Neighborly Advice
- 1
Silver Lake has retained the bohemian flair that marked its rise as a residential neighborhood near downtown a century ago.
- 2
More a cultural hub and place of the heart for Filipino Americans than a neighborhood where most hang their hats, Historic Filipinotown — or Hi-Fi, as locals call it — is now home primarily to Latinos.
- 3
For a community built on land that once virtually couldn’t be given away, Corona del Mar has done pretty well for itself.
- 4
There’s Mar Vista -- the Westside community of pleasant postwar housing -- and then there’s Mar Vista Hill, actually a gathering of hills that oversee their more modest mother community.
- 5
It’s an aberration in today’s real estate market: a development of more than 100 homes and nary a “for sale” sign in sight.
- 6
La Habra Heights is about opulence: sprawling properties with orchards and canyon views, rolling hills with room for horses to roam, a golf course and trails for hiking and deep breathing.
- 7
This is one of those places where you suck in your breath, let out a low whistle and think, “So this is how the other half lives.”
- 8
San Bernardino may not be the Eden the early inhabitants stumbled upon, but the creeks and river are still inviting, and snowcapped mountains grace its backdoor in the wintertime.
- 9
When it comes to stepping back in time, the Los Rios Historic District in San Juan Capistrano can claim major bragging rights.
- 10
Watch out, Melrose. Move over, Robertson.
- 11
Loma Linda offers many of the amenities of a college town — without the heavy partying.
- 12
Watch out, Melrose. Move over, Robertson.
- 13
When South Korea played Togo in the 2006 FIFA World Cup, thousands of Korean Americans flooded the streets of Garden Grove to watch the soccer match on a giant TV screen.
- 14
On the Westside of Los Angeles sits a plain-Jane neighborhood known as Sawtelle.
- 15
Perched above the hub of old Hollywood, Outpost Estates is one of the original premier developments in Los Angeles.