BRENTWOOD
Brentwood is a district in the West
Los Angeles region of Los Angeles, California.
Located at the base of the Santa
Monica Mountains, bounded by the San Diego Freeway on the east, Wilshire
Boulevard on the south, the Santa Monica city limits on the southwest, the
border of Topanga State Park on the west and Mulholland Drive along the
ridgeline of the mountains on the north.
Nearby neighborhoods and cities
include Pacific Palisades on the west, Santa Monica on the southwest, West Los
Angeles on the south, Sawtelle on the southeast, Westwood on the east, Bel-Air
on the northeast and Encino on the north.
The area's ZIP code is 90049, which
includes Brentwood and part of Bel-Air Estates (the other section of Bel-Air
Estates is located in the 90077 zip code).
History
The area that is now Brentwood was part of the Rancho San Vicente y Santa
Monica, a Spanish land-grant ranch sold off in pieces to Anglos after Mexico's
defeat in the Mexican-American War. The area now popularly known as Brentwood
was recorded in city ledgers as Westgate when it was annexed on June 14, 1916.
Westgate was the city's 17th annexation, and added another 49 square miles (127
square kilometers) to the city of Los Angeles, including large parts of what is
now the Pacific Palisades and a small portion of today's Bel-Air. (Note: There
is a Westgate Ave. in West L.A./Brentwood that remembers the original name of
the district.)
Originally an agricultural district
(soybeans, avocados, et al.), Brentwood is now one of the wealthiest neighborhoods
in Los Angeles, and one of the prominent districts of the Westside. It has
prosperous commercial districts along each of its major east-west thoroughfares
(Wilshire, San Vicente and Sunset). It is largely populated by professionals
and executives.
Local traditions include the Maypole
erected each year on the lawn of the Archer School for Girls, carrying on the
tradition set by the Eastern Star Home that it replaced, and the annual
decoration of the coral trees with holiday lights. Inspired by the adjacent Los
Angeles National Cemetery and the community of veterans resident at the nearby
Veterans Administration center, Brentwood once regularly hosted a Memorial Day
parade, complete with a flotilla of classic cars and an elephant named Tiny;
the tradition is now only sporadically practiced due to funding problems.
Environment
Brentwood, like nearby Santa Monica, is kept fairly cool by marine breezes off
the Pacific Ocean and frequently wakes to the so-called "marine
layer," a cover of clouds brought in at night and burned off by
mid-morning. The topography of the area is generally split into two, broadly
divided by Sunset Boulevard. North of Sunset, the area is defined by the ridges
and canyons created by the Santa Monica Mountains; south of Sunset (exceptions
include Franklin Hill), the area is relatively flat. The southern district (and
the neighboring Westgate-Sawtelle areas) features underground springs which
bubble up into a small creek along "the Gully" in south Brentwood
near the golf course, and in the "Indian Springs" (the springs were
formerly the site of a Tongva campsite) portion of the University High School
campus.
San Vicente Boulevard, considered
the "Main Street" of Brentwood, is divided by a wide median on which
stand many large coral trees. The median and the trees replaced the derelict
Pacific Electric track, and the trees have become a Historic-Cultural Monument
(#148) for the city of Los Angeles. (Brentwood boosters have adopted the
silhouette of a coral tree as a de facto town logo.) Bundy Drive is lined with
extremely tall date palms, likely planted by the district's original developer.
Neighborhoods
There are a number of residential subdistricts; some defined by original
developers, some defined by present-day local realtors. Some may be as small as
a few blocks, others range over acres of hills:
Brentwood Circle: Gated community
east of Barrington and north of Sunset.
Brentwood Country Estates
Brentwood Flats
Brentwood Glen: Part of Brentwood that is bounded by Sunset, the 405 Freeway
and the Veterans Administration
Brentwood Heights
Brentwood Highlands
Brentwood Hills: Home to Mount St. Mary's College and the Getty Center.
Brentwood Park: Notable for its layout, having been designed around several
large traffic circles, a handful of which remain; the area between Sunset and
San Vicente west of Kenter/Bundy.
Brentwood Terrace: Southwest edge of Brentwood, bounded by San Vicente Blvd,
Montana Ave, the Brentwood Country Club, and Santa Monica's 26th Street.
Walking distance to the Brentwood Country Mart.
Bundy Canyon
Crestwood Hills: Includes a cluster of architecturally significant mid-century
modern residences; located in the northern part of Kenter Canyon.
Kenter Canyon
Mandeville Canyon: Westernmost part of Brentwood.
Mountaingate
Museum Heights: Modern designed condominiums. Located off Sunset Blvd.
South Brentwood: Between San Vicente and Wilshire Boulevards and the eastern
boundary of Santa Monica.
Westgate: Directly to the east of Brentwood Park
Westridge Hills
Westridge Heights: Western portions of Mandeville Canyon
Transportation
Major thoroughfares include Sunset, San Vicente and Wilshire Boulevards;
Barrington and Montana Avenues; and Bundy Drive. Brentwood is also situated
close to the Wilshire, Montana and Sunset exits of the 405 freeway.
Santa Monica's Big Blue Bus serves
Brentwood with its 2, 3, 4, 11, 13, and 14 bus lines. Los Angeles County
Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) buses serve Brentwood include the
20 and 720 lines on Wilshire Blvd. (the latter of which is L.A.'s most
successful bus rapid transit line), and several lines along Sunset Blvd.
