thousand Oaks
  • Temecula
  • Torrance
  • Tustin
  • Ventura
  • Victorville
  • West Covina
  • Westminster
  • Whittier
  • Area
     • Urban

    2,281.0 sq mi (5,907.8 km2)

     • Metro

    33,954 sq mi (87,940 km2)

    Highest elevation

    11,503 ft (3,507 m)

    Lowest elevation

    0 ft (0 m)

    Population
     (2023)[2]

     • Megacity and combined statistical area

    18,422,600

     • Density

    541.1/sq mi (208.9/km2)

     

    Ranked 2nd in the US

    GDP

     • Megacity and combined statistical area

    $1.528 trillion (2022)

    Time zone

    UTC−8 (PST)

     • Summer (DST)

    UTC−7 (PDT)

    Area codes

    213/323, 310/424, 562, 626, 661, 714/657, 760/442, 805/820, 818/747, 909/840, 949, 951

    Los Angeles Metropolitan Area

    Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA MSA

    Map of Los Angeles Metropolitan Area

    Coordinates: 34°03′N 118°15′W / 34.05°N 118.25°W / 34.05; -118.25

    Country

    United States

    State(s)

    California

    Largest city

    Los Angeles

    Area

     • Total

    4,850.3 sq mi (12,562 km2)

    Highest elevation

    Mount San Antonio 10,064 ft (3,069 m)

    Lowest elevation

    Wilmington −9 ft (−3 m)

    Population
     (2023)[2]

     • Total

    12,872,322

     • Rank

    2nd in the U.S.

     • Density

    2,654/sq mi (1,025/km2)

    GDP

     • Total

    $1.227 trillion (2022)

    Time zone

    UTC–8 (Pacific)

     • Summer (DST)

    UTC–7 (PDT)

    Los Angeles Metropolitan Area by Sentinel-2, ESA

    Greater Los Angeles is the most populous metropolitan area in the U.S. stateofCalifornia, encompassing five countiesinSouthern California extending from Ventura County in the west to San Bernardino County and Riverside County in the east, with Los Angeles County in the center, and Orange County to the southeast. The Los Angeles–Anaheim–Riverside combined statistical area (CSA) covers 33,954 square miles (87,940 km2), making it the largest metropolitan region in the United States by land area. The contiguous urban area is 2,281 square miles (5,910 km2),[1] whereas the remainder mostly consists of mountain and desert areas. With a population of 18.4 million in 2024,[2] it is the second-largest metropolitan area in the country, behind New York, as well as one of the largest megacities in the world.[6]

    In addition to being the nexus of the global entertainment industry, including films, television, and recorded music, Greater Los Angeles is also an important center of international trade, education, media, business, tourism, technology, and sports.[7] It is the third-largest metropolitan area by nominal GDP in the world with an economy exceeding $1 trillion in output, behind New York City and Tokyo.

    There are three contiguous component urban areas in Greater Los Angeles: the Inland Empire, which can be broadly defined as Riverside and San Bernardino counties; the Ventura/Oxnard metropolitan area (Ventura County); and the Los Angeles metropolitan area (also known as Metropolitan Los AngelesorMetro LA) consisting of Los Angeles and Orange counties only. The Census Bureau designates the latter as the Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim metropolitan statistical area (MSA), the fourth largest metropolitan area in the western hemisphere and the second-largest metropolitan area in the United States, by population of 13 million as of the 2020 U.S. census. It has a total area of 4,850 square miles (12,561 km2). Although San Diego–Tijuana borders the Greater Los Angeles area at San Clemente and Temecula, it is not part of it as the two urban areas are not geographically contiguous due to the presence of Camp Pendleton. However, both form part of the Southern California Megalopolis which extends into Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. Throughout the 20th century, Greater Los Angeles was one of the fastest-growing regions in the United States, but growth has slowed since 2000.

    Definitions[edit]

    The Los Angeles–Long Beach, CA Combined Statistical Area as defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget.
      Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA MSA
      Riverside–San Bernardino–Ontario, CA MSA
      Oxnard–Thousand Oaks–Ventura, CA MSA

    Area (km2)

    Population (2024)

    GDP
    (million US$)

    Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA (MSA)

    12,580

    12,974,926[8]

    1,227,469[3]

    Riverside–San Bernardino–Ontario, CA (MSA)

    70,610

    4,623,811[8]

    237,913[4]

    Oxnard–Thousand Oaks–Ventura, CA (MSA)

    4,770

    823,863[8]

    62,239[5]

    Los Angeles–Long Beach, CA CSA

    87,960

    18,422,600

    1,527,621

    Los Angeles metropolitan area[edit]

    The Los Angeles metropolitan area is defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget as the Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA),[9] with a 2021 population of 12,997,353.[8] The MSA is in turn made up of two "metropolitan divisions":

    The MSA is the most populous metropolitan area in the Western United States and second-most populous in the United States. It has at its core the Los AngelesLong BeachAnaheim urban area, which had a population of 12,237,376 as of the 2020 census.[10]

    Greater Los Angeles[edit]

    The U.S. Census Bureau also defines a wider commercial region based on commuting patterns, the Los Angeles–Long Beach, CA Combined Statistical Area (CSA), more commonly known as the Greater Los Angeles Area, with an estimated population of 18,422,600 in 2024.[8] The total land area of the CSA is 33,955 sq. mi (87,945 km2).

    The CSA consists of three component metropolitan areas:

    History[edit]

    Nearly all of the metropolitan area of Greater Los Angeles is located within the homelands of the Tongva, otherwise referred to as Tovaangar.[11][12]

    Geography[edit]

    Urban form[edit]

    Many areas are completely filled with houses, buildings, roads, and freeways as observed in Vermont Vista, a Los Angeles neighborhood.

    Los Angeles has long been famous for its sprawl, but this has to do more with its status in history as the "poster child" of large cities that grew up with suburban-style patterns of development, rather than how it ranks in sprawl among American metro areas today, now that suburban and exurban-style development is present across the country.[13] The Los Angeles–Orange County metro area was the most densely populated "urbanized area" (as defined by the United States Census Bureau) in the United States in 2000, with 7,068 inhabitants per square mile (2,729/km2).[14] For comparison, the "New York–Newark" Urbanized Area had a population density of 5,309 per square mile (2,050/km2).

    Los Angeles' reputation for sprawl is due to the fact that the city grew from relative obscurity to one of the country's ten largest cities (i.e. 10th largest city in 1920), at a time when suburban patterns of growth first became possible due to electric streetcars and automobiles. The city was also the first large American city where, in the 1920s, major clusters of regional employment, shopping, and culture were already being built outside the traditional downtown areas – in edge cities such as Mid-Wilshire, Miracle Mile and Hollywood. This pattern of growth continued ever outward, more so when the freeway system was built starting in the 1950s; thus Greater Los Angeles was the earliest large American metropolitan area with a decentralized structure. Its major commercial, financial, and cultural institutions are geographically dispersed rather than being concentrated in a single downtown or central area. Also, the population densityofLos Angeles proper is low (approximately 8,300 people per square mile) when compared to some other large American cities such as New York City (27,500), San Francisco (17,000), Boston (13,300), and Chicago (11,800).[15] Densities are particularly high within a 5-mile radius of downtown, where some neighborhoods exceed 20,000 people per square mile.[16] What gives the entire Los Angeles metro region a high density is the fact that many of the city's suburbs and satellite cities have high density rates.[17] Within its urbanized areas, Los Angeles is noted for having small lot sizes and low-rise buildings. Buildings in the area are low when compared to other large cities, mainly due to zoning regulations. Los Angeles became a major city just as the Pacific Electric Railway spread population to smaller cities much as interurbans did in East Coast cities. In the first decades of the twentieth century, the area was marked by a network of fairly dense but separate cities linked by rail. The ascendance of the automobile helped fill in the gaps between these commuter towns with lower-density settlements.[18]

    Starting in the early twentieth century, there was a large growth in population on the western edges of the city moving to the San Fernando Valley and out into the Conejo Valley in eastern Ventura County. Many working-class whites migrated to this area during the 1960s and 1970s out of East and Central Los Angeles.[19] As a result, there was a large growth in population into the Conejo Valley and into Ventura County through the US 101 corridor. Making the US 101 a full freeway in the 1960s and expansions that followed helped make commuting to Los Angeles easier and opened the way for development westward. Development in Ventura County and along the US 101 corridor remains controversial, with open-space advocates battling those who feel business development is necessary to economic growth.[20] Although the area still has abundant amount of open space and land, almost all of it was put aside and mandated never to be developed as part of the master plan of each city. Because of this, the area which was once a relatively inexpensive area to buy real estate, saw rising real estate prices well into the 2000s.[21] Median home prices in the Conejo Valley for instance, ranged from $700,000 to $2.2 million in 2003.[22] According to Forbes, "it's nearly impossible" to find reasonably priced real estate in California, and the prices will continue to increase.[23]

    The Los Angeles area continues to grow, principally on the periphery where new, cheaper, undeveloped areas are being sought.[24] As such, in these areas, populations as well as housing prices exploded, although the housing bubble popped late in the decade of the 2000s. Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, which contain large swaths of desert, attracted most of the population increase between 2000 and 2006. Growth continues not only outside the existing urbanized area but also adjacent to existing development in the central areas.[25] As in virtually all US core cities, there is now vigorous residential development in the downtown area with both new buildings and renovation of former office buildings. The Los Angeles Downtown News keeps a list of ongoing development projects, updated every quarter.[26] Over the course of the 21st century, droughts and wildfires have increased in frequency and the region's water security has become a development issue.[27]

    Downtown Los Angeles

    Major business districts and edge cities[edit]

    Greater Los Angeles has numerous traditional downtowns or central business districts, the largest being Downtown Los Angeles. Other important ones are Downtown Long Beach, downtown Pasadena, downtown Glendale, and downtown Burbank, and – with their county, state and federal government facilities – Downtown Santa Ana, Downtown Anaheim, Downtown Riverside, Downtown San Bernardino, downtown Irvine, and downtown Ontario.

