Alsace, California Explained

Alsace is a place name designating what was originally an interurban trolley stop, and now an approximately five-block enclave of unincorporated Los Angeles County in the Westside region, surrounded by Del Rey, just north of the Playa Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, United States.

Geography

The Alsace area is one of approximately 472 recognized neighborhoods in Los Angeles County.[1]

Although historically Alsace was a large, amorphously defined section of Los Angeles lying between Ballona Creek and what is now Jefferson Boulevard, today Alsace consists of a five-block strip of unincorporated Los Angeles County land bounded Jefferson Boulevard, Centinela Avenue, Grosvenor Boulevard, and Centinela Creek Channel (or Marina Freeway, California State Route 90, which runs parallel to the creek channel in this section).

The streets of Alsace include one-block sections of Hammack Street, Aneta Street, Lucile Street, Beatrice Street, as well as a very short span of Juniette Street, all of which dead-end before Grosvenor.

Alsace has one east-west paved alley (parallel to Jefferson) and one north-south paved alley (parallel to Centinela). As is common in certain unincorporated sections of Los Angeles County, the streets in the Alsace do not have sidewalks as the County has limited funds available for sidewalk construction and maintenance.[2]

33.9786°N -118.4156°W

Government

The Alsace county island is served by Los Angeles County first responders, including the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department located in nearby Marina del Rey.

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Works and the Los Angeles County Department of Regional Planning refer to this area as West Fox Hills.[3] [4] (Fox Hills is a nearby neighborhood in the city of Culver City.)

History

Alsace was a stop on the Venice–Inglewood Line of the Los Angeles’ electric interurban system, located at what is now the intersection of Centinela Avenue and Jefferson Boulevard. Local historian the Militant Angeleno connects the place name with the ancestral homeland of local ranchero and real estate developer Louis Mesmer.[5]

Oil was discovered in the area in 1929[6] and drilling was conducted on the otherwise undeveloped Alsace section for a period of less than a decade thereafter. After that, Alsace and adjacent areas remained primarily agricultural through the 1950s.[7]

Pictures of the Hughes Airport as late as 1952 confirm that that area remained undeveloped as of that date.[8] Shortly thereafter, it was developed as Tract No. 10038 and construction commenced on free-standing single-family residences completed in 1953 and 1954. By 1960, the housing development portion of the Alsace was completed and was shown on the maps as currently configured.[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Which LA neighborhood do you really live in?. Jenna. Chandler. July 28, 2017. Curbed LA.
  2. Web site: The street I live on (Altadena Drive between Marengo and Fair Oaks) doesn't have sidewalks on one side of the street. How do we get a sidewalk built on this side, or is this not something the County .... pw.lacounty.gov.
  3. Web site: West Fox Hills Wasteshed - LOS ANGELES COUNTY UNINCORPORATED COMMUNITY WASTESHEDS .
  4. Web site: Search by Category: West Fox Hills .
  5. Web site: Angeleno . Militant . August 15, 2015 . Ask The Militant: Alsace and Alla That . September 25, 2022 . Militant Angeleno.
  6. Web site: A Short History of Venice, Which Used to be an Oilfield: LAist . December 31, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191231043122/https://laist.com/2015/01/29/venice_beach_used_to_be_an_oilfield.php . December 31, 2019 . dead .
  7. Web site: Hiding in Plain Sight: The Oil Wells of Los Angeles. Donkeypongin #history • 3 Years. Ago. June 23, 2017. Steemit.
  8. Web site: Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: California - West Los Angeles Area. airfields-freeman.com.