District Profile
The Thirteenth District comprises eighteen neighborhoods known
in Los Angeles and throughout the world for their dynamism, diversity,
and creativity. Nestled between the skyscrapers of Downtown Los
Angeles and the glitter of Hollywood, it is the most densely-populated
council district in the city. The Thirteenth District has it all:
a river and a lake, hills and flats, sound stages and hospitals,
subway stops, freeways and pedestrian commerical districts, world-class
museums and community art galleries, some of the most famous architectural
homes ever built and national award-winning affordable housing.
GEOGRAPHY
The Thirteenth District covers exactly 13.13 sq. miles, the geographically
smallest, most densely-populated council district in the City of
Los Angeles. The stretches from its western corner at Hollywood
Blvd. and La Brea to Elysian Park and Division Street in Glassell
Park (click here for a map) on its easternmost
boundary. It includes part or all of the neighborhoods of Hollywood,
East Hollywood, Thai Town, Little Armenia, Los Feliz, Virgil Village,
Silver Lake, Echo Park, Temple-Beverly, Koreatown, Historic Filipinotown,
Westlake, Wilshire Center, Melrose Hill, Echo Park, Elysian Valley,
Atwater Village, and Glassell Park (see if
you are a resident of the 13th District).
Notable geographic features of District 13 include the Hollywood
Walk of Fame, Echo Park Lake, Elysian Park, the Silver Lake Reservoir,
Barnsdall Art Park (and Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hollyhock House),
Angelus Temple, Sunset Junction, and Los Angeles City College (the
former campus of UCLA). The district includes the most subway stops
of any district in the city, the largest natural-bottomed (unpaved)
stretch of the Los Angeles River, and the city’s steepest
street (Fargo St. in Echo Park).
The district is defined by its geographic diversity: hills and
flats, rivers and lakes, high-rise buildings and quiet single-family
homes, mixed-use developments and horse stables. The 13th has it
all!
DEMOGRAPHICS
With more than 100 languages spoken in its streets, the 13th District
is one of the most incredible mixes of people ever assembled in
one place. According to the US Census Bureau, more than a quarter-million
people reside in the district. Approximately 60% of the residents
are foreign-born, and ethnic breakdown of the district is 62% Latino,
16% Anglo, 16% Asian-American, 3% African-American, and 3% American
Indian/Mixed Race/Other. 83% of the residents of the district are
renters and the median household income is $24,074 with 40% children
living in poverty. 16% of the residents of the 13th District have
no education beyond the 6th Grade, 46% have no high school diploma,
and 17% have a bachelor’s degree or higher. The average household
size is 2.9 persons.
More than 100 languages are spoken in the district with significant
populations of Mexican, Central American, Filipino, Armenian, Korean,
Thai, Cambodian, African, and Chinese immigrants. 30% of the population
in the district is under 20 years old, while 11% is over 60 years
old.
ECONOMY
The largest industries in the district are entertainment/technology,
healthcare, education, and tourism, each a critical industry to
the overall health of the Los Angeles economy. The neighborhoods
of the district each have vibrant business districts with neighborhood-focused
shopping, restaurants, and chambers of commerce.
The ten largest employers in the district are (in order):
- Paramount Pictures Corporation 5,000
- Kaiser Permanente Hospital 5,000
- Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles 3,600
- Sunset Gower Studios 2,500
- Los Angeles City College 2,271
- St. Vincent’s Medical Center 1,800
- Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center 1,550
- City of Angels Medical Center 900
- Nielsen Entertainment 700
- Deluxe Laboratories, Inc. 600
In the 13th District, you can find the first hospital in Los Angeles,
the location of the first oil discovered in the region, and the
location of the world’s first full-length motion picture ever
shot!
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