    However, most of the commercial activity (office space, retail, hotels, entertainment) is found outside traditional downtowns, among the suburban-style development in clusters known as edge cities. In fact, the Los Angeles area is considered the classic example of a metropolitan area that developed in this pattern, because it did so early in history, starting in the 1920s, and was the city to enter into the top ten of American cities while growing in this pattern.[28]

    Identity[edit]

    Employment is not only in the downtown area, but consistently occurs outside the central core. As such, many people commute throughout the city and suburbs in various directions for their work and daily activities, with a large portion heading to the municipalities that are outside the city of Los Angeles.[29]

    Unlike most metropolitan areas, regional identity remains a contentious issue in the Greater Los Angeles area, with many residents not acknowledging any association with the region as a whole. For example, while Los Angeles County and Orange County together make up the smaller MSA region, the two host many sub-areas that each have sharp demographic, political, and financial distinctions. South Orange County residents often attempt to be identified apart from Los Angeles although they make up the same metropolitan area. Also, while only 1.63% of Los Angeles residents commute to Orange County for work, over 6% of Orange County commuters head to Los Angeles for work.[30] Western Riverside County and San Bernardino County have become commuter regions characteristic of other suburban counties throughout the nation. Residents in these counties often commute to Los Angeles County and Orange County for employment.[31]

    Component counties, subregions, and cities[edit]

    Los Angeles Basin at dawn

    Los Angeles County[edit]

    Los Angeles County, of which the City of Los Angeles is the county seat, is the most populous county in the United States and is home to over a quarter of all California residents.[32] The large size of the city of Los Angeles, as well as its history of annexing smaller towns, has made city boundaries in the central area of Los Angeles County quite complicated.[33] Many cities are completely surrounded by the city of Los Angeles and are often included in the city's areas despite being independent municipalities. For example, Santa Monica and Beverly Hills (which is almost completely surrounded by Los Angeles) are considered part of the Westside, while Hawthorne and Inglewood are associated with South L.A. Adjacent areas that are outside the actual city boundaries of incorporated Los Angeles but border the city itself include the Santa Clarita Valley, the San Gabriel Valley, South Bay, and the Gateway Cities.

    Despite the large footprint of the city of Los Angeles, a majority of the land area within Los Angeles County is unincorporated and under the primary jurisdiction of Los Angeles County. Much of this land, however, cannot be easily developed due to planning challenges presented by geographic features such as the Santa Monica Mountains, the San Gabriel Mountains, and the Mojave Desert. Actual land development in these regions occurs on the fringes of incorporated cities, some of which have been fully developed, such as the cities of Palmdale and Lancaster.

    Subregions in Los Angeles County[edit]

    While there is not an official designation for the regions that comprise Greater Los Angeles, one authority, the Los Angeles Times, divides the area into the following regions:[34]

    Some of the above areas can be defined as being bounded by natural features such as mountains or the ocean; others are marked by city boundaries, freeways, or other constructed landmarks. For example, Downtown Los Angeles is the area of Los Angeles roughly enclosed by three freeways and one river: the Harbor Freeway (SR 110) to the west, the Santa Ana Freeway (US 101) to the north, the Los Angeles River to the east, and the Santa Monica Freeway (I-10) to the south.[35] Meanwhile, the San Fernando Valley ("The Valley") is defined as the basin consisting of the part of Los Angeles and its suburbs that lie north-northwest of downtown and is ringed by mountains.[36]

    Edge cities in Los Angeles County[edit]

    Central and Western area[edit]
    San Fernando Valley[edit]
    Elsewhere in Los Angeles County[edit]

    Cities in Los Angeles County[edit]

    With a population of nearly 3.9 million people at the 2020 census, the City of Los Angeles is the second most populous city in the United States after New York City, and is the focal point of the Greater Los Angeles Area.[37] As an international center for finance, entertainment, media, culture, education, tourism, and science, Los Angeles is considered one of the world's most powerful and influential global cities.[38]

    List of the 88 cities of Los Angeles County and six large CDPs by population at the 2020 U.S. census:

  • Long Beach (466,742)
  • Santa Clarita (228,673)
  • Glendale (196,543)
  • Lancaster (173,516)
  • Palmdale (169,450)
  • Pomona (151,713)
  • Torrance (147,067)
  • Pasadena (138,699)
  • East Los Angeles CDP (118,786)
  • Downey (114,355)
  • West Covina (109,501)
  • El Monte (109,450)
  • Inglewood (107,762)
  • Burbank (107,337)
  • Norwalk (102,773)
  • Compton (95,740)
  • Carson (95,558)
  • Santa Monica (93,076)
  • South Gate (92,726)
  • Hawthorne (88,083)
  • Whittier (87,306)
  • Alhambra (82,868)
  • Lakewood (82,496)
  • Bellflower (79,190)
  • Baldwin Park (72,176)
  • Redondo Beach (71,576)
  • Lynwood (67,265)
  • Montebello (62,640)
  • Pico Rivera (62,088)
  • Florence-Graham CDP (61,983)
  • Monterey Park (61,096)
  • Gardena (61,027)
  • Arcadia (56,681)
  • South Whittier CDP (56,415)
  • Diamond Bar (55,072)
  • Huntington Park (54,883)
  • Hacienda Heights CDP (54,191)
  • Paramount (53,733)
  • Glendora (52,558)
  • Covina (51,268)
  • Rosemead (51,185)
  • Azusa (50,000)
  • Cerritos (49,578)
  • Rowland Heights CDP (48,231)
  • La Mirada (48,008)
  • Altadena CDP (42,846)
  • Rancho Palos Verdes (42,287)
  • Culver City (40,779)
  • San Gabriel (39,568)
  • Bell Gardens (39,501)
  • La Puente (38,062)
  • Monrovia (37,931)
  • Claremont (37,266)
  • Temple City (36,494)
  • West Hollywood (35,757)
  • Manhattan Beach (35,506)
  • San Dimas (34,924)
  • Bell (33,559)
  • Beverly Hills (32,701)
  • Lawndale (31,807)
  • La Verne (31,334)
  • Walnut (28,430)
  • South Pasadena (26,943)
  • Maywood (25,138)
  • San Fernando (23,946)
  • Calabasas (23,241)
  • Cudahy (22,811)
  • Duarte (21,727)
  • Lomita (20,921)
  • La Cañada Flintridge (20,573)
  • Agoura Hills (20,299)
  • Hermosa Beach (19,728)
  • South El Monte (19,567)
  • Santa Fe Springs (19,219)
  • El Segundo (17,272)
  • Artesia (16,395)
  • Hawaiian Gardens (14,149)
  • Palos Verdes Estates (13,347)
  • San Marino (12,513)
  • Commerce (12,378)
  • Signal Hill (11,848)
  • Sierra Madre (11,268)
  • Malibu (10,654)
  • Rolling Hills Estates (8,280)
  • Westlake Village (8,029)
  • La Habra Heights (5,682)
  • Avalon (3,460)
  • Rolling Hills (1,739)
  • Hidden Hills (1,725)
  • Irwindale (1,472)
  • Bradbury (921)
  • Industry (264)
  • Vernon (222)
  • Orange County[edit]

    Aerial view of Newport BeachinOrange County

    Orange County was originally an agricultural area dependent on citrus crops, avocados, and oil extraction, and became a bedroom community for Los Angeles when I–5, the Santa Ana Freeway, linked it to the city in the 1950s. The growth of Los Angeles initially fueled population growth in Orange County, but by the 1970s it had become an important economic center in its own right, with tourism and electronics industries, among others. Today, Orange County is known for its tourist attractions, such as Disneyland, Knott's Berry Farm, its several pristine beaches and coastline, and its wealthier areas, featured in television shows such as The O.C. No one of the original downtowns serves as the central urban core for the county, but there are important clusters of business and culture in Downtown Santa Ana and in three edge cities: the Anaheim–Santa Ana edge city from Disneyland to the Orange Crush interchange (Orange, Santa Ana), the South Coast Plaza–John Wayne Airport edge city (Santa Ana, Costa Mesa, Irvine), and Irvine's Spectrum edge city.

    Population of Los Angeles and Orange Counties since 1890

    Orange County is sometimes figuratively divided into "North County" and "South County", with North Orange County including cities such as Anaheim, Fullerton, and Santa Ana, and is the older, more ethnically diverse and more densely built-up area closer to Los Angeles. South County, defined variously as beginning with either Costa Mesa[39] or Irvine[40] and includes cities to the east and south such as Laguna Beach, Mission Viejo, Newport Beach, and San Clemente, is more residential, affluent, recently developed, and has a mostly white population. Irvine is an exception, as it is a center of employment and is ethnically diverse. A growing alternative dividing marker between north and south is the El Toro Y interchange. Orange Coast or South Coast area is defined instead, consisting of some or all of the cities lining the coast.

