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La Cienega Boulevard is a major north–south arterial road in the Los Angeles metropolitan area that runs from the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood in the north to El Segundo Boulevard in Hawthorne in the South. It was named for Rancho Las Cienegas, literally "The Ranch Of The Swamps," an area of marshland south of Rancho La Brea.

La Cienega Boulevard
(Spanish: "The Swamp")
Nearest metro station E Line La Cienega/Jefferson
South endEl Segundo Boulevard in Del Aire
Major
junctions
I-105 in Los Angeles
I-405 in Inglewod
SR 187 in Los Angeles
I-10 in Los Angeles
SR 2 in West Hollywood
North endSunset Boulevard in West Hollywood

Route description

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La Cienega Boulevard's northern terminus is the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood. It runs as a surface street in a due south direction through Beverly Hills and a section known as "Restaurant Row" for its historic tradition of upscale restaurants. South of Olympic, La Cienega runs through between the Pico-Robertson, South Carthay, and Crestview neighborhoods of West Los Angeles. South of the Santa Monica Freeway, the I-10, it briefly borders Culver City, and passes the La Cienega/Jefferson station of the Metro E Line.

 
Looking north on La Cienega from Santa Monica Blvd

Between Obama Boulevard and Manchester Avenue, most of La Cienega Boulevard is a divided, limited access expressway with few traffic signals. In the late 1940s, as part of the proposed Laurel Canyon Freeway, La Cienega was constructed to freeway standards with several grade-separated interchanges. Emergency call boxes like those found along the area's freeways were also installed along that stretch in the early 1970s. The Laurel Canyon Freeway was never completed. This stretch of La Cienega passes through the Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area, Baldwin Hills, the Inglewood Oil Field, and Ladera Heights.

South of Manchester Avenue, La Cienega becomes a surface street once more, running parallel to the San Diego (405) Freeway through Inglewood. It terminates at El Segundo Boulevard in Hawthorne along the west side of the freeway. A non-contiguous segment also named La Cienega Boulevard runs along the east side of the 405 freeway, roughly between El Segundo Boulevard and Rosecrans Avenue in an unincorporated strip of Los Angeles County.

La Cienega Design Quarter

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The area of La Cienega Boulevard, from Beverly Boulevard to Santa Monica Boulevard, and its satellite streets is known as the La Cienega Design Quarter. Its shops and galleries house many antiques, furniture, rugs, accessories and art. Art dealer Felix Landau operated his trend-setting gallery there in the 1960s.

Restaurant Row

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Sign at the corner of Wilshire and La Cienega
 
Looking south down La Cienega from the intersection with Sunset Blvd
 
The big Randy's Donuts shop is at the corner of La Cienega and Manchester Blvd in Inglewood

La Cienega in Beverly Hills, north of Wilshire Boulevard, is known as Restaurant Row because it features many upscale restaurants. From Wilshire in Beverly Hills traveling north the best known establishments include Benihana, The Stinking Rose, Darioush, the original Lawry's the Prime Rib, Hakobe, Tokyo Table - Tokyo City Cuisine, Matsuhisa, Fogo de Chão, Gyu-Kaku, Woo Lae Oak, The Bazaar by José Andrés, and Morton's.[1]

Etymology

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Ballona Road, now Washington Blvd., passes through the marshland, creeks and ponds of La Cienega in 1874

La Cienega Boulevard is named after Rancho Las Cienegas Mexican land grant roughly in the region now called "West Los Angeles." The Spanish phrase la ciénaga translates into English as "the swamp" and the area named "Las Ciénegas" was a continual marshland due to the course of the Los Angeles River through that area prior to a massive southerly shift in 1825 to roughly its present course. The difference in spelling in Los Angeles between the Castilian Spanish word ciénaga and the name of the thoroughfare, which is common in other Iberian languages like Extremaduran,[2] originated with the name of the ranch.

Transportation

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Metro Local lines 105 runs on La Cienega Boulevard. An elevated light rail station for the Metro E Line is located at Jefferson Boulevard. An underground station for the Metro D Line at Wilshire Boulevard is currently under construction.

Major intersections

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The entire route is in Los Angeles County.

Locationmi[3]kmDestinationsNotes
HawthorneDel Aire line00.0 
 
El Segundo Boulevard to I-405 (San Diego Freeway)
South end of La Cienega Boulevard; I-405 north exit 44
Del Aire0.20.32 
 
I-405 south (San Diego Freeway)
I-405 south exit 44/El Segundo Boulevard
0.50.80120th Street
Los AngelesLennox line0.91.4 
 
I-405 south (San Diego Freeway)
I-405 south exit 45B/Imperial Highway east
1.01.6 
 
 
Imperial Highway to I-405 north (San Diego Freeway)
I-405 north exit 45B
1.21.9 
 
I-405 south (San Diego Freeway) – Long Beach
I-405 south exit 45B/Imperial Highway west
1.93.1 
 
I-405 south (San Diego Freeway)
Next to I-405 south exit 46/Century Boulevard east
Los AngelesInglewood line2.03.2 
 
 
Century Boulevard to I-405 north (San Diego Freeway) – LAX
I-405 north exit 46
2.23.5 
 
I-405 south (San Diego Freeway)
I-405 south exit 46/Century Boulevard west
Inglewood2.54.0Arbor Vitae Street
3.04.8 
 
I-405 south (San Diego Freeway) / Olive Street
I-405 south exit 47
3.15.0Manchester BoulevardFormer SR 42
3.35.3Florence Avenue
3.55.6 
 
I-405 south (San Diego Freeway) – Long Beach
Interchange; I-405 south exit 47; no access from La Cienega Boulevard northbound
Los AngelesInglewood line4.36.9Centinela Avenue
South end of expressway
Ladera Heights5.08.0Slauson Avenue – Ladera HeightsInterchange; former SR 90
5.08.0Stocker Street
Los AngelesCulver City line6.810.9Kenneth Hahn State Recreation AreaInterchange
Los Angeles7.411.9South end of expressway
Obama Boulevard
7.812.6Jefferson Boulevard
8.012.9 
 
Fairfax Avenue to I-10 (Santa Monica Freeway)
Culver City8.213.2Washington Boulevard
Los Angeles8.513.7Venice Boulevard (SR 187)
8.613.8  I-10 (Santa Monica Freeway) – Santa Monica, Los AngelesInterchange; I-10 exit 7A
9.815.8Pico Boulevard
Los AngelesBeverly Hills line10.216.4Olympic Boulevard
Beverly Hills10.617.1Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles11.017.7San Vicente Boulevard
11.117.93rd Street
11.318.2Beverly BoulevardCenter of the so-called "studio zone"
West Hollywood11.819.0Melrose Avenue
12.319.8Santa Monica Boulevard (SR 2)
12.620.3Sunset BoulevardNorth end of La Cienega Boulevard
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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  1. ^ Monreal, Jane (March 20, 2008). "Top 7 restaurant rows in SoCal". ABC 7. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  2. ^ Julyan, Robert (1996). The Place Names of New Mexico. ISBN 9780826316899.
  3. ^ "Route of La Cienega Boulevard" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved March 23, 2024.
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