
The South Bay and surrounding regions in Southern California
The 'South Bay' is a region in the southwest peninsula of
Los Angeles County,
California,
United States. Its name stems from the fact that it stretches along the southern shores of
Santa Monica Bay, which forms its western border. The picture at right uses the broadest definition of the region, including all communities south of the
105 and west of
Long Beach (with the exception of
Compton, which is generally considered South LA). A more restrictive definition of the South Bay includes only the
Beach Cities (
Manhattan Beach,
Hermosa Beach,
Redondo Beach), the
Palos Verdes Peninsula, and
Torrance. This definition is more commonly found near the ocean, while not as accepted in the inland portions of the South Bay. The region is bordered on the north by
West Los Angeles, on the northeast by
South Los Angeles, on the east by the
Gateway Cities, and on the south and west by the
Pacific Ocean.
The
Harbor (
I-110),
San Diego (
I-405),
Gardena (
CA/SR-91), and
Century (
I-105) Freeways provide the region with its principal transportation links. The
Los Angeles MTA's Green Line
light rail line also serves the South Bay. Several ports and harbors in the South Bay provide access to
Santa Catalina Island, a popular resort.
Note that in
Southern California, "South Bay" may also refer to the
South Bay of the San Diego Area, this area includes cities such as Chula Vista and National City, California. In
Northern California, "South Bay" refers to the
South Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area.
People
The South Bay is one of the most culturally, economically, and ethnically diverse areas in the United States, with a largely even distribution of population among persons of European, Asian/Pacific Islander, African, and Latino ancestry. However, the racial and economic makeup varies widely across the region. The beach cities and the
Palos Verdes Peninsula are very affluent, with mostly white and Asian-American populations.
Manhattan Beach and
Palos Verdes are also two of the wealthiest communities in the United States with some of the most expensive real estate in the United States
[1]. The city of Carson also has a sizable population of wealthy African-Americans. The demographics are very different east of the 405
San Diego Freeway. Hawthorne and Gardena are a diverse communities with pluralities of blacks and Latinos. In recent years, some residents of The South Bay Have moved east into Hawthorne, Gardena, and Lawndale to find more affordable housing. As a result, cities such as Lawndale have experienced some of the greatest real estate gains in Los Angeles County. They form a kind of buffer between the wealthy beach cities to the west and the impoverished areas of
South Los Angeles to the east.
Gardena is also home to one of LA's oldest Japanese communities, though many of its younger and wealthier residents are moving to the
San Gabriel Valley.
Major employers
Port of Los Angeles
The
Port of Los Angeles, sprawling across the shorelines of San Pedro and Wilmington, is the busiest in the United States. When combined with the
Port of Long Beach, it is the fifth-busiest in the world. Traditionally, most of the populations of Wilmington and San Pedro have worked for the port in some capacity. It is increasingly the primary driver of the Southern California economy: industrial growth in the
Inland Empire is almost entirely attributable to increased port traffic since the 1980s. Unfortunately, the massive increase in cargo volume has created significant
air pollution (especially of
particulate matter resulting from the combustion of low-grade marine
diesel fuel) in neighboring communities.
Aerospace
The South Bay is the traditional home of Southern California's
aerospace industry. While considerably shrunken from its
Cold War peak, it still represents a major economic force, employing thousands in high-skill, high-wage
engineering positions and generating enormous amounts of tax revenue.
Northrop Grumman has a major facility in El Segundo where the
F/A-18 Hornet fuselage is manufactured, as well as the headquarters of the Space Technology division in
Redondo Beach and a facility at the
Hawthorne Municipal Airport.
Boeing and
Lockheed Martin also maintain extensive production facilities throughout the South Bay, and
Raytheon's Space and Airborne Systems business unit is based in El Segundo. The
Los Angeles Air Force Base, in El Segundo, is the locus of much of this aerospace research activity, as it is the primary development facility for military
satellites and other space programs.
DirecTV, a former subsidiary of
Hughes Aircraft, is also headquartered in El Segundo for this reason.
Refining

View of the Palos Verdes Peninsula. Los Angeles in the distance.
Petroleum refining is another important component of the South Bay's economy. Major South Bay refiners include
BP (
ARCO facility in Carson),
Chevron (El Segundo),
ConocoPhillips (Wilmington),
ExxonMobil (Torrance),
Shell (Wilmington), and
Valero (Wilmington). These refiners supply the lion's share of petroleum products for Southern California, as well as for
Nevada and
Arizona. As the Los Angeles region's oil fields are mostly exhausted, most of the crude oil that feeds the refineries is brought in from terminals at the port.
Local politicians and activists have long denounced the refineries for the amount of air pollution they generate, but in recent years these protests have been muted as the Port of Los Angeles has become the region's dominant polluter. The controversial practice of
residue flaring returned to the forefront during the September 12, 2005
Los Angeles Department of Water and Power outage; facing dangerous pressure buildups, refinery operators in Wilmington were forced to flare, resulting in dangerously bad air quality throughout the southeastern South Bay. The incident has renewed calls for restrictions on flaring in non-emergency situations.
Automotive
Japanese automobile manufacturers
Toyota and
Honda maintain their North American headquarters in the South Bay. (
Nissan was also headquartered in the South Bay until late 2005. The company then relocated to Tennessee, citing the high cost of running a business in California.) While these locations are largely the legacy of the region's historical importance as a Japanese-American population center, it has proven fortuitous for two reasons: first, it enables closer oversight of vehicle import operations at the nearby ports; and second, it gives them proximity to the automobile customization culture that is prominent in nearby
South Los Angeles.
Education
★
California State University, Dominguez Hills
★
Los Angeles Harbor College
★
El Camino College
★
Marymount College
★
College of Oceaneering
★
Westwood College
Media
In addition to the ''
Los Angeles Times'', the South Bay cities are served by their own daily paper, the ''
Daily Breeze''. The ''Daily Breeze'' is usually center-right in terms of its political stance. The
Beach Cities are also served by two free weekly papers,
The Beach Reporter and the
Easy Reader. The Palos Verdes Peninsula is served by the local semi-weekly paper, the
Palos Verdes Peninsula News. San Pedro, Wilmington, Carson and Lomita are served by ''
Random Lengths News'', a liberal bi-weekly, which began publication as a quarterly in late 1979.
Music
The South Bay has produced numerous significant
rock bands, beginning with Hawthorne natives
The Beach Boys in the early 1960s. Other notable South Bay-based groups include:
★
The Minutemen (San Pedro)
★
Black Flag (Redondo Beach)
★
Redd Kross (Hawthorne & Hermosa Beach)
★
The Descendents (Manhattan Beach)
★
Pennywise (Hermosa Beach)
★
Gabriels Fallen (Hermosa & Redondo Beach)
★
Third Party (Redondo Beach)
★
Circle Jerks (Hermosa Beach)
★
1208 (Hermosa Beach)
★
The Deviates (Torrance)
★
98 Mute (Hermosa Beach)
★
The Jim Mellon Quartet (South Torrance)
Black Flag guitarist
Greg Ginn's
SST record label, one of the most important
alternative rock labels of the 1980s, maintained its headquarters in Lawndale.
Communities in the South Bay
;Cities:
;Unincorporated Los Angeles County communities:
;Harbor Area communities in the City of Los Angeles
References
1. The Most Expensive Zip Codes
External links
History of the South Bay of Los Angeles
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City of Hermosa Beach
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City of Manhattan Beach
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City of Palos Verdes Estates
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City of Rancho Palos Verdes
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City of Redondo Beach
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City of Torrance
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City of Gardena
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South Bay Cities Council of Governments
History of the South Bay of Los Angeles