    Subregions in Orange County[edit]

    Edge cities in Orange County[edit]

    Cities in Orange County[edit]

    List of the 34 cities in Orange County by population at the 2020 census:

  • Santa Ana (310,227)
  • Irvine (307,670)
  • Huntington Beach (198,711)
  • Garden Grove (171,949)
  • Fullerton (143,617)
  • Orange (139,911)
  • Costa Mesa (111,918)
  • Mission Viejo (93,653)
  • Westminster (90,911)
  • Lake Forest (85,858)
  • Newport Beach (85,239)
  • Buena Park (84,034)
  • Tustin (80,276)
  • Yorba Linda (68,336)
  • Laguna Niguel (64,355)
  • San Clemente (64,293)
  • La Habra (63,097)
  • Fountain Valley (57,047)
  • Aliso Viejo (52,176)
  • Placentia (51,824)
  • Cypress (50,151)
  • Rancho Santa Margarita (47,949)
  • Brea (47,325)
  • Stanton (37,962)
  • San Juan Capistrano (35,196)
  • Dana Point (33,107)
  • Laguna Hills (31,374)
  • Seal Beach (25,242)
  • Laguna Beach (23,032)
  • Laguna Woods (17,644)
  • La Palma (15,581)
  • Los Alamitos (11,780)
  • Villa Park (5,843)
  • Inland Empire[edit]

    San Bernardino Valley

    The Inland Empire, consisting of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, contains fast-growing suburbs of the region, with a large to majority percentage of the working population commuting to either Los Angeles or Orange Counties for work. Originally an important center for citrus production, the region became an important industrial area by the early 20th century.[41][42][43] The Inland Empire also became a key transportation center following the completion of Route 66, and later Interstate 10. With the post-World War II economic boom leading to rapid development in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, land developers bulldozed acres of agricultural land to build suburbs in order to accommodate the Los Angeles area's expanding population.[41] The development of a regional freeway system facilitated the expansion of suburbs and human migration linking the Inland Empire and rest of Greater Los Angeles. Despite being primarily suburban, the Inland Empire is also home to important warehousing, shipping, logistics and retail industries, centered on the subregion's major cities of Riverside, San Bernardino and Ontario.

    While the Inland Empire is sometimes defined as the entirety of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, the eastern undeveloped, desert portions of these counties are not considered to be part of Greater Los Angeles. The state of California defines this area to include the cities of Adelanto, Apple Valley, and Victorville to the north, the Riverside–San Diego county line to the south, and the towns of Anza, Idyllwild, and Lucerne Valley, along with the San Bernardino National Forest to the east.[44]

    Additionally, the southwest portion of Riverside County, centered on the city of Temecula is more economically linked to San Diego county, with its growth largely being driven by migrants from San Diego seeking more affordable housing similar to how northwestern Riverside county's growth was driven by migrants from Orange County and Los Angeles seeking more affordable housing.[45][46]

    However, with clear northern and southern limits to expansion, the region's urban eastern boundaries have become increasingly nebulous as suburban sprawl continues to spread out to form a unified whole with Los Angeles, with further development encroaching past the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains and into the outlying desert areas. As a result, the regional definition of Greater Los Angeles can now be extended to include Barstow and surrounding towns in the northeast, the Morongo Basin in the east-central including Yucca Valley and Twentynine Palms, and the Coachella Valley cities in the southeast. This interconnectivity, provided by one of the most extensive freeway systems in the world, as well as economic, social and media ties, has blended boundaries between these regions and the urbanized Los Angeles and Inland Empire areas.[47]

    Subregions in the Inland Empire[edit]

    Edge cities in the Inland Empire[edit]

    Cities in Riverside County[edit]

    List of the 28 cities of Riverside County by population at the 2020 U.S. census:

  • Moreno Valley (208,634)
  • Corona (157,136)
  • Murrieta (110,949)
  • Temecula (110,003)
  • Jurupa Valley (105,053)
  • Menifee (102,527)
  • Hemet (89,833)
  • Indio (89,137)
  • Perris (78,700)
  • Lake Elsinore (70,265)
  • Eastvale (69,757)
  • San Jacinto (53,898)
  • Beaumont (53,036)
  • Cathedral City (51,493)
  • Palm Desert (51,163)
  • Palm Springs (44,575)
  • Coachella (41,941)
  • La Quinta (37,558)
  • Wildomar (36,875)
  • Desert Hot Springs (32,512)
  • Banning (29,505)
  • Norco (26,316)
  • Blythe (18,317)
  • Rancho Mirage (16,999)
  • Canyon Lake (11,082)
  • Calimesa (10,026)
  • Indian Wells (4,757)
  • Cities and towns in San Bernardino County[edit]

    List of the 24 cities and incorporated towns of San Bernardino County by population at the 2020 U.S. census:

  • Fontana (208,393)
  • Ontario (175,265)
  • Rancho Cucamonga (174,453)
  • Victorville (134,810)
  • Rialto (104,026)
  • Hesperia (99,818)
  • Chino (91,403)
  • Upland (79,040)
  • Chino Hills (78,411)
  • Redlands (73,168)
  • Apple Valley (75,791)
  • Highland (56,999)
  • Yucaipa (54,542)
  • Colton (53,909)
  • Adelanto (38,046)
  • Montclair (37,865)
  • Twentynine Palms (28,065)
  • Barstow (25,415)
  • Loma Linda (24,791)
  • Yucca Valley (21,738)
  • Grand Terrace (13,150)
  • Big Bear Lake (5,046)
  • Needles (4,931)
  • Sparsely populated areas in the Inland Empire[edit]

    While the above areas are included in the regional definition of Greater Los Angeles, the U.S. Census Bureau defines Greater Los Angeles, or officially, the Los Angeles–Long Beach Combined Statistical Area, to include both the above-mentioned areas along with the entirety of San Bernardino and Riverside counties.[48] These areas are sparsely developed and are part of the Mojave and Colorado Deserts. To the north, Interstate 15 crosses desolate desert landscape after passing Barstow, linking Greater Los Angeles with Las Vegas, with Baker being the only significant outpost along the route. To the east, lie the Mojave National Preserve and Joshua Tree National Park along with the towns of Needles and Blythe on the California-Arizona border.

    Ventura County[edit]

    The Ventura coast

    Ventura County is mostly suburban and rural and also has developed primarily through the growth of Los Angeles. Central and southern Ventura County formerly consisted of small towns along the Pacific Coast until the expansion of U.S. Route 101 drew in commuters from the San Fernando Valley. Master-planned cities soon began developing, and the county became increasingly urbanized. The northern part of the county, however, remains largely undeveloped and is mostly within the Los Padres National Forest.

    Subregions in Ventura County[edit]

    Edge cities in Ventura County[edit]

    Cities in Ventura County[edit]

    List of the 10 cities of Ventura County by population at the 2020 U.S. census:

  • Thousand Oaks (126,966)
  • Simi Valley (126,356)
  • Ventura (110,763)
  • Camarillo (70,741)
  • Moorpark (36,284)
  • Santa Paula (30,657)
  • Port Hueneme (21,954)
  • Fillmore (16,419)
  • Ojai (7,637)
  • Urban areas within[edit]

    Urban areas within the Los Angeles combined statistical area as of the 2020 census. (Far eastern portions of Riverside and San Bernardino counties are cropped out).
      Urban areas
      Counties in the Los Angeles MSA
      Counties in the Los Angeles CSA but not the MSA

    At the core of the Los Angeles–Long Beach combined statistical area (CSA) lies the Los Angeles–Long BeachAnaheim, CA urban area, the second most populous in the United States.[10] Within the boundaries of the CSA the Census Bureau defines 30 other urban areas as well, two of which (RiversideSan Bernardino and OxnardVentura) form the core of their own metropolitan areas separate from the Los Angeles metropolitan statistical area. Urban areas situated primarily outside the Los Angeles metropolitan statistical area but within the CSA are identified with a cross (†) in the table below.

    Urban area

    Population
    (2020 census)

    Land area
    (sq mi)

    Land area
    (km2)

    Density
    (population / sq mi)

    Density
    (population / km2)

