LAFAYETTE SQUARE, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
'Lafayette Square' is a small, gated neighborhood in Los Angeles, California. It sits just off of Crenshaw Boulevard in the Wilshire area. It was designated by the city as a Los Angeles Historic Preservation Overlay Zone in 2000 for its significant residential architecture and history.
Lafayette Square consists of eight blocks, centered around St. Charles Place, and situated between Venice Boulevard and Washington Boulevard. There are 236 homes in the neighborhood.[1]
According to the Los Angeles Conservancy, "Lafayette Square was the last and greatest of banker George L. Crenshaw's ten residential developments in the City of Los Angeles."[2] The neighborhood was founded in 19131; the gates surrounding the district are a relatively recent addition, coming only in 1989.
The neighborhood was always meant to be for higher-income families and now-historic houses regularly have 5,000 to floor plans, although the average home size is 1. Architectural styles include Neo-Federalist, Craftsman, Italianate and Spanish Revival, as well as several notable examples of early Modern. According to a ''Los Angeles Times'' real-estate section article on the district, "Most of the properties have period details: Juliet balconies, mahogany staircases and libraries, sitting rooms, stained glass windows, triple crown molding, soaring ceilings—even four-car garages."1
Famous residents of Lafayette Square have included George Pepperdine (founder of Pepperdine University), actors W.C. Fields and Fatty Arbuckle, industrialist and art collector Norton Simon, boxer Joe Louis, architect Paul R. Williams (who designed his own home in the neighborhood), and members of the Crenshaw family.
The neighborhood is zoned to schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District.
The neighborhood is zoned to the following schools:
★ Alta Loma Elementary School
★ Cochran Middle School (formerly Mount Vernon Middle School)
★ Los Angeles High School
Most of the new families in the neighborhood do not send their children to public school.1
1. Cohen, Allison B., "Neighborly Advice: History behind iron gates in Lafayette Square," ''Los Angeles Times'', 9 Feb 2003.
2. Los Angeles Conservancy, ''Los Angeles' Historic Preservation Overlay Zones'', 2002, pp. 14-15.
★ Lafayette Square Association
Lafayette Square consists of eight blocks, centered around St. Charles Place, and situated between Venice Boulevard and Washington Boulevard. There are 236 homes in the neighborhood.[1]
According to the Los Angeles Conservancy, "Lafayette Square was the last and greatest of banker George L. Crenshaw's ten residential developments in the City of Los Angeles."[2] The neighborhood was founded in 19131; the gates surrounding the district are a relatively recent addition, coming only in 1989.
The neighborhood was always meant to be for higher-income families and now-historic houses regularly have 5,000 to floor plans, although the average home size is 1. Architectural styles include Neo-Federalist, Craftsman, Italianate and Spanish Revival, as well as several notable examples of early Modern. According to a ''Los Angeles Times'' real-estate section article on the district, "Most of the properties have period details: Juliet balconies, mahogany staircases and libraries, sitting rooms, stained glass windows, triple crown molding, soaring ceilings—even four-car garages."1
Famous residents of Lafayette Square have included George Pepperdine (founder of Pepperdine University), actors W.C. Fields and Fatty Arbuckle, industrialist and art collector Norton Simon, boxer Joe Louis, architect Paul R. Williams (who designed his own home in the neighborhood), and members of the Crenshaw family.
| Contents |
| Education |
| References |
| External links |
Education
The neighborhood is zoned to schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District.
The neighborhood is zoned to the following schools:
★ Alta Loma Elementary School
★ Cochran Middle School (formerly Mount Vernon Middle School)
★ Los Angeles High School
Most of the new families in the neighborhood do not send their children to public school.1
References
1. Cohen, Allison B., "Neighborly Advice: History behind iron gates in Lafayette Square," ''Los Angeles Times'', 9 Feb 2003.
2. Los Angeles Conservancy, ''Los Angeles' Historic Preservation Overlay Zones'', 2002, pp. 14-15.
External links
★ Lafayette Square Association
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