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The Laguna Hills Civic Center was an existing office building at 24035 El Toro Road – near the Laguna Hills Mall – which was bought and totally renovated by the city. The city moved its City Hall there in 2004, but also rents out space in the building on a commercial basis, providing the city with a positive net income on the building.
Laguna Woods (Laguna, Spanish for "Lagoon") is a city in Orange County, California, United States. The population was 17,644 at the 2020 census, [8] up from 16,192 at the 2010 census, with a median age of 74.5 (as of 2021). [9] Laguna Woods became Orange County's 32nd city on March 24, 1999, after local residents voted to incorporate. [10]
Unlike Emerald Bay, however, Irvine Cove is within the city limits of Laguna Beach. Emerald Bay is one of two unincorporated areas on the coast of Orange County, the other being a portion of Crystal Cove State Park located between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. It is the only unincorporated populated place on the county's coastline.
The 92694 ZCTA is statistically equivalent to Ladera Ranch. This is a map of what was completed in 2000. At the 2000 census, the Census Bureau did not define a census-designated place called Ladera Ranch, but it did define a Zip Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA), 92694.
Aliso Viejo (Spanish for "Old Sycamore") is a city in the San Joaquin Hills of southern Orange County, California. It had a population of 52,176 as of the 2020 census, up from 47,823 as of the 2010 census. It became Orange County's 34th city on July 1, 2001, the only city in Orange County to be incorporated since 2000.
Laguna Beach is the tenth official Transition Town in the U.S. In February 2007, Laguna's city council unanimously voted to join the U.S. Mayors Climate Initiative, and in April 2013 became the first Orange County city to make a formal request that the San Onofre Nuclear Reactor not be restarted after its January 2012 shutdown. The Aliso Creek ...
The 40th district takes in the cities of Tustin, Yorba Linda, Lake Forest, Laguna Woods, Laguna Hills, Mission Viejo, Rancho Santa Margarita, Brea, Villa Park, Aliso Viejo, eastern Orange, and eastern Anaheim, as well as the census-designated places North Tustin, Silverado, Williams Canyon, Modjeska, Trabuco Canyon and Coto de Caza.
Cortese filed his first subdivision map for Rossmoor on October 20, 1956, and filed his thirteenth and final map on March 21, 1960. [3] Cortese's original partners in securing the first large parcels of land that would become Rossmoor included California governor Goodwin Knight and Judge Alfred Gittelson, who had also partnered with him in the ...