    Los AngelesLong BeachAnaheim, CA

    12,237,376

    1,636.83

    4,239.36

    7,476.28

    2,886.61

    RiversideSan Bernardino, CA †

    2,276,703

    608.56

    1,576.17

    3,741.10

    1,444.45

    Mission ViejoLake ForestLaguna Niguel, CA

    646,843

    163.63

    423.81

    3,953.02

    1,526.27

    TemeculaMurrietaMenifee, CA †

    528,991

    150.47

    389.73

    3,515.49

    1,357.34

    OxnardSan Buenaventura (Ventura), CA †

    376,117

    76.61

    198.41

    4,909.70

    1,895.65

    IndioPalm DesertPalm Springs, CA †

    361,075

    151.82

    393.22

    2,378.26

    918.25

    PalmdaleLancaster, CA

    359,559

    84.78

    219.59

    4,240.90

    1,637.42

    VictorvilleHesperiaApple Valley, CA †

    355,816

    131.77

    341.29

    2,700.19

    1,042.55

    Santa Clarita, CA

    278,031

    77.85

    201.62

    3,571.56

    1,378.99

    Thousand Oaks, CA †

    213,986

    80.20

    207.71

    2,668.26

    1,030.22

    Hemet, CA †

    173,194

    37.06

    95.98

    4,673.61

    1,804.49

    Simi Valley, CA †

    127,364

    31.63

    81.91

    4,027.01

    1,554.84

    Camarillo, CA †

    76,338

    22.48

    58.22

    3,395.98

    1,311.19

    Desert Hot Springs, CA †

    45,767

    14.08

    36.47

    3,250.66

    1,255.09

    Santa Paula, CA †

    30,675

    4.96

    12.86

    6,179.04

    2,385.74

    Barstow, CA †

    30,522

    12.38

    32.07

    2,465.05

    951.76

    CrestlineLake Arrowhead, CA †

    22,272

    16.85

    43.64

    1,321.70

    510.31

    Yucca Valley, CA †

    18,293

    11.33

    29.36

    1,613.95

    623.15

    Big Bear, CA †

    16,498

    15.93

    41.26

    1,035.73

    399.90

    Fillmore, CA †

    16,397

    2.63

    6.82

    6,227.80

    2,404.57

    Twentynine Palms, CA †

    12,881

    6.82

    17.66

    1,889.13

    729.40

    Blythe, CA–AZ †

    11,780

    6.20

    16.06

    1,899.83

    733.53

    Twentynine Palms North, CA †

    11,665

    2.77

    7.18

    4,206.03

    1,623.96

    Fort Irwin, CA †

    8,096

    3.62

    9.37

    2,238.42

    864.26

    Mecca, CA †

    6,875

    0.63

    1.62

    10,979.30

    4,239.13

    Needles, CA–AZ †

    6,739

    5.55

    14.38

    1,213.99

    468.73

    Silver Lakes, CA †

    5,908

    2.12

    5.49

    2,789.52

    1,077.04

    Running Springs, CA †

    5,313

    3.64

    9.44

    1,458.40

    563.09

    Joshua Tree, CA †

    4,370

    3.80

    9.85

    1,149.11

    443.67

    Wrightwood, CA †

    3,927

    1.38

    3.59

    2,835.51

    1,094.80

    Avalon, CA

    3,362

    1.19

    3.08

    2,826.47

    1,091.31

    Central Los Angeles and the Westside, as viewed from the Getty Center in the Santa Monica Mountains. San Gabriel Mountains at back left, Downtown Los Angeles skyline at center-left, Century City and Westwood in the foreground and to their right, the 405 Freeway. The Brentwood skyline, the hills of the Palos Verdes Peninsula at back right and the Pacific Ocean at far right.

    Demographics[edit]

    Historical population
    Greater Los Angeles CSA
    (Five-county area)

    Census

    Pop.

    Note

    1900

    250,187

    1910

    648,316

    159.1%

    1920

    1,150,252

    77.4%

    1930

    2,597,066

    125.8%

    1940

    3,252,720

    25.2%

    1950

    4,934,246

    51.7%

    1960

    7,751,616

    57.1%

    1970

    9,981,942

    28.8%

    1980

    11,497,486

    15.2%

    1990

    14,531,529

    26.4%

    2000

    16,373,645

    12.7%

    2010

    17,877,006

    9.2%

    2020

    18,644,680

    4.3%

    2023 (est.)

    18,422,600

    −1.2%

    U.S. Census Bureau[49]

    According to the 2020 census, there were 18,644,680 people living in the Greater Los Angeles Area. The racial makeup of the area was 29.4% White (23.0% Non-Hispanic European and 6.4% Non-Hispanic Middle Eastern), 13.8% Asian (Non-Hispanic), 0.2% Pacific Islander (Non-Hispanic), 6.1% African American (Non-Hispanic), 0.2% Native American (Non-Hispanic), 0.5% from other races (Non-Hispanic), and 3.3% from two or more races (Non-Hispanic). 46.3% of the population were Hispanic of any race, a super-majority of which was of Mexican origin.[50] 29.4% of the population (5.5 million) was foreign born; most immigrants came from Latin America and Asia.[51]

    The explosive growth of the region in the 20th century can be attributed to its favorable Mediterranean climate, the availability of land and many booming industries such as oil, automobile and rubber, motion pictures, intermodal, logistics, and aerospace which in turn attracted millions of people from all over the United States and world.[citation needed] Citrus production was important to the region's development in the earlier part of the 20th century.[52]

    Ethnic origins in LA CSA (5 counties)

    While the New York metropolitan area is presently the most populous metropolitan area in the United States, it has been predicted in the past that Greater Los Angeles will eventually surpass Greater New York in population.[citation needed] Whether this will happen is yet to be seen, but past predictions on this event have been off the mark. A 1966 article in Time predicted Greater Los Angeles would surpass New York by 1975, and that by 1990, would reach close to the 19 million mark.[53] But the article's flawed definition of Greater Los Angeles included San Diego, which is actually its own metropolitan area. A 1989 article in The New York Times predicted Greater Los Angeles would surpass Greater New York by 2010,[54] but the article predicted the population would be 18.3 million in that year, a number Greater New York already surpassed in 2007 by half a million people. By 2009, the New York metropolitan area had a population of 22.2 million compared to the Greater Los Angeles Area's 18.7 million, about a 3.56 million persons difference.[55] Percentage growth, however, has been higher in Greater Los Angeles over the past few decades than in Greater New York.

    Demographics of Los Angeles and Orange counties[edit]

    County

    2021 Estimate

    2020 Census

    Change

    Area

    Density

    Los Angeles County

    9,829,544

    10,014,009

    −1.84%

    4,057.88 sq mi (10,509.9 km2)

    2,422/sq mi (935/km2)

    Orange County

    3,167,809

    3,186,989

    −0.60%

    790.57 sq mi (2,047.6 km2)

    4,007/sq mi (1,547/km2)

    Total

    12,997,353

    13,200,998

    −1.54%

    4,848.45 sq mi (12,557.4 km2)

    2,681/sq mi (1,035/km2)

    Historical population
    Los Angeles MSA
    (Los Angeles and Orange Counties)

    Census

    Pop.

    Note

    1890

    115,043

    1900

    189,994

    65.2%

    1910

    538,567

    183.5%

    1920

    997,830

    85.3%

    1930

    2,327,166

    133.2%

    1940

    2,916,403

    25.3%

    1950

    4,367,911

    49.8%

    1960

    6,742,696

    54.4%

    1970

    8,462,366

    25.5%

    1980

    9,410,130

    11.2%

    1990

    11,273,720

    19.8%

    2000

    12,365,627

    9.7%

    2010

    12,828,837

    3.7%

    2020

    13,200,998

    2.9%

    2023 (est.)

    12,799,100

    −3.0%

    State Census data [56]

    Age and gender[edit]

    According to the 2009 American Community Survey, the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area had a population of 12,874,797, of which 6,402,498 (49.7% of the population) were male and 6,472,299 (50.3% of the population) were female. The age composition is shown in the table at right.

    Age distribution
    Los Angeles and
    Orange Counties, 2009

    Age

    % of pop.

    Under 5

    7.3%

    5 to 9

    6.6%

    10 to 14

    7.0%

    15 to 19

    7.2%

    20 to 24

    7.0%

    25 to 34

    15.5%

    35 to 44

    14.8%

    45 to 54

    13.9%

    55 to 59

    5.5%

    60 to 64

    4.4%

    65 to 74

    5.6%

    75 to 84

    3.6%

    85 and over

    1.6%

    Median age

    34.6

    Median age: 34.6 years

    Race[edit]

    According to the 2020 census, there were 18,644,680 people living in the Greater Los Angeles Area. The racial makeup of the area was 29.4% White (23.0% Non-Hispanic European and 6.4% Non-Hispanic Middle Eastern), 13.8% Asian (Non-Hispanic), 0.2% Pacific Islander (Non-Hispanic), 6.1% African American (Non-Hispanic), 0.2% Native American (Non-Hispanic), 0.5% from other races (Non-Hispanic), and 3.3% from two or more races (Non-Hispanic). 46.3% of the population were Hispanic of any race, a super-majority of which was of Mexican origin.[50]

    Ethnic origins in LA and Orange Counties

    Non-Hispanic whites make up under one-third (29.4%) of the population, approximately 5,477,462 residents. The top European ancestries were German: 7.0% (1,301,202), English: 6.1% (1,131,426), Irish: 5.4% (1,002,233), Italian: 3.4% (624,585), Scandinavian: 2.2% (405,887), French: 1.5% (284,180), Scottish: 1.4% (264,429), Polish: 1.2% (224,443), and Russian: 1.0% (189,115). The top Middle Eastern ancestries were Jewish: 3.2% (600,000), Armenian: 1.2% (214.190), Arab: 0.98% (182,934), and Iranian: 0.75% (139,632). Additionally, 3.3% (611,193) of residents identified as simply American. Values may add to over 100% because people can identify with more than one ethnicity.

    Approximately 2,577,706 residents are Asian of non-Hispanic origin. Asians of non-Hispanic origin make up 13.8% of the population, about 1.4% South Asian (Indian Subcontinent), and about 12.4% were East or Southeast Asian. The six largest Asian ancestries with respect to all of Greater LA's population were Chinese: ~ 6.1% , Filipino: ~ 3.1%, Vietnamese: ~ 2.0%, Korean ~ 1.9%, Indian ~ 1.1% , and Japanese ~ 0.8%. Other important Asian American groups include Cambodian, Laotian, Hmong, Taiwanese, Pakistani, and Thai Americans.

    Non-Hispanic blacks make up 6.1% of the population. Approximately 1,143,781 residents are non-Hispanic blacks. Sub-Saharan Africans were 0.7% (137,443) and Non-Hispanic Caribbean Blacks were 0.3% (62,419).

    Non-Hispanic Native Americans make up 0.2% of the population (46,143).

    Non-Hispanic Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders make up 0.2% of the population. Approximately 42,591 residents are Native Hawaiian or of other Pacific Islander ancestries. The largest Pacific Islander ancestries were Samoan, Native Hawaiian, and Guamanian or Chamorro, and Tongan

    Non-Hispanic Multiracial people make up 3.3% of the population. Approximately 624,473 people are non-Hispanic multiracial.

    People who listed "other" as their race made up 0.5% (102,434) of the population.

    Source: data.census.gov. Retrieved on April 15, 2023.[57]

    Hispanic or Latino origin[edit]

    Hispanic or Latinos, who may be of any race, are by far the largest group; Hispanics or Latinos make up 46.3% of the population. They outnumber every other racial group. Approximately 8,630,090 residents are Hispanic or Latino. The largest Hispanic or Latino ancestry was by far Mexican, with other important groups being Salvadoran, Guatemalan, Honduran, Peruvian, Puerto Rican, Colombian, and Cuban.