Once linked to Los Angeles by a
Pacific Electric Railway track on San Vicente, Brentwood is now part of a
dispute over the future of public transportation in Los Angeles. In a
controversial move protested by business owners, but which substantially
increased bus speed through the Westside, the Metro has reserved the outermost
lane of Wilshire Boulevard through Brentwood in each direction as a bus-only
lane during rush hour, in a possible precursor to the adoption of bus rapid
transit service with a dedicated lane along the entire length of Wilshire.
However, the difficulty of getting
into and out of Brentwood by any means but private automobile (aggravated by
the Metro's cancellation of several "nanny bus" lines connecting the
district to poorer areas of Los Angeles) has led to widespread calls for an
extension of the Wilshire Boulevard leg of Metro's Red Line subway, which
currently ends at Western Avenue in Koreatown, through Brentwood to Ocean
Avenue in Santa Monica; a Brentwood stop would presumably be sited in the
business district near Barrington Avenue. There has been little forward
progress by local authorities on making this concept a reality.
Demographics
According to the Los Angeles Almanac, the 2000 census-year population was just
under 42,000, with a population density of about 2,700 people per square mile.
The population is about 80 percent white, nine percent Asian-American and six
percent Hispanic or Latino. Brentwood has a significant Iranian community that
is classified as white by the U.S. Census.
After English, the primary secondary
household languages are Spanish and Farsi, with Chinese, Japanese, Korean,
German, French and Hebrew also spoken at home in statistically significant
numbers.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau,
Brentwood's (ZCTA 90049) median household income was $84,342; its median family
income was $137,945; and its median per capita income was $75,965 in 1999.
As of the 2000 census, among people
over age 25, approximately five percent of the population had no high school
degree, eight percent had only a high school diploma, 15 percent of the
population had some college education but no degree, 37 percent of the population
had a bachelor's degree, 15 percent had a master's degree, and 16 percent had
either a doctorate or a professional degree.
Housing
As of 2000, there were just over 22,000 housing units in Brentwood. Most
Brentwood residents reside in single-family homes, many of which—while
seemingly modest in style, square footage and lot size—would rarely sell for
less than $750,000 due to the area's high housing costs. There are many
spectacular mansions and multi-million-dollar estates located in the hilly
areas north of Sunset. There are also large, modern apartment complexes and
condominiums located on most of district's primary and secondary thoroughfares,
many of which are home to young professionals and students attending nearby
UCLA. According to the Los Angeles Almanac, the median value of a single-family
home in Brentwood as of 2004 was $1.4 million.
Recreation
Popular recreational spots include the Brentwood Country Mart, an early
farmer's market complex built in 1947 (and recently remodeled and expanded); the
Brentwood Village, a small shopping district near the intersection of Sunset
and Barrington; and more recently, Brentwood Green, a "village
commons" created from the playground at Brentwood Science Magnet
Elementary School. There is also a tented farmer's market held each Sunday on a
strip of Gretna Green Way between Brentwood Elementary and the Brentwood
Country Club. The 2.7-mile-long (4.3 km) boundary of the private Brentwood
Country Club is a popular local jogging route. The internationally renowned
Getty Museum is located in the hills high above Brentwood, near the 405 freeway
and the Sepulveda Pass.
Public open space is limited in the
area, but green space with occasional or partial free public use can be found
at the VA and on Brentwood Common. Local public parks are Crestwood Hills Park
and Barrington Recreation Center, the latter of which features a community
center, tennis courts, soccer fields, baseball diamonds and a dog park. Fire
roads in the Santa Monica Mountains, good for mountain biking and hiking, can
be accessed at the top of Sullivan Canyon and Westridge.
Economy and businesses
Dutton's Brentwood Books is a longtime local landmark, and an institution that
Sunset magazine calls the "last of the truly independent bookstores."
In addition, Brent-Air Pharmacy,
which is still run by the founding Lassoff family, has served Brentwood for
more than 50 years. The drug store has been the scene of many famous scandals
and, like its defunct downtown L.A. cousin Schwab's, is known as the pharmacy
to the stars, where many now-notable actors and actresses worked as delivery
boys or "candy counter" girls.
Vicente Foods is an independently
owned and operated grocery market (a rarity in Los Angeles) that has served
Brentwood for decades.
There is a disproportionately large
number of restaurants along San Vicente that serve Italian food, leading some
to call Brentwood a new Little Italy.
Education
In addition to Brentwood Science Magnet Elementary School (which only zones
some residents for Kindergarten), the area is served by Kenter Canyon
Elementary School, Brockton Avenue Elementary School, and Pacific Palisades
Elementary School (some areas are zoned jointly to Kenter Canyon and Pacific
Palisades), all of which are part of Los Angeles Unified School District.
Locals attending public school
usually go to Paul Revere Charter Middle School, while some go to Emerson
Middle School; the local public high schools are University High School (named
for nearby UCLA, formerly Warren G. Harding High and planned as Sawtelle High
School, see Sawtelle), just outside the neighborhood's boundaries in West Los
Angeles and often thought to be located in Brentwood, and Palisades Charter
High School, in the nearby neighborhood of Pacific Palisades.
Brentwood is also home to several
private schools, including Brentwood School (see image below), St. Martin of
Tours Catholic School, and the Archer School for Girls, located in what was
once the historic Eastern Star Home. The old Eastern Star Home can be seen as
the setting of the "Mar Vista Rest Home" in the movie Chinatown
(1974).
One of the two campuses of Mount St.
Mary's College, a Roman Catholic liberal arts college for women, is located in
the hills above Brentwood (the other is located in downtown Los Angeles, near
USC).