Angelenos
in Wilshire Center are traveling to work, to school, to visit
friends and shopping by way of the MTA mass transit system,
local Smart Shuttle system, DASH, and by foot. Surrounding
the transit stops are high-activity, livable, pedestrian oriented
neighborhoods that are linked to other neighborhoods via rail,
bus and other modes of transportation. This pedestrian-oriented
neighborhood is identified by compact development that provides
for a full range of economic and social services, including
housing, ground floor retail, community and entertainment
facilities, grocery stores and cafes. Wilshire Center is vital,
active with potential for 24-hour living. Moreover, this area
contains a safe and clean environment with attractive settings
for living and working. By integrating life around MTA transit,
Wilshire Center and the City of Los Angeles have the opportunity
to reduce automobile congestion and consequently to better
the City's air quality, provide a more efficient land use
pattern and create a better quality of life for all Los Angeles
residents. Besides the net reduction of internally generated
traffic, a good jobs/housing balance strengthens the sense
of community and neighborhood and provides for a better overall
environment both socially and economically.
IMPLEMENTATION. The City of Los Angeles Planning Department,
in cooperation with the Wilshire Center Urban Design Taskforce
of the Wilshire Center & Koreatown Citizen Advisory Committee
of the Los Angeles Community Redevelopment Agency along with
many other community individuals and groups has initiated
a cooperative planning effort to update the Wilshire Community
Plan. This Community Plan Update (CPU) is to encourage wise
growth, provide appropriate locations for development, minimize
lengthy, discretionary approvals, and provide a certainty
and predictability for developers, homeowners, and anyone
else concerned with future development of Wilshire Center
and the surrounding area.
BACKGROUND. Wilshire Center is a long established
commercial and residential district in the core of Los Angeles.
It is an exciting and vital area where people work and/or
live adjacent to transportation links to all of L.A.'s business,
residential, and cultural areas. Wilshire Center is a Regional
Center for various interrelated commercial office, shopping,
residential, and cultural activities. It is generally bounded
on the south by Ninth St., on the east by Hoover St., on the
north by Third St., and on the west by Western Ave. (&
now Wilton Place). L.A. Wilshire District Plan, 1976.
HISTORY.
Gaylord Wilshire created the first stretch of Wilshire
Boulevard in 1895, the birth of Wilshire Center. In 1920 the
Wilshire Chamber of Commerce was formed. The Ambassador Hotel
opened its doors in 1921. In 1929 Bullocks Wilshire was built
at Wilshire and Westmoreland. The Wiltern Theatre opened in
1931. In 1952 the first high-rise office building was built
at Wilshire and Normandie. Between 1966 and 1976 some 22 office
buildings were built in Wilshire Center. Then in the 1980's
L.A.'s Planning Dept. designated an area south of Wilshire
Center as Koreatown - Vermont on the east, Western on the
west, 8th Street on the north and Olympic on the south.
REVITALIZATION. In the 1990's the revitalization program
began. The first program was the construction of the Metro
Red line which opened in 1996, allowing people a quick ride
to Downtown, Long Beach, LAX, and in the near future to Hollywood
and Universal City. Central Plaza along with the Radisson
Hotel and Southwestern University spent millions of dollars
on refurbishing their buildings. In 1993 the planning began
for the $6 million Streetscape Project with the planting of
more than 2000 trees, and with new sidewalks, medians, crosswalks
and signage which is to be completed in the Spring of 1998.
In 1995 the Wilshire Center and Koreatown Redevelopment Project
Area was created. The Wilshire Center Business Improvement
Corporation was formed in 1995 and in the same year City Council
established the Wilshire Center Business Improvement District
(WCBID) and appointed the Corporation's Board of Directors
as the Advisory Board of the WCBID. WCBID funded a new private
security patrol for the area. In 1997 Smart Shuttle, Inc.,
operating under a grant from LADOT, began weekday service
throughout Wilshire Center.
PROFILE. The greater Wilshire Center encompasses a
three-mile radius from Normandie and Wilshire. The total employment
is about 488,000 with about 636,000 residents. It has Los
Angeles' most ethnically and economically diverse population.
Wilshire Center is located in West Central Los Angeles.
