Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Los Angeles Haunted Hayride is a yearly Halloween haunted hayride in Los Angeles, California, located near the city's Old Zoo in Griffith Park. [1] It was created by Ten Thirty One Productions, subsequently receiving a record Shark Tank investment from Mark Cuban, [2] [3] [4] and bought out by haunted attraction company Thirteenth Floor Entertainment Group.
Travel Town Museum is a railway museum dedicated on December 14, 1952, and located in the northwest corner of Los Angeles, California's Griffith Park.The history of railroad transportation in the western United States from 1880 to the 1930s is the primary focus of the museum's collection, with an emphasis on railroading in Southern California and the Los Angeles area.
A sign posted before the railway was closed, 1969. The railway was closed on May 17 [20] or May 18, 1969, [21] [22] when the Bunker Hill area underwent a controversial total redevelopment, which destroyed and displaced a community of almost 22,000 working-class families who were renting rooms in architecturally significant but run-down buildings; the demolished residences were replaced with a ...
Los Angeles actually offers a lot of free things to do around town, including world class museums offering free admissions, plenty of hiking trails, music performances and much more. Whether you ...
Free bus and train rides on L.A. Metro are being offered through Sunday. ... (Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times) ... America’s 50 most expensive retirement towns.
Beverly Park "The 'Kiddieland' that Inspired Walt Disney" Location Los Angeles, California, United States Coordinates 34°04′30″N 118°22′37″W / 34.075°N 118.377°W / 34.075; -118.377 Status Defunct Opened 1943 Closed 1974 Owner David Bradley General manager Bud Benner Slogan The greatest children's amusement center on earth Operating season Weekends and Holidays Area 400 ...
Robotaxis will begin cruising the streets of Los Angeles on Thursday when Google spinoff Waymo starts offering free rides to some of the roughly 50,000 people who have signed up for its driverless ...
Chutes Park in Los Angeles, California began as a trolley park in 1887. It was a 35-acre (140,000 m 2) amusement park bounded by Grand Avenue on the west, Main Street on the east, Washington Boulevard on the north and 21st Street on the south. At various times it included rides, animal exhibits, a theater and a baseball park.