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The Santa Monica Pier is located at the intersection of Ocean and Colorado. [3] Many major east–west arterial roads such as Wilshire Boulevard, Santa Monica Boulevard, and Pico Boulevard begin their western ends on Ocean Avenue. Southeast bound past Pico Boulevard, Ocean turns into Neilson Way.
In 1985, Irving and von Kersting opened Ivy at the Shore on Ocean Avenue, near the Santa Monica pier. Ivy at the Shore serves a similar menu to The Ivy in a relaxed, tropical atmosphere with a scenic view of the Pacific Ocean, and features a front patio overlooking the ocean and a large outdoor garden in back.
Street numbering increases to the west, beginning with the number 11400 at Wilshire Boulevard. The last number on San Vicente Boulevard in Los Angeles' address grid is 13100. On the Santa Monica side, the numbering follows that city's grid, beginning at 2600 and decreasing towards the ocean. At Ocean Avenue, the road terminates at number 100.
West Hollywood City Hall at 8300 Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood. The western terminus of Santa Monica Boulevard is at Ocean Avenue near the Pacific Ocean. From there until the San Diego Freeway (Interstate 405), Santa Monica Boulevard is a densely urban commercial street.
PB Catch, the 12-year-old Sunrise Avenue seafood restaurant and raw bar, launched both lunch and late-afternoon menus. Rock shrimp salad lunch item at PB Catch.
Hotel Arcadia, circa 1890. The Hotel Arcadia was a hotel in Santa Monica, California that stood on the oceanfront between 1886 and 1909. [1] The hotel was located on Ocean Avenue between Colorado and Front (later Pico Boulevard).
Ocean Avenue (San Francisco), California, see Ocean Avenue/CCSF Pedestrian Bridge station; Ocean Avenue (Santa Monica), California; Ocean Avenue (Palm Beach), Florida; see Florida State Road A1A § Major intersections; Ocean Avenue (Daytona Beach), Florida; see Daytona Beach Boardwalk; Ocean Avenue (Brooklyn), New York
Palisades Park is a 26.4-acre (10.7 ha) park in Santa Monica, California. The park is located along a 1.6-mile (2.6 km) section of Ocean Avenue on top of an uplifted unconsolidated sedimentary coastal Quaternary terrace with exposed bluffs, offering views of both the Pacific Ocean and the coastal mountains.