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Fact Sheet for Los Angeles
Location: California, western United States.
Country dialling code: 1 (also required within America, as well as the city code, when dialling from one city code to another). Metropolitan city codes include 213, 310, 323, 562, 626, 818, 909 and 949.
Population: 3.8 million (city); 9.8 million (Los Angeles County); 17 million (Los Angeles Five-County Area) (2002)
Ethnic mix: 31.1% white, 44.6% Hispanic, 9.5% African-American, 12% Asian/Pacific Islander, 2.8% other (including American Indian).
Time zone: GMT - 8 (GMT -7 from first Sunday in April to Saturday before last Sunday in October).
Electricity: 110 volts AC; standard two-pin plugs are used.
Average January temp: 14ºC (57ºF).
Average July temp: 23ºC (73ºF).
Annual rainfall: 375mm (14.84 inches).
Country dialling code: 1 (also required within America, as well as the city code, when dialling from one city code to another). Metropolitan city codes include 213, 310, 323, 562, 626, 818, 909 and 949.
Population: 3.8 million (city); 9.8 million (Los Angeles County); 17 million (Los Angeles Five-County Area) (2002)
Ethnic mix: 31.1% white, 44.6% Hispanic, 9.5% African-American, 12% Asian/Pacific Islander, 2.8% other (including American Indian).
Time zone: GMT - 8 (GMT -7 from first Sunday in April to Saturday before last Sunday in October).
Electricity: 110 volts AC; standard two-pin plugs are used.
Average January temp: 14ºC (57ºF).
Average July temp: 23ºC (73ºF).
Annual rainfall: 375mm (14.84 inches).

Los Angeles, America’s second largest city after New York, sprawls along the Pacific coast of southern California. Its coastline actually stretches 122km (76 miles) from Malibu to Long Beach, while inland the city spreads out to fill a vast, flat and once arid basin ringed by the Santa Monica and San Gabriel mountains.
Arriving by plane gives a good first impression of the city. From out of this vast flat grid of streets and buildings, there rises a cluster of imposing skyscrapers to mark Downtown – 26km (16 miles) inland from the coast. To the northeast is Pasadena; to the west and northwest are Hollywood, Beverly Hills and Century City, as well as the wide San Fernando Valley; to the south is Long Beach and along the west coast are Santa Monica, Venice Beach and Marina del Rey.
Founded in 1781 by Mexican settlers, the city was given the cumbersome name of El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de Los Angeles de Porciuncula (the Town of Our Lady Queen of the Angels of Porciuncula). Since then, it has been called everything from La La Land to Tinseltown but is most commonly known simply as LA. However, Los Angeles itself is actually just the largest of 88 different incorporated cities that make up the greater metropolitan area that we think of as Los Angeles.
Over the decades, the city grew from a cowtown to a Gold Rush boomtown to an oil town – and oil pumps can still be seen, bobbing up and down like mechanical donkeys. By the end of the 19th century, settlers were heading west in larger numbers, lured by the same thing that still attracts newcomers today: the mild climate, the sea and the almost continuous sunshine. On average, LA enjoys 292 sunny days each year, cooled by gentle ocean breezes and little rain. And the sunsets can be truly fabulous.
But the turning point in the city’s fame came in the 1920s, when the fledgling film industry realised that it was sunshine that was missing from their film-making in New York City – and so it decamped to the West. And Hollywood, then a simple district, became famous. Today, with major studios located here, such as Paramount, Universal, Fox and Warner Brothers, it is labelled the ‘Entertainment Capital of the World’.
However, there is more to LA than Hollywood. Disneyland, America’s famous fun park, which has just celebrated its 50th anniversary, is the area’s most popular site and well worth a visit. The city is also home to many world-renowned cultural institutions, such as the Museum of Contemporary Art, the LA Philharmonic (now based in the striking Walt Disney Concert Hall) and the Getty Museum. Visitors do come to see the huge Hollywood sign in Griffith Park and the mansions of the stars in Beverly Hills, but also to experience the nightlife on Sunset Strip, the beach life, the car culture and just to look at the people. LA is exuberant – there are few places in the world where the phrase ‘Express Yourself’ is taken so literally. From hippy health fanatics to muscled fitness freaks, from Art Deco lovers to devotees of off-beat religions – they all exist alongside the glamorous and the wealthy. From classic cars to silicone, LA represents people’s dreams – and thousands come seeking fame and fortune or just a new life. Los Angeles is the country’s gateway for immigrants from Asia, the Pacific Rim, Eastern Europe, Mexico and Latin America. People from 160 countries, speaking 96 different languages, make up Los Angeles.