    Ethnic enclaves[edit]

    Ethnic enclaves like Chinatown, the Byzantine-Latino Quarter, Historic Filipinotown, Little Saigon, Little Armenia, Little Ethiopia, Little Bangladesh, Little Moscow (inHollywood), Little Tokyo, Croatian Place and Via Italia in San Pedro, several Koreatowns, TehrangelesinWest Los Angeles, the Chinese enclaves in the San Gabriel Valley and Thai Town provide examples of the polyglot multicultural character of Los Angeles. Below is a list of many ethnic enclaves present in the Los Angeles metropolitan area.

    Ethnic Enclave Name

    Neighborhood

    Ethnicity Represented

    Official Recognition or Dedicated District

    East Asian Ethnic Enclaves

    Chinatown

    Chinatown, Los Angeles

    Chinese Americans, Taiwanese Americans, & Hong Kong Americans; as well as many other Asian Americans

    Yes, 1938

    626/SGV

    Chinese enclaves in the San Gabriel Valley

    No

    Cerritos, California

    No

    Irvine, California & Tustin, California[58]

    No

    Chino Hills, California & Eastvale, California

    No

    Little Taipei

    Monterey Park, California

    No

    Rowland Heights, & Hacienda Heights, California

    Little Saigon

    Little Saigon, Orange County, Westminster, Garden Grove, & Fountain Valley, California

    Vietnamese Americans

    Yes, 1988

    Koreatown

    Koreatown, Los Angeles

    Korean Americans

    Yes, 2008

    Orange County Koreatown

    Koreatown, Garden Grove

    Yes, 2019

    North Orange County Koreantown[59][60]

    Buena Park, Fullerton, & La Mirada

    Yes, 2023 [61]

    Little Tokyo

    Little Tokyo, Los Angeles

    Japanese Americans

    Yes, 1995

    Little Osaka/Sawtelle Japantown

    Sawtelle, Los Angeles

    Yes, 2015

    Japan's 48th prefecture[62]

    Torrance, & Gardena, California

    No

    Costa Mesa[63]

    No

    Terminal Island Japanese Fishing Village

    Terminal Island[64]

    Historically Japanese Americans

    No

    South East Asian Ethnic Enclaves

    Filipinotown

    Historic Filipinotown, Los Angeles

    Filipino Americans

    Yes, 2002

    Manilatown

    Downtown Riverside

    No

    Little Manila

    Carson, California

    No

    Panorama City, Eagle Rock, & Glendale

    No

    West Covina

    No

    Cerritos, California

    No

    Rancho Cucamonga

    No

    Westside Long Beach, California

    No

    Thai Town

    Thai Town, Los Angeles

    Thai Americans

    Yes, October 27, 1999

    Cambodia Town

    Cambodia Town, Long Beach, California

    Cambodian Americans

    Yes, 2007

    South Asian Ethnic Enclaves

    Little India

    Little India, Artesia, California

    Indian Americans

    Yes

    Little Bangladesh

    Little Bangladesh, Los Angeles

    Bangladeshi Americans

    Yes, 2010

    Middle Eastern Ethnic Enclaves

    Little Armenia

    Little Armenia, Los Angeles

    Armenian Americans

    Yes, October 6, 2000

    Arabia Street

    West Los Angeles

    Middle Eastern Americans

    No

    Reseda, Los Angeles

    Little Arabia

    Anaheim, California

    Egyptian American, Syrian American, Lebanese American, & Yemeni American

    Yes, August 24, 2022[65]

    Little Gaza

    Palestinian American

    Pending

    TehrangelesorLittle Persia

    Westwood, Los Angeles

    Iranian Americans

    No

    Southern San Fernando Valley

    Beverly Hills, California

    Persian Square

    Near UCLA

    Yes, 2010[66]

    Little Afghanistan

    Hollywood

    Afghan Americans

    No

    Los Angeles Community Eruv

    Agoura Hills, Beverly Hills, Hancock Park, Pico-Robertson, West Hollywood, & Westwood

    Jewish American

    North Valley Eruv

    Chatsworth, Granada Hills, North Hills, & Northridge

    Valley Eruv

    North Hollywood, Valley Village, Van Nuys, Sherman Oaks, Sherman Village, and Panorama City

    Woodland Hills/West Hills Eruv

    Woodland Hills/West Hills

    Latin American/Caribbean Ethnic Enclaves

    El Salvador Corridor

    Pico-Union, Los Angeles

    Salvadoran Americans

    Yes, August 2012

    Guatemalan Americans, Honduran Americans, & other Central American groups

    No

    Little Central America

    Westlake, Los Angeles & Harvard Heights, Los Angeles

    Olvera Street

    El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument

    Mexican Americans & Chicano

    Yes, 1877

    Sonoratown

    Removed, 1732–1938

    Mariachi Plaza

    East Los Angeles, California

    No

    Gateway Cities

    No

    El Monte, La Puente, Baldwin Park, West Covina, Covina, Irwindale, Azusa

    No

    Santa Ana

    No

    San Fernando

    No

    Anaheim Colony District

    Anaheim, California

    No

    Pomona and Ontario

    No

    San Bernardino Valley

    San Bernardino, Colton, Fontana, Rialto, and Bloomington

    No

    Moreno Valley and Perris

    No

    Riverside, Corona, and Jurupa Valley

    No

    Byzantine-Latino Quarter

    Byzantine-Latino Quarter, Los Angeles

    Mexican American, & Hispanic Caribbean American

    No

    El Corredor Oaxaqueño

    Mid-City, Los Angeles

    Oaxacan Mexican Americans

    No

    Little Brazil

    Culver City, California

    Brazilian Americans & Other Lusophone Americans

    No

    Little Belize

    Vermont Square, Los Angeles

    Belizean Americans

    No

    African and African American Ethnic Enclaves

    Little Ethiopia

    Little Ethiopia, Los Angeles

    Ethiopian Americans

    Yes, 2002

    Freetown

    Whittier, California

    African Americans

    No

    South-central Los Angeles, Compton, Carson, Inglewood, Culver City, and Hawthorne

    No

    Altadena, California

    No

    Antelope Valley

    No

    Native American Ethnic Enclaves

    Indian Alley

    Skid Row, Los Angeles

    Native Americans

    No

    Pacific Islander Ethnic Enclaves

    Carson, California

    Pacific Islander Americans

    No

    Eagle Rock, Los Angeles & Glendale, California

    No

    Anglo American Ethnic Enclaves

    Orange Coast

    Huntington Beach, California, Newport Beach, California, Laguna Beach, California, Dana Point, California, and San Clemente, California

    Anglo Americans

    No

    Horsetown USA

    Norco, California

    No

    Malibu, California

    No

    European Ethnic Enclaves

    Little Italy

    Downtown LA, modern day Chinatown, Los Angeles

    Historically Italian Americans

    No

    Little Italy/Via Italia[67]

    San Pedro, Los Angeles

    Italian Americans & Maltese Americans

    Yes[68]

    Croatian Place

    Croatian Americans

    No

    Greektown

    Historically Greek Americans

    No

    Byzantine-Latino Quarter

    Byzantine-Latino Quarter, Los Angeles

    No

    Little Portugal

    Artesia, California

    Historically Portuguese Americans

    No

    Frogtown

    Frogtown, Los Angeles & Lincoln Heights, Los Angeles

    Historically French Americans

    No

    Little Moscow

    Los Feliz, Los Angeles

    Russian Americans

    No

    Little Odessa

    West Hollywood, California

    Ukrainian Americans in Los Angeles and Russian Americans

    No

    Little Britain

    Santa Monica, California

    British Americans

    No

    Anaheim, California

    Anaheim, California

    Historically German Americans

    No

    Bellflower, California[69]

    Dutch Americans

    No

    Politics[edit]

    Presidential Election Results for the Los Angeles-Anaheim-Riverside Consolidated Statistical Area

    (Counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Ventura, Riverside and San Bernardino)

    Year

    GOP

    DEM

    Others

    2020

    34.8% 2,799,636

    63.1% 5,078,481

    2.1% 169,472

    2016

    31.5% 2,013,697

    62.3% 3,983,255

    6.1% 391,977

    2012

    37.4% 2,196,108

    60.2% 3,534,444

    2.4% 143,577

    2008

    37.3% 2,099,609

    60.8% 3,425,319

    1.9% 107,147

    2004

    45.3% 2,490,150

    53.4% 2,932,429

    1.3% 69,649

    2000

    41.3% 2,003,114

    54.6% 2,652,907

    4.1% 198,750

    1996

    38.3% 1,661,209

    51.3% 2,220,837

    10.4% 449,706

    1992

    33.8% 1,657,151

    45.0% 2,202,345

    21.2% 1,038,448

    1988

    53.8% 2,408,696

    45.0% 2,014,670

    1.2% 54,441

    1984

    60.6% 2,614,904

    38.3% 1,650,231

    1.1% 48,225

    1980

    55.5% 2,187,859

    35.0% 1,381,285

    9.5% 374,993

    1976

    50.8% 1,877,267

    46.7% 1,728,532

    2.5% 93,554

    1972

    57.7% 2,346,127

    38.7% 1,573,708

    3.6% 146,653

    1968

    50.3% 1,836,478

    43.0% 1,570,478

    7.3% 247,280

    1964

    44.0% 1,578,837

    55.9% 2,006,184

    0.1% 2,488

    1960

    50.8% 1,677,962

    48.9% 1,612,924

    0.3% 10,524

    Greater Los Angeles is a politically divided metropolitan area. During the 1970s and 1980s, the region leaned toward the Republican Party. Los Angeles County, the most populous of the region, is a Democratic stronghold, although it voted twice for both Richard Nixon (1968 and 1972) and Ronald Reagan (1980 and 1984). Riverside County, San Bernardino County, and Orange County have historically leaned toward the Republican Party but have started shifting leftward in recent years. Ventura County is politically divided.