BENEFITS. Wilshire Center provides the best value
in office and retail space in Los Angeles with some of the
largest available spaces in L.A. The Center has the best access
to and from here by major streets, freeways, and Metro Red
Line (three stations within easy walking distance of all businesses
along Wilshire).
It has the best value in housing for employees with some of
the best private schools in L.A. The Center is one of the
safest areas in Los Angeles. It is an attractive area due
to its architecture, urban form and streetscape elements.
The Center offers the best value for new development in retail,
entertainment, and housing. Wilshire Center's urban size allows
jobs, housing, daily needs and other activities to be within
easy walking distance to each other and to transit stops.
Frank Gehry, a world renowned architect, said "The real
downtown of L.A. is linear, it's Wilshire Boulevard."
GOAL. Create a place that provides jobs, retail, entertainment,
restaurants, cultural facilities, civic facilities, housing
and other services. Promote pedestrian activity and provide
a livable community for all.
OBJECTIVE. Reinforce existing and encourage the
development of a new Wilshire Center that accommodates a
broad range of uses that serve, provide job opportunities,
and are accessible to the residents, workers, and region,
are compatible with adjacent land uses, and are developed
to enhance urban lifestyles.
POLICIES. Accommodate intensity of activity and
incorporate retail uses in the ground floor of existing
and new structures that would induce considerable pedestrian
activity. Increase the density generally within one quarter
to one half mile of the transit stations. Encourage mixed
use development through the development of ground floor
retail use, sidewalk cafes, libraries, cultural facilities
and other services. Promote a diversity of housing types
to enable citizens from a wide range of economic levels
and age groups to live within Wilshire Center. Public spaces
should be designed to encourage the attention and presence
of people at all hours of the day and night.
| Time Line |
| 1993 |
- Planning begins for the $6 million Wilshire
Blvd. Streetscape Project, which will add 2,000
trees, 300 new flower planters and over a mile
of landscaped medians to the area.
|
| 1994 |
- Southwestern School of Law purchases the Art
Deco Bullock's Wilshire building to renovate
into a state-of-the-art law library.
|
| 1995 |
- The Community Redevelopment Agency creates
the Wilshire Center and Koreatown Redevelopment
Project Area.
- Wilshire Center Business Improvement Corporation
forms.
- Los Angeles City Council establishes the
Wilshire Center Business Improvement District
(BID).
|
| 1996
|
- Metro Red Line opens, allowing people to travel
quickly from Wilshire Center to Downtown, Long
Beach and LAX.
|
| 1997 |
- Weekly street maintenance services begin
along Wilshire Blvd., including cleaning of
sidewalks, street poles, signal boxes and other
public areas.
- Smart Shuttle buses begin operating in the
Wilshire Center.
- Southwestern School of Law Library opens
in the 1st floor of the Bullock's
Wilshire building.
|
| 1998 |
- The first phase of the Streetscape Project
is completed.
- The Wilshire Center BID, with assistance
from the City of Los Angeles, lays brick crosswalks
at every intersection between Wilton Place and
Hoover.
- Two gateway monuments are erected to welcome
visitors to Wilshire Center
- Weekday security bike patrols begin in the
Wilshire Center Area.
|
| 1999 |
- The number of security bike patrol officers
doubles, and the area patrolled every weekday
is expanded to include Sixth and Seventh Streets
and adjacent streets.
- The Southwestern School of Law is presented
with the Respectful Renovation Award by the
Windsor Square-Hancock Park Historical Society
for its renovation of the Bullock's Wilshire
building.
- DASH shuttles begin operating in the Wilshire
Center.
- The Tea Room in the Bullock's building reopens
as the new commissary for Southwestern School
of Law students.
- Metro Red Line expands to Hollywood from
Wilshire Center
|
| Future
Revitalization Efforts |
- Future of the Ambassador site - destination
entertainment/retail center and a Academy School
- Aroma Wilshire Center - sport and shopping
center.
- Redesigning and replacing of news racks within
Wilshire Center.
- Replacing current wire trash containers with
new receptacles.
- Redesigning and replacing of existing bus
benches.
- Installing community-approved bus shelters.
- Upgrading of the street lighting along Wilshire
Blvd.
|
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