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North Long Beach (also referred to as North Town or Northside) is a predominantly working-class area of Long Beach, California.The neighborhood is bounded to the west, north and east by the Long Beach city limits (the Rancho Dominguez unincorporated county area and the cities of Compton, Paramount, Bellflower and Lakewood), and to the south by a Union Pacific railroad track and the Bixby ...
445-455 Pine Ave. 16.52.780: Gaytonia Apartment Building: 212 Quincy Ave. 16.52.790: Masonic Hall Commercial Building: 5351-53 Long Beach Blvd. 16.52.800: Art Theater Building: 2025 E. 4th St. 16.52.810: Ambassador Apartment Building: 35 Alboni Place 16.52.830: Merrill Building: 810-812 Long Beach Blvd. 16.52.840: Flossie Lewis House: 628 West ...
California and Hawaii can enforce bans on carrying guns in some public locations including bars and parks, a federal appeals court ruled on Friday, partly reversing lower court orders blocking the ...
In 2017 the office building was purchased by Long Beach based Pacific6 with plans for conversion to residential units. [7] The project was started in 2019, and when finished it will have approximately 80 units with access to rooftop terraces, the ground floor along Ocean Blvd. and Pine Ave. will have space for restaurants and boutiques. [8]
Long Beach fire authorities are investigating an explosion that occurred in an ADU that injured one person and displaced three people.
American Avenue in Long Beach, c. 1924 Model Cleaners, 25th & Long Beach Boulevard, Long Beach, 1977. In the 1970s, Long Beach Boulevard was lined with gay, lesbian, and transgender bars. Sailors from the local Long Beach Naval Shipyard and Naval Station would enjoy all the bar activity. Sailors had to be careful of military police "Witch Hunts ...
The Dolphins-Chiefs game gets underway at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 5. Fans looking for watch parties, here are 6 of the best in Palm Beach County.
The paper's operations were moved to the Arco Center in Downtown Long Beach. The building at 6th Street and Pine Avenue in Downtown Long Beach occupied nearly the entire block, and at one time encompassed the entire production of the paper, including the presses, which were formerly visible behind glass windows at street level. The old building ...