Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shatto laid out Avalon's streets, and introduced it as a vacation destination to the general public. Despite Shatto's efforts, in a few years he had to default on his loan and the island went back to the Lick estate. [12] Avalon Bay from the north, ca.1900 Avalon Bay around 1910 from the south, before the construction of the Catalina Casino
Encino is situated in the central portion of the southern San Fernando Valley and on the north slope of the Santa Monica Mountains.It is flanked on the north by Reseda, Lake Balboa, and the Sepulveda Basin, on the east by Sherman Oaks, on the south by Brentwood, and on the west by Tarzana.
Areas under an evacuation warning include portions of Encino south of Ventura Boulevard, including the Gelson’s supermarket, and east of the 405 Freeway around Mulholland Drive, including ...
Stage of Avalon Theatre The Page organ. The Avalon Theatre is a movie theater on the first level, with a seating capacity of 1,154. [8] It has a single massive screen. [9] The theater has its original 4-manual, 16 rank pipe organ built by the Page Organ Company of Lima, Ohio. [8]
Get the Avalon, CA local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
The William Wrigley Jr. Summer Cottage, or "Mount Ada", is a historic residence located at 76 Wrigley Road in Avalon, on Santa Catalina Island, California. It was the former summer mansion and gardens of William Wrigley Jr. (1861–1932), the founder of the Wrigley Company. [2] It is on a hill, overlooking the town and Avalon Bay.
Los Encinos State Historic Park fountain "Encino Hot Springs" Los Angeles Evening Express, September 22, 1923. The Encino Springs are historic artesian springs that were the site of the Siutcanga village of the Tongva-Kizh people, and later provided water for Rancho Los Encinos in what is now the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles County, California.
The Encino Reservoir, is a controlled lake created by the damming of Encino creek. [1] It is located near the Encino neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley , California . With construction completed in 1924, it is owned by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (LADWP).