    Economy[edit]

    The Los Angeles metropolitan area has the third-largest metropolitan economy in the world, behind the Greater Tokyo Area and the New York metropolitan area. In 2022, the combined statistical area of Greater Los Angeles (which includes the Los Angeles metropolitan area, the Inland Empire, and Ventura County) had a $1.528 trillion economy.

    Los Angeles and Orange Counties together have an economy of roughly $1.227 trillion.[3] Important are coastal California land values and the rents they command, which contribute heavily to GDP earnings, though there are worries that these high land values contribute to the long-term problem of housing affordability and are thus a possible risk to future GDP increase.[70][71] This is evident when comparing the coast with the Inland Empire, a large component of the five-county combined statistical area (CSA) that nevertheless contributes a far smaller portion to regional gross metropolitan product but still dominates in industry. The Greater Los Angeles CSA is the third-largest economic center in the world, after Greater Tokyo and the New York-Newark-Bridgeport CSA.

    Greater Los Angeles is a hotspot for Asian car manufacturers. Specifically, Mitsubishi, Hyundai, Honda, and Mazda have their U.S. headquarters in the area.[72] Nissan and Toyota were headquartered in the area in the recent past as well. (Nissan moved to Tennessee; Toyota moved to Texas.)[73]

    This section needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (June 2015)

    The economy of the Los Angeles metropolitan area is famously and heavily based on the entertainment industry, with a particular focus on television, motion pictures, interactive games, and recorded music – the Hollywood district of Los Angeles and its surrounding areas are known as the "movie capital of the United States" due to the region's extreme commercial and historical importance to the American motion picture industry. Other significant sectors include shipping/international trade – particularly at the adjacent Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach, together comprising the United States' busiest seaport – logistics – the Inland Empire being the largest concentration of warehousing and intermodal facilities in the world – as well as aerospace, technology, petroleum, fashion and apparel, and tourism.

    The City of Los Angeles is home to five Fortune 500 companies: energy company Occidental Petroleum (until 2014 when it moved its headquarters to Houston), healthcare provider Health Net, metals distributor Reliance Steel & Aluminum, engineering firm AECOM, and real estate group CB Richard Ellis. Other companies headquartered in Los Angeles include American Apparel, City National Bank, 20th Century Studios, Latham & Watkins, Univision, Metro Interactive, LLC, Premier America, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, DeviantArt,[74] Guess?, O'Melveny & Myers; Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, Tokyopop, The Jim Henson Company, Paramount Pictures, Sunkist Growers, Incorporated, Tutor Perini, Fox Sports Net, Capital Group, and The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf. Korean Air's US passenger and cargo operations headquarters are in two separate offices in Los Angeles.[75] Entertainment and media giant The Walt Disney Company is headquartered in nearby Burbank.

    Port of Long Beach

    The Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach together comprise the fifth-busiest port in the world, being the center of imports and exports for trade on the west Pacific Coast as well as being one of the most significant ports of the western hemisphere. The Port of Los Angeles occupies 7,500 acres (3,035 hectares) of land and water along 43 miles (69 kilometres) of waterfront and is the busiest container port in the United States. The Port is the busiest port in the United States by container volume, the 8th busiest container port in the world.[76][77][78] The top trading partners in 2004 were: China ($68.8 billion), Japan ($24.1 billion), Taiwan ($10.8 billion), Thailand ($6.7 billion), & South Korea ($5.6 billion)

    The Port of Long Beach is the second-busiest container port in the United States. It adjoins the separate Port of Los Angeles. Acting as a major gateway for U.S.-Asian trade, the port occupies 3,200 acres (1,295 hectares) of land with 25 miles (40 kilometres) of waterfront in the city of Long Beach, California. The seaport has approximately $100 billion in trade and provides more than 316,000 jobs in Southern California. The Port of Long Beach imports and exports more than $100 billion worth of goods every year. The seaport provides the country with jobs, generates tax revenue, and supports retail and manufacturing businesses.[citation needed]

    Economic statistics for Los Angeles and Orange Counties[edit]

    In 2014, the population of the Long Beach–Los Angeles–Anaheim metropolitan statistical area (MSA) reached 13,262,220 and ranked second in the United States – a 1 percent increase from 2013.[79] In 2014, Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim had a per capita personal income (PCPI) of $50,751 and ranked 29th in the country.

    In 2014, Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim placed third among the largest exporters in the United States (shipment totaling to $75.5 billion). The metro accounted for 40.8 percent of California's merchandise exports, mainly exporting computer and electronic products ($18.6 billion); transportation equipment ($15.3 billion) and chemicals ($5.6 billion). Nonetheless, the greater Los Angeles metro has immensely benefited from the free trade agreements: greater Los Angeles exported $25.1 billion to the NAFTA region and $776 million in goods to the CAFTA region.

    Overall, in 2014 the average wages and salaries reached $57,519 (in 2010, the average wages and salaries reached $54,729).[80] Meanwhile, the median household income in 2014 was $56,935, a 1.4 percent increase from 2013 (average median household income was $56,164).[81]

    Note: Dollar items are in current dollars (not adjusted for inflation). Per capita items in dollars; other dollar items in thousands of dollars.

    Table 2 (refer below) is a chart of the four highest sectors in the metro area, with health care and social assistance reaching 15.54%.

    Industry

    Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA MSA

    NAICS 62 Health care and social assistance

    15.54%

    NAICS 44–45 Retail trade

    11.27%

    NAICS 72 Accommodation and food services

    10.79%

    NAICS 31–33 Manufacturing

    10.47%

    Table 3 (refer below) displays the location quotient for employment in the Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim MSA. Top three sectors include information; art, entertainment, and recreation; and real estate and rental and leasing. (Data obtained from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2014. Data measures Location Quotient for sectors in the MSA area. U.S. Total is the base areas.[82])

    Industry

    Los Angeles–Long Beach–Anaheim, CA MSA

    NAICS 99 Unclassified

    2.46

    NAICS 51 Information

    1.88

    NAICS 71 Arts, entertainment, and recreation

    1.36

    NAICS 53 Real estate and rental and leasing

    1.29

    NAICS 42 Wholesale trade

    1.21

    NAICS 61 Educational services

    1.13

    NAICS 54 Professional and technical services

    1.11

    NAICS 56 Administrative and waste services

    1.06

    NAICS 81 Other services, except public administration

    1.04

    NAICS 31–33 Manufacturing

    1

    NAICS 62 Health care and social assistance

    1

    NAICS 72 Accommodation and food services

    1

    NAICS 55 Management of companies and enterprises

    0.95

    NAICS 48–49 Transportation and warehousing

    0.88

    NAICS 52 Finance and insurance

    0.86

    NAICS 44–45 Retail trade

    0.85

    NAICS 23 Construction

    0.76

    NAICS 22 Utilities

    0.65

    NAICS 11 Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting

    0.15

    NAICS 21 Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction

    0.15

    Utilities and infrastructure[edit]

    There are nine electric utility power companies in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Southern California Edison serves a large majority of the Los Angeles metropolitan area except for Los Angeles city limits, Burbank, Glendale, Pasadena, Azusa, Vernon, Anaheim, and southern Orange County. Southern Orange County is part of the Los Angeles metropolitan area and it is served by San Diego Gas & Electric. There are three natural gas providers in the metropolitan area. Southern California Gas Company serves a large majority of the Los Angeles metropolitan area except for Long Beach and southern Orange County.

    The Los Angeles metropolitan area is served by the following utility companies.

    Electricity[edit]

    The only nuclear power plant that serves the Los Angeles metropolitan area is Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station in the US state of Arizona 46 miles west of Phoenix. LADWP and Southern California Edison get their electricity from it.

    Natural gas[edit]

    Cable television[edit]

    Phone and Internet[edit]

    Medical facilities[edit]

    Greater Los Angeles is one of the world's largest patient destinations. The Los Angeles Medical Services provide quality medical services and specialty care services to the populations served in compliance with local, state and federal regulations as well as human rights protection.[83] Archived February 12, 2018, at the Wayback Machine

    Los Angeles and Orange counties have separate medical service department but both work jointly. Government and Private hospitals open normally Monday through Friday, excluding City Holidays but some speciality hospitals are open year-round.[83] Archived February 12, 2018, at the Wayback Machine

    The main healthcare providers in the Los Angeles metropolitan area are Kaiser Permanente, Cedars-Sinai Health System, UCLA Health, Dignity Healthcare, and Providence Healthcare. LA Care and Care1st are also the main providers for those in the metropolitan area that have Medi-Cal.