But the population is fairly ghettoised. Afro-Americans live primarily in black suburbs, such as South Central LA and the Crenshaw District, which are poor and rundown and have high crime rates. Visitors are unlikely to go to these areas though and it can feel as though the black population (like the gangster rap that started here) barely touches on the rest of the city. But then much of Los Angeles lives in a bubble anyway. One where it is always sunny and nothing (be it smog, the occasional earthquake or a limited water supply for a growing population) will stop the Angelenos’ determination to work hard and live a rich life.
Source: worldtravelguide.net
Arriving by plane gives a good first impression of the city. From out of this vast flat grid of streets and buildings, there rises a cluster of imposing skyscrapers to mark Downtown – 26km (16 miles) inland from the coast. To the northeast is Pasadena; to the west and northwest are Hollywood, Beverly Hills and Century City, as well as the wide San Fernando Valley; to the south is Long Beach and along the west coast are Santa Monica, Venice Beach and Marina del Rey.
Founded in 1781 by Mexican settlers, the city was given the cumbersome name of El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de Los Angeles de Porciuncula (the Town of Our Lady Queen of the Angels of Porciuncula). Since then, it has been called everything from La La Land to Tinseltown but is most commonly known simply as LA. However, Los Angeles itself is actually just the largest of 88 different incorporated cities that make up the greater metropolitan area that we think of as Los Angeles.
Over the decades, the city grew from a cowtown to a Gold Rush boomtown to an oil town – and oil pumps can still be seen, bobbing up and down like mechanical donkeys. By the end of the 19th century, settlers were heading west in larger numbers, lured by the same thing that still attracts newcomers today: the mild climate, the sea and the almost continuous sunshine. On average, LA enjoys 292 sunny days each year, cooled by gentle ocean breezes and little rain. And the sunsets can be truly fabulous.
But the turning point in the city’s fame came in the 1920s, when the fledgling film industry realised that it was sunshine that was missing from their film-making in New York City – and so it decamped to the West. And Hollywood, then a simple district, became famous. Today, with major studios located here, such as Paramount, Universal, Fox and Warner Brothers, it is labelled the ‘Entertainment Capital of the World’.
However, there is more to LA than Hollywood. Disneyland, America’s famous fun park, which has just celebrated its 50th anniversary, is the area’s most popular site and well worth a visit. The city is also home to many world-renowned cultural institutions, such as the Museum of Contemporary Art, the LA Philharmonic (now based in the striking Walt Disney Concert Hall) and the Getty Museum. Visitors do come to see the huge Hollywood sign in Griffith Park and the mansions of the stars in Beverly Hills, but also to experience the nightlife on Sunset Strip, the beach life, the car culture and just to look at the people. LA is exuberant – there are few places in the world where the phrase ‘Express Yourself’ is taken so literally. From hippy health fanatics to muscled fitness freaks, from Art Deco lovers to devotees of off-beat religions – they all exist alongside the glamorous and the wealthy. From classic cars to silicone, LA represents people’s dreams – and thousands come seeking fame and fortune or just a new life. Los Angeles is the country’s gateway for immigrants from Asia, the Pacific Rim, Eastern Europe, Mexico and Latin America. People from 160 countries, speaking 96 different languages, make up Los Angeles.
But the population is fairly ghettoised. Afro-Americans live primarily in black suburbs, such as South Central LA and the Crenshaw District, which are poor and rundown and have high crime rates. Visitors are unlikely to go to these areas though and it can feel as though the black population (like the gangster rap that started here) barely touches on the rest of the city. But then much of Los Angeles lives in a bubble anyway. One where it is always sunny and nothing (be it smog, the occasional earthquake or a limited water supply for a growing population) will stop the Angelenos’ determination to work hard and live a rich life.
Source: worldtravelguide.net

