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The wait is finally over for city of Los Angeles residents wanting to comply with California's food waste mandate.. The Bureau of Sanitation announced Jan. 16 that residents citywide should ...
Bike lanes and other street improvements called for in Los Angeles' 2015 mobility plan would be mandated if citizen-sponsored Measure HLA passes. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
A Los Angeles County Department of Public Works sign along 7th Street in downtown Los Angeles. The department was formed in 1985 in a consolidation of the county Road Department, the Flood Control District (in charge of dams, spreading grounds, and channels), and the County Engineer (in charge of building safety, land survey, waterworks).
Puente Hills Landfill was the largest landfill in the United States, rising 500 feet (150 meters) high and covering 700 acres (2.8 km 2). [1] Originally opened in 1957 in a back canyon in the Puente Hills, the landfill was made to meet the demands of urbanization and waste-disposal east of Los Angeles.
This is a list of notable districts and neighborhoods within the city of Los Angeles in the U.S. state of California, present and past.It includes residential and commercial industrial areas, historic preservation zones, and business-improvement districts, but does not include sales subdivisions, tract names, homeowners associations, and informal names for areas.
Los Angeles portal; List of Los Angeles placename etymologies; Transportation in Los Angeles; Pico and Sepulveda; Los Angeles streets, 1–10; Los Angeles streets, 11–40; Los Angeles streets, 41–250; Los Angeles Avenues; List of streets in the San Gabriel Valley
Roscoe Boulevard has four lanes or more for almost its entire length and is arterial for most of its length, but is residential for two short sections in Sun Valley, these sections separated by a 0.7 miles (1.1 km) gap from the rest of the street and a 0.1 miles (0.16 km) gap from each other.
The Toyon Canyon Landfill is located within Griffith Park in the Los Feliz hillside neighborhood of greater Hollywood in central Los Angeles, California in the Santa Monica Mountains. The landfill began filling in 1957 and ended in 1985. A lawsuit in 1959 attempted to stop the project but was unsuccessful. [1]