    Events[edit]

    Major events include:[84]

    Awards ceremonies[edit]

    Annual county fairs[edit]

    Annual Conventions[edit]

    Tourism and attractions[edit]

    This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Consider splitting content into sub-articles, condensing it, or adding subheadings. Please discuss this issue on the article's talk page. (November 2020)
    This section is missing information about San Bernardino, Riverside and Ventura counties. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (November 2020)

    Due to L.A.'s position as The Entertainment Capital of the World, there are many tourist attractions in the area. Consequently, Greater Los Angeles is one of the most visited areas in the world. Here is a breakdown of some of its major attractions:

    Amusement parks[edit]

    Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland
  • Disneyland
  • Disney California Adventure
  • Knott's Berry Farm
  • Pacific Park
  • Six Flags Magic Mountain
  • Universal Studios Hollywood
  • Beaches[edit]

    Laguna Beach coastline is popular for sunbathers
  • Corona del Mar
  • Dana Point
  • El Porto
  • El Segundo
  • Hermosa Beach
  • Huntington Beach
  • Laguna Beach
  • Long Beach
  • Los Angeles
  • Malibu
  • Manhattan Beach
  • Marina del Rey
  • Newport Beach
  • Pacific Palisades
  • Palos Verdes Estates
  • Playa del Rey
  • Rancho Palos Verdes
  • Redondo Beach
  • San Clemente
  • San Pedro
  • Santa Monica
  • Seal Beach
  • Sunset Beach
  • Venice Beach
  • Shopping centers and districts[edit]

    There are hundreds of shopping centers and shopping districts across the area. Some key ones that attract out-of-area visitors are listed here; see also the Table of Shopping Centers in Southern California for a more complete list.

  • Beverly Center near West Hollywood
  • Citadel Outlets, Commerce
  • Del Amo Fashion Center, Torrance
  • Downtown Disney
  • Fashion District, Downtown Los Angeles
  • Fashion Island, Newport Beach
  • Ovation Hollywood
  • Irvine Spectrum Center
  • Melrose Avenue, Hollywood
  • Old Pasadena
  • Ontario Mills
  • Rodeo Drive and downtown Beverly Hills
  • The Grove at Farmer's Market, Fairfax District
  • South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa
  • Third Street Promenade and Santa Monica Place, Santa Monica
  • Universal CityWalk
  • Victoria Gardens (Rancho Cucamonga)
  • Westfield Century City
  • Visitors may also stroll Broadway and 7th streets in Downtown Los Angeles, the main shopping districts until the 1950s, to see the architecture of the buildings that once housed the large downtown department stores such as the May Company, Bullock's, The Broadway, Desmond's, Coulter's, Barker Brothers, and J. W. Robinson's.

    Film and TV Studio Tours[edit]

    Warner Bros. Studios in the San Fernando Valley

    Water Parks[edit]

  • Raging Waters
  • Knott's Soak City
  • Six Flags Hurricane Harbor
  • Wild Rivers
  • Great Wolf Lodge
  • Zoos and Aquariums[edit]

    Los Angeles Zoo
  • Cabrillo Aquarium
  • Griffith Park Zoo (Defunct)
  • Los Angeles Zoo
  • Montebello Barnyard Zoo
  • Ocean Institute
  • Orange County Zoo
  • Santa Ana Zoo
  • Museums[edit]

    There are over 100 museums in the area, with some of the most widely visited being:

  • Bowers Museum
  • California African American Museum
  • California Science Center
  • Children's Museum of Los Angeles
  • Chinese American Museum
  • Discovery Cube Los Angeles
  • Discovery Cube Orange County
  • El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument
  • Getty Center
  • Getty Villa
  • Grammy Museum
  • Griffith Observatory
  • Hammer Museum
  • Hollywood Wax Museum
  • Huntington Library
  • Italian American Museum of Los Angeles
  • La Brea Tar Pits and Page Museum
  • Los Angeles County Museum of Art
  • Mission San Buenaventura
  • Mission San Fernando Rey de España
  • Mission San Gabriel Arcángel
  • Mission San Juan Capistrano
  • Movieland Wax Museum
  • Museum of Contemporary Art
  • Museum of Tolerance
  • Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
  • Nethercutt Collection
  • Norton Simon Museum
  • Orange County Museum of Art
  • Queen Mary
  • Richard Nixon Birthplace
  • Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum
  • Ripley's Believe It or Not!
  • Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
  • San Bernardino de Sena Estancia
  • Southwest Museum of the American Indian
  • Travel Town Museum
  • USC Fisher Museum of Art
  • Watts Towers
  • Convention Centers[edit]

  • Los Angeles Convention Center
  • Pasadena Convention Center
  • Long Beach Convention Center
  • National Orange Show Event Center
  • Ontario Convention Center
  • State Parks & Beaches[edit]

  • Antelope Valley Indian Museum State Historic Park
  • Arthur B. Ripley Desert Woodland State Park
  • Bolsa Chica State Beach
  • California Citrus State Historic Park
  • Castaic Lake State Recreation Area
  • Chino Hills State Park
  • Corona del Mar State Beach
  • Crystal Cove State Park
  • Dockweiler State Beach
  • Doheny State Beach
  • Emma Wood State Beach
  • Huntington State Beach
  • Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area
  • Leo Carrillo State Park
  • Los Angeles State Historic Park
  • Los Encinos State Historic Park
  • Malibu Creek State Park
  • Malibu Lagoon State Beach
  • Mandalay State Beach
  • McGrath State Beach
  • Mount San Jacinto State Park
  • Pescadero State Beach
  • Pío Pico State Historic Park
  • Placerita Canyon State Park
  • Point Dume State Beach
  • Point Mugu State Park
  • Rio de Los Angeles State Park
  • Robert H. Meyer Memorial State Beach
  • Saddleback Butte State Park
  • San Buenaventura State Beach
  • San Clemente State Beach
  • San Onofre State Beach
  • Santa Monica State Beach
  • Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park
  • Topanga State Park
  • Verdugo Mountains State Recreation Area
  • Watts Towers of Simon Rodia State Historic Park
  • Will Rogers State Historic Park
  • Will Rogers State Beach
  • National parks, monuments, & refuges[edit]

    Places of Worship[edit]

    • Bao Quang Temple
  • BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Chino Hills
  • Buddha Monastery Support (Monterey Park)
  • Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels
  • Chua Bat Nha
  • Chua Dieu Ngu Vietnamese Buddhist Temple
  • Crystal Cathedral
  • First Congregational Church of Los Angeles
  • Glory Church of Jesus Christ
  • Hai Nam Association of Southern California
  • Holy Transfiguration Russian Orthodox Cаthedral
  • Hsi Lai Temple
  • Koyasan Buddhist Temple
  • Immanuel Presbyterian Church
  • Islamic Society of Orange County
  • Loma Linda University Church of Seventh-day Adventists
  • Los Angeles California Temple
  • Malibu Hindu Temple
  • Ming Ya Buddhist Foundation
  • Hsi Lai Temple Main Hall.

    Other visitor attractions[edit]

  • Ave 26 Night Market (Pico Rivera)
  • Balboa Fun Zone
  • Balboa Island
  • Balboa Pier
  • Bear Mountain Ski Resort
  • Big Bear Lake
  • Cabazon Dinosaurs
  • Catalina Island
  • Devil's Punchbowl
  • El Capitan Theatre
  • El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument
  • Exposition Park
  • Glen Helen Amphitheater
  • Grauman's Chinese Theatre
  • Griffith Park
  • Hollywood Boulevard
  • Hollywood Bowl
  • Hollywood Sign
  • Hollywood Walk of Fame
  • Huntington Beach Pier
  • Irvine Regional Park
  • Jet Propulsion Laboratory
  • Jurupa Oak
  • Korean Bell of Friendship
  • La Brea Tar Pits
  • Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden
  • Manhattan Beach Pier
  • Medieval Times
  • Mile Square Regional Park
  • The Mission Inn
  • Mount Rubidoux
  • Mount Wilson Observatory
  • Murals of Los Angeles
  • Newport Bay
  • O'Neill Regional Park
  • Orange County Great Park
  • Palm Springs Aerial Tramway
  • Pasadena City Hall
  • San Bernardino Santa Fe Depot
  • Santa Monica Pier
  • Terminal Island Japanese Fishing Village Memorial
  • The Japanese Garden
  • Universal City
  • Venice
  • Area and ZIP codes[edit]

    This section is missing information about San Bernardino, Riverside and Ventura counties. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (November 2020)

    Area codes[edit]

    Media[edit]

    The Los Angeles metropolitan area is home to the headquarters of several well-known media companies including: the Los Angeles Times, Fox Broadcasting Company, Universal Studios, and The Walt Disney Company. Local television channels broadcasting to the Los Angeles market include KCBS-TV 2 (CBS), KNBC 4 (NBC), KTLA 5 (The CW), KABC 7 (ABC), KCAL-TV 9 (Independent), KTTV 11 (Fox), KCOP 13 (MyNetworkTV), KCET 28, (PBS), KPXN-TV 30 (Ion), KMEX-DT 34 (Univision), KVEA 52 (Telemundo) and KLCS 58 (PBS). Radio stations serving the area include: KKJZ, KIIS, KNX (AM), and KMZT.

    Education[edit]

    This section is missing information about San Bernardino, Riverside and Ventura counties. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (November 2020)

    Primary and secondary education[edit]

    The Los Angeles Unified School District serves the city of L.A., and other school districts serve the surrounding areas. A number of private schools are also located in the region.

    Higher education[edit]

    Cal State LA's The Golden Eagle, consisting of two adjoining structures separated by a promenade.

    Greater Los Angeles is home to a number of colleges and universities. The University of Southern California and University of California, Los Angeles, are among the largest, and the Claremont Colleges and California Institute of Technology are among the most academically renowned. Below is a list of some of the most well known colleges and universities within the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area.

