Los_Cerritos,_Long_Beach,_California
Los Cerritos, Long Beach, California
Neighborhood of Long Beach in Los Angeles, California, United States
Los Cerritos (sometimes called Los Cerritos/Virginia Country Club) is a neighborhood with approximately 700 homes and 2,000 residents located within the Bixby Knolls neighborhood of Long Beach, California. Established in 1906, the Los Cerritos neighborhood has been used by the film industry of Hollywood with its historic, estate-sized homes. It was one of three finalists in the 2007 Neighborhood of the Year national competition.
Los Cerritos, California | |
---|---|
Country | United States |
State | California |
County | Los Angeles |
City | Long Beach |
On October 7, 1906, 330 acres (130 ha) surrounding Rancho Los Cerritos were designated as the Los Cerritos subdivision.[1] Once streets were cut out into the designed tract, the lots began to sell.
In 1920, Thomas Gilchrist, an Oklahoma oilman, purchased 10 acres (4.0 ha) along La Linda Drive[2] and subdivided them into a development called La Linda, Spanish for "the pretty." In 1929, 20th century architect Kirtland Cutter designed three award-winning homes in the Los Cerritos Neighborhood.[3]
Until 1961, the neighborhood was served by the Pacific Electric Long Beach Line.[4]
Now one of Long Beach's oldest gated communities, the residential make-up of La Linda has changed. Many of the newer homes are larger.[5]
In 2007, Los Cerritos Neighborhood was one of three finalists in Neighborhood USA's Neighborhood of the Year national competition in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.[6]
- Charles T. McGrew and Sons[7]
- Clarence Aldrich - Leonie Pray House[8]
- George Montierth[9]
- Hugh Gibbs[10] - residence of Newton T. Bass[11]
- Paul Tay - the Pekrul House[12][13]
- Edward Killingsworth - family home[14]
- Coxhead and Coxhead - reconstruction of Bixby Ranch House on La Linda Drive[15]
- Greene and Greene - Jennie A. Reeve House[16]
- Kirtland Cutter - Casa el Sueño[17]
- Kirtland Cutter - Clock House, built for president of the United States Golf Association John Clock and his wife Blanche[18]
- Kurt Meyer[19]
In 1985, a home on Country Club Drive[20] in the Los Cerritos neighborhood was used as the Bueller family home in the 1986 comedy film Ferris Bueller's Day Off[21][22] and subsequently used in the 2001 comedy film Not Another Teen Movie, the 2002 thriller film Red Dragon, and in a Cheerios commercial. In 1998, two homes on Cedar Avenue in the Los Cerritos neighborhood were used in the 1999 teen comedy film American Pie.[23][24][25] In August 2000, another home on Country Club Drive was used as the fictional home for the teenager Donnie Darko in the 2001 drama/psychological thriller/science fiction film Donnie Darko.
- Los Cerritos Ranch House after restoration. Photo by Daniel Cathcart, March 8, 1934.
- The Leonie Pray House, built for Signal Hill oilman William E. "Billy" Babb in 1