Granada Hills. Inside the Neighborhood. Neighborhood Overview. For Sale on Trulia: 51 homes. For Rent on Trulia: 17 homes. To Downtown Los Angeles: 39 minutes. What Locals Say.
At least Trulia users voted on each feature. There are sidewalks. It's dog friendly. Car is needed. Yards are well-kept. Parking is easy. There's holiday spirit. People would walk alone at night. Streets are well-lit. It's quiet. It's walkable to grocery stores. They plan to stay for at least 5 years. It's walkable to restaurants. There's wildlife. Kids play outside. Neighbors are friendly. There are community events. See All what locals say. Learn more about our methodology. Dog Owners. Trulia User.
Resident 1y ago. Especially not within walking distance. Most of my friends are also location scouts. Granada Hills has the highest density of scouts living here. Dollar for dollar pound for pound it is the best place to live in the LA area. Omelveny park, and the parks that are connected to it in the nearby mountains is the nicest place in LA to go hiking.
Bee Canyony is a great area to walk around in. It is a prosperous neighborhood, egalitarian and diverse. It is a very very extremely easy place to live I came from Silverlake before this. There is no traffic and once can go from a living to produce aisle in 5 different markets in 3 minutes. There are lot of different freeways nearby, but not too nearby.
Both offer a variety of options in many industries. The population of Granada Hills is diverse when it comes to race and ethnicity. The average temperature in Granada Hills stays between 45 degrees and 85 degrees, and almost never goes below 42 degrees. Granada Hills is a Los Angeles neighborhood that covers just over 15 square miles of land.
The neighborhood is further broken down into smaller neighborhood communities, often cover just a block of two where neighbors come together.
Here are a few of our favorite areas to live in Granada Hills:. Like Sunset Ridge, this popular neighborhood in Granada Hills mostly features attached homes. Most of these homes have three bedrooms and two bathrooms, and sit on 2. The cost of living in Granada Hills is high when compared to the national average, but pretty comparable to the cost of living in the rest of Los Angeles. Everything from groceries to goods and services cost more in Granada Hills than in other parts of the US.
The Granada pavilion, having fallen into disrepair, was torn down, and orange trees replaced when the California Trust Co. Chamber of Commerce meetings were attended by nearly everyone-men, women and children. Refreshments were usually served after every meeting. Other social activities included community Halloween and Christmas parties, which were attended by most of the residents.
In May, the name of the community was changed to Granada Hills, so as not to conflict with Grenada, California, and the Granada Hills branch post office was opened. Miller later sold the store to Cecil Russell, present president of the Chamber of Commerce who added a meat market. The Granada Hills school was reopened in February, in four bungalows which were moved onto the old school property.
A new bungalow was built to serve the increased enrollment in September, and plans are now being made for a large permanent building. A large and active PTA is serving the new school and the community.
The Granada Hills Memorial Church Community Presbyterian was organized in and named in honor of the late Henry West, who was very active in the founding of the church. Work is scheduled to begin in a few weeks on the Church building on Zelzah Avenue between San Jose and Devonshire, which will also serve as a community building until such a time as the Women's Club is able to build on its lot on White Oak and Tribune.
Of the residents who came to Granada in , five reside here today. One of the first was Charles S. Tilton of 17xxx Horace St. Tilton built one of the first and largest rabbitries in the area at 17xxx Mission Blvd. The buildings are today used as a chicken ranch. Tilton was very active in the Chamber of Commerce and other community organizations in those early days.
Bury, at present a landscape gardener, still lives in the house built for him at 17xxx Kingsbury St. Helen F. Woolsey of 10xxx White Oak Ave. It is today the residence of Mr.
Thurlow S. Culley of 17xxx Mission Blvd. They have remained active in community affairs through all the years and have done more probably for the development of the community than any other residents.
Culley came to Granada as a salesman for the Edwards and Wildey Co. He eventually became the accepted arbiter and go-between for transactions, disputes, etc. When the subdividers went into bankruptcy, he remained in the same office and continued with the work he had been doing.
During the depression most of his business consisted of rentals, the management of abandoned property and, as always, whatever services he could render the residents of the community. Culley was secretary of the Chamber of Commerce during its first three years of existence, followed by two terms as president.
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