  • Azusa Pacific University
  • Biola University
  • California Baptist University
  • California Lutheran University
  • California State University, Channel Islands
  • California State University, Dominguez Hills
  • California State University, Fullerton
  • California State University, Northridge
  • California State University, Long Beach
  • California State University, Los Angeles
  • California State University, San Bernardino
  • California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
  • California Institute of Technology
  • Chapman University
  • Claremont Colleges
  • Laguna College of Art and Design
  • Loma Linda University
  • Loyola Marymount University
  • University of California, Irvine
  • University of California, Los Angeles
  • University of California, Riverside
  • University of Southern California
  • University of La Verne
  • University of Redlands
  • Pepperdine University
  • Soka University of America
  • Vanguard University
  • West Coast University
  • Transportation[edit]

    Rush hour on the Harbor Freeway, Downtown

    Greater Los Angeles is known for its expansive transportation network. Most notable is its extensive highway system. The area is a junction for numerous interstates coming from the north, east, and south and contains the three principal north–south highways in California: Interstate 5, U.S. Route 101, and California State Route 1. The area is also home to several ports, including the twin ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, which are the two busiest in the United States, as well as Port of Hueneme.[85] Additionally, the region is also served by the Los Angeles Metro Rail and Metrolink commuter rail systems that link neighborhoods of Los Angeles with immediate surrounding suburbs and most of the region (excluding the outer region of the Inland Empire) with Oceanside in San Diego County, respectively. Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) is the principal international airport of the region and is one of the busiest in the world.[86] Other airports include Ontario International Airport (ONT), John Wayne Airport (SNA), Bob Hope Airport (BUR), Long Beach Municipal Airport (LGB), and Palm Springs International Airport (PSP).

    Historic streetcar network[edit]

    Los Angeles Pacific Electric (Red Cars) network

    The Pacific Electric Railway Company, nicknamed the Red Cars, was a privately owned mass transit system in Southern California consisting of electrically powered streetcars, interurban cars, and buses and was the largest electric railway system in the world in the 1920s. Organized around the city centers of Los Angeles and San Bernardino, it connected cities in Los Angeles County, Orange County, San Bernardino County and Riverside County.

    The system shared dual gauge track with the 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) narrow gauge Los Angeles Railway, "Yellow Car", or "LARy" system on Main Street in downtown Los Angeles (directly in front of the 6th and Main terminal), on 4th Street, and along Hawthorne Boulevard south of downtown Los Angeles toward the cities of Hawthorne, Gardena, and Torrance.

    Commercial airports[edit]

    Airport

    IATA code

    County

    Enplanements (2013)[87]

    Los Angeles International Airport

    LAX

    Los Angeles

    32,425,892

    John Wayne Airport

    SNA

    Orange County

    4,540,628

    Ontario International Airport

    ONT

    San Bernardino

    1,970,538

    Hollywood Burbank Airport

    BUR

    Los Angeles

    1,918,011

    Long Beach Airport

    LGB

    Los Angeles

    1,438,756

    San Bernardino International Airport

    SBD

    San Bernardino

    NA

    The primary airport serving the LA metro area is Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), one of the busiest airports in the United States. LAX is in southwestern Los Angeles, 16 miles (26 km) from Downtown Los Angeles. LAX is the only airport to serve as a hub for all three U.S. legacy airlines —American, Delta and United.

    In addition to LAX, other airports, including Hollywood Burbank Airport, John Wayne Airport, Long Beach Airport, Ontario International Airport, and San Bernardino International Airport also serve the region.

    Bridges[edit]

    The Los Angeles metropolitan area has only one suspension bridge: Vincent Thomas BridgeinSan Pedro, and one cable-stayed bridge: Long Beach International GatewayinLong Beach.

    Interstate Highways[edit]

    U.S. Highways[edit]

    California State Highways[edit]

  • State Route 2
  • State Route 14
  • State Route 18
  • State Route 19
  • State Route 22
  • State Route 23
  • State Route 27
  • State Route 33
  • State Route 34
  • State Route 39
  • State Route 47
  • State Route 55
  • State Route 57
  • State Route 60
  • State Route 66
  • State Route 71
  • State Route 72
  • State Route 73
  • State Route 74
  • State Route 83
  • State Route 90
  • State Route 91
  • State Route 103
  • State Route 107
  • State Route 110
  • State Route 118
  • State Route 126
  • State Route 133
  • State Route 134
  • State Route 138
  • State Route 142
  • State Route 170
  • State Route 187
  • State Route 210
  • State Route 213
  • State Route 241
  • State Route 261
  • Los Angeles County Metro[edit]

    Map of LA County Metro

    The Los Angeles Metro Rail is the mass transit rail system of Los Angeles County. It is run by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority and its system runs six rail lines throughout Los Angeles County. Metro Rail currently operates four light rail and two rapid transit lines, altogether totaling 115.5 miles (185.9 km) of rail, 101 stations, and over 360,000 daily weekday boardings as of December 2012.[88]

    The system's light rail lines are the second busiest LRT system in the United States, after Boston, by number of riders, with 200,300 average weekday boardings during the third quarter of 2012.[89] By 2019, it had become the most heavily ridden light rail system in the country.[90]

    Since the region of the city is in close proximity to a major fault area the tunnels were built to resist earthquakes of up to magnitude 7.5. Both subway lines use an electrified third rail to provide power to the trains, rendering these lines unusable on the other three. The Blue and Gold Lines run mostly at grade, with some street-running, elevated, and underground stretches in the more densely populated areas of Los Angeles. The Green Line is entirely grade separated, running in the median of I-105 and then turning southward along an elevated route.

    The rail lines run regularly on a 5 am and midnight schedule, seven days a week. Limited service on particular segments is provided after midnight and before 5 am There is no rail service between 2 and 3:30 am Exact times vary from route to route; see individual route articles for more information.

    Other authorities[edit]

    In addition to Metro, other providers provide local service within their jurisdictions. These include the Orange County Transportation Authority, San Bernardino County Transportation Authority, and Riverside Transit Agency.[citation needed]

    Regional and commuter rail[edit]

    Map of Metrolink

    There are two providers of heavy rail transportation in the region, Amtrak and Metrolink. Amtrak provides service to San Diego, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and points in between on the Pacific Surfliner. It also provides long-distance routes, including the Coast Starlight which goes to the San Francisco Bay Area, Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington; the Southwest Chief which goes to Flagstaff, Arizona, Albuquerque, New Mexico, Kansas City, Missouri and Chicago; and the Sunset Limited which provides limited service (three days a week) to Tucson, El Paso, Houston, and New Orleans.

    Metrolink provides service to numerous places within Southern California, including all counties in the region. Metrolink operates to 67 stations on eight lines within Southern California which mostly (except for the Inland Empire–Orange County Line and Arrow) radiate from Los Angeles Union Station.

    Sports[edit]

    This section is missing information about San Bernardino, Riverside and Ventura counties. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (November 2020)

    Professional teams[edit]

    As a whole, the Los Angeles area has more national championships, all sports combined (college and professional), than any other city in the United States, with over four times as many championships as the entire state of Texas, and just over twice that of New York City.[91] It is the only American city to host the summer Olympic games twice: once in 1932, and more recently in 1984 (Lake Placid hosted the winter Olympic games twice: once in 1932 and once in 1980). Los Angeles will also be the host of the 2028 Summer Olympics, becoming the third city to host three Olympic Games, after London and Paris.

    Staples CenterinDowntown Los Angeles

    Table of professional teams and venues[edit]

    Team

    Sport

    League

    Venue

    Los Angeles Rams

    American football

    National Football League

    SoFi Stadium

    Los Angeles Chargers

    Los Angeles Dodgers

    Baseball

    Major League Baseball

    Dodger Stadium

    Los Angeles Angels

    Angel Stadium

    Los Angeles Clippers

    Basketball

    National Basketball Association

    Intuit Dome

    Los Angeles Lakers

    Crypto.com Arena

    Los Angeles Sparks

    Women's National Basketball Association

    Los Angeles Kings

    Ice hockey

    National Hockey League

    Anaheim Ducks

    Honda Center

    LA Galaxy

    Soccer

    Major League Soccer

    Dignity Health Sports Park

    Los Angeles FC

    BMO Stadium

    Angel City FC

    National Women's Soccer League

    Other professional venues include:

    NCAA Division I college sports[edit]

    UCLA–USC rivalry; both universities are located in Los Angeles and are members of the Pac-12 Conference, and will move together to the Big Ten Conference in 2024. The rivalry between the two is among the more unusual in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I sports, because the campuses are only 12 miles (19 km) apart, and both are located within the same megacity.

    Other sports[edit]

    The Greater Los Angeles area also has three well-known horse racing facilities: Santa Anita Park, Los Alamitos Race Course and the former Hollywood Park Racetrack and three major motorsport venues: Auto Club Speedway, Long Beach street circuit, and Auto Club Raceway at Pomona. In addition, the city of Los Angeles hosted the Summer Olympics in 1932 and 1984.

    For over twenty years the Los Angeles area media market lacked a National Football League team. After the 1994 season, the Los Angeles Rams moved to St. Louis, Missouri, and the Los Angeles Raiders returned to their original home of Oakland, California, due to the lack of an up-to-date NFL stadium. After numerous stadium proposals between 1995 and 2016 in an attempt to bring the NFL back,[92][93][94] the Oakland Raiders, St. Louis Rams, and San Diego Chargers all submitted plans to relocate back to Los Angeles after the 2015 NFL season. On January 12, 2016, the Rams were approved to move to Los Angeles and build the venue eventually known as SoFi Stadium with the Chargers or Raiders given the option to join them. On January 12, 2017, the Chargers announced their move to Los Angeles to join the Rams. Both teams share SoFi StadiuminInglewood, California.[95]

    The Los Angeles Basin, viewed south from Mulholland Drive. From left to right can be seen the Santa Ana Mountains / Saddleback (horizon), downtown L.A., the Hollywood Bowl (foreground), Mid-Wilshire, Long BeachPalos Verdes (background), Catalina Island (horizon), the South Bay and Pacific Ocean.

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

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  • ^ a b "Total Gross Domestic Product for Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA (MSA)". Federal Reserve Economic Data. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
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