| About Valley
Village - Valley Village is a neighborhood
of Los Angeles, California. It is located in the San
Fernando Valley, east of Studio City and west of North
Hollywood, and mostly consists of single family homes
and small shops. Until the early 1990s, it was considered
part of North Hollywood, though it was more upscale
than most of North Hollywood. It broke away and renamed
itself to boost real estate values, as is common in
the Valley. Like Studio City and Sherman Oaks, Valley
Village has a large Jewish population.
The northwest corner of Victory Boulevard and Laurel
Canyon Boulevard is home to Valley Plaza, once reported
to be part of the largest suburban shopping center west
of the Mississippi (when taken together with Laurel
Plaza, located on the southeast corner of the same intersection).
The original Sears anchor store was dedicated in 1952,
and is still open for business.
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Living in Valley Village
People of Valley Village - Latinos
and Whites are nearly even in numbers comprising more
than four out of five Valley residents. In general,
communities in the northeastern, central, and western
parts of the Valley contain the highest concentration
of Latinos. Whites live mainly along the communities
along the region's mountain rim. Burbank and Glendale
have an influential and large Latino communities. San
Fernando, Calabasas, and Hidden Hills are quite homogenous
in racial makeup. Asian-Americans make up 10.7% of the
population and are scattered throughout the Valley floor
but some clusters can be found in Chatsworth, Panorama
City, Glendale and Granada Hills. Lake View Terrace
is 16 percent African-American significantly above the
4.1% average for the Valley.
Although poverty rates in the San Fernando Valley are
lower than the rest of the county (15.3% compared to
17.9%), eight San Fernando Valley communities have at
least one of out five residents living in poverty. Although
heavily-Latino Pacoima is widely known in the region
as a hub of suburban blight, other mostly Latino places
like Mission Hills, Arleta, and Sylmar have poverty
rates well below the regional average and lower than
in some whiter neighborhoods.
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State of California
| Los Angeles | Alhambra
| Altadena | Anaheim
| Arcadia | Bell
| Buena Park
| Burbank | Carson
| Compton | Corona
| Costa Mesa
| Downey | Fountain
Valley | Garden
Grove | Glendale
| Huntington
Beach | Inglewood
| Irvine | La
Habra | Lakewood
| Long Beach
| Monrovia | North
Hollywood | Northridge
| Norwalk | Ontario
| Orange | Pacoima
| Panorama City
| Pasadena | Pomona
| Rancho Cucamonga
| San Pedro |
Santa Ana | Santa
Monica | Sherman
Oaks | South
Gate | Thousand
Oaks | Torrance
| Tustin | Valley
Village | Van Nuys
| Whittier |
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