Granada Hills, Los Angeles, California

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Chatsworth Street & Zelzah Avenue
Chatsworth Street & Zelzah Avenue

Granada Hills is a district in the San Fernando Valley region of the City of Los Angeles, California.

It is located just north of the North Hills district, west of the Mission Hills and Sylmar districts, and just east of the Northridge and Porter Ranch districts. It is accessible by the Ronald Reagan (SR 118), San Diego (Interstate 405), and Golden State (Interstate 5) Freeways. Major thoroughfares include Balboa Boulevard, Woodley, Hayvenhurst, and Haskell Avenues, as well as Rinaldi Street, San Fernando Mission Boulevard, Chatsworth Street, and Devonshire Street.

In 1916, the San Fernando Valley's first oil well was drilled in what is now Granada Hills. The oil well was located at the northern tip of Zelzah Avenue. Granada Hills was founded in 1927 (as "Granada;" the "Hills" was added 15 years later) and started out as a dairy farm and orchard known as the Sunshine Ranch. Among the crops harvested here as the nation prepared for the Roaring '20s were apricots, oranges, walnuts and beans. Vestiges of former citrus groves can still be seen as small groups of orange, lemon or grapefruit trees in some residential yards. A more detailed history can be found via the Granada Hills Chamber of Commerce.

According to the 2000 San Fernando Valley Almanac, Granada Hills has a population of 68,748 and 16,268 households. As of June 2007, the median home price is $642,200 [1]. The population demography is 45.2% Caucasian, 33% Latino, 17.1% Asian, and 4.3% African American. The community spans 15.5 square miles.

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Los Angeles Fire Department Station 18 (Knollwood/Granada Hills) and Station 87 (Granada Hills) are in the area.

Granada Hills is served by two police stations:

Granada Hills is served by the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Granada Hills Charter High School, also known as "Granada Hills High School" or simply "Granada," is located at 10535 Zelzah Avenue, Granada Hills, California 91344.

John F. Kennedy High School, teaching 9th grade through 12th grade, is located at 11254 Gothic Avenue, Granada Hills, California 91344. "Kennedy", as it is called by its students and faculty, is part of District 1 of the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Alemany High School, Catholic high school teaching grades 9-12, located at the old seminary grounds on the San Fernando Mission property behind the mission, at 11111 N. Alemany Drive Mission Hills, CA 91345 Phone: (818) 365-3925, serves a large population of Granada Hills families. It is located on the border between Granada Hills and Mission Hills, a line which changes, as our address changed at Rinaldi and Sepulveda from Mission Hills, to Granada Hills, in the mid-1970's. Alemany has been known for high standards in academics, sports and the arts for decades.

Granada Hills is also home to Robert Frost Middle School, George K. Porter Middle School, Patrick Henry Middle School, El Oro Way Elementary, Van Gogh Elementary, and Knollwood Elementary.

Los Angeles Public Library operates the Granada Hills Branch.

O'Melveny Park, the second largest park in Los Angeles, consists of a large undeveloped area and a much smaller developed section with several dozen citrus trees, a small intermittent stream, and grass and picnic areas. Hiking trails and fire roads invite exploration of this 672-acre park, including a grassy promontory from which a view of the northeastern portion of the San Fernando Valley may be seen.

In 1927, when the California Legislature established the State Park Commission,[2] Henry W. O'Melveny (the namesake for this park), became one of the original commission members along with:[3] Major Frederick R. Burnham, W. F. Chandler, William E. Colby (Secretary), and Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur.

Mission Point and its environs are popular mountain biking and hiking areas. The view from the top of Mission Point, the highest point in Granada Hills, is striking, taking in most of the San Fernando Valley. In clear weather, one can see the Pacific Ocean and Downtown Los Angeles. The area around the peak is home to quails, bobcats, mule deer, mountain lions and rattlesnakes.

Granada Hills High School's stadium, the John Elway Stadium (named after the quarterback, an alumnus), is the home of the San Fernando Valley Quakes, a semi-professional soccer team competing in the USL Premier Development League. When used for Quakes games, the stadium is known as the Re/Max Epicenter.

In 1963, the Granada Hills Little League won the Little League World Championship in baseball[4].

On September 19, 1959, a special visitor entered Granada Hills with a large entourage. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev arrived in California with two requests: to visit Disneyland and to meet John Wayne, Hollywood's top box-office draw. Disneyland was ruled out due to security concerns and the Cold War, and as a result, he was taken on a visit to a modern American neighborhood on Sophia Drive in Granada Hills.

On his visit, the Soviet leader got a show of American consumerism and the American way of life. Khrushchev's visit marked the first time a Soviet leader set foot on U.S. soil. His whirlwind 20-hour Los Angeles journey, part of a six-day, coast-to-coast tour, is better remembered for the Kremlin boss' bumptious antics than for his talks with U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower at the White House and at Camp David.

Although he declared himself outraged at missing Mickey Mouse and offended when he saw a rousing Hollywood rendition of the can-can, then finally threatened to go home when Los Angeles Mayor Norris Poulson needled him, his visit gave fascinated Granada Hills and L.A. area residents a close look at him.

Shortly after his noon arrival, Khrushchev, already irritated that Disneyland had been placed off-limits, was further annoyed that the main event of the day was a lunch with 300 movie stars and other celebrities and a visit to the set of the movie "Can-Can" at 20th Century Fox, rather than an inspection of an aerospace plant.

After Khrushchev left the studio, gawkers pasted tomatoes on his limo as the doubly offended leader and his 30-car, heavily guarded caravan made its way through city streets. Angelenos, six-deep at the curb, offered not one wave or audible greeting while the open limo lumbered by. Authorities would later report that a bomb was planted in a tree along the route and that a 47-year-old Hawthorne man who said he was "deer hunting" was arrested on suspicion of carrying concealed weapons--a .45-caliber handgun and a bow and arrow--just moments before Khrushchev's motorcade passed on Sepulveda Boulevard.

Heading toward the San Fernando Valley, the premier was escorted by a Jewish Russian emigre whom the mayor had appointed to accompany the Soviet leader while he inspected two types of housing developments on Sophia Drive just south of Rinaldi Street. Ironically, the Ronald Reagan Freeway (State Route 118) was later built within a mile of the housing site and named after the former U.S. President who is credited with ending America's long Cold War with the Soviet Union. Crowds of several hundred gathered to observe the Soviet leader's reaction to an American model home. As it turned out, the earlier visit to 20th Century Fox had cut into Khrushchev's time, and his only inspection of the housing project was a fleeting glance from a motorcade.

Granada Hills is a hot spot of mid-century architecture which returned to vogue in the 1990s, known as mid-century modern. The most notable tract is "Balboa Highlands," a small tract designed by iconic architect Joseph Eichler. Many of these homes, which are North of Rinaldi/West of Balboa, have been featured in movies, commercials, magazine pictorials and often pop up in books both on Eichler and classic examples of mid-century architecture.

While the Eichler homes are the most famous examples of MCM in this North Valley suburb many areas of Granada Hills feature the aesthetic style that includes pitched roofs and beam ceilings including numerous homes surrounding the Knollwood golf course to the east of Balboa, Knollwood Grove to the west of Balboa (behind the Eichler tract) and dotted throughout the areas south of Rinaldi.

A home in the Knollwood Grove tract.
A home in the Knollwood Grove tract.

White Oak Avenue, between San Fernando Mission and San Jose Street was declared a Historical Landmark on August 3, 1966 for the 101 Deodar Cedar Trees that line the street (which has been dubbed "Christmas Tree Lane"). The trees are native to the Himalayas and valued for their size, beauty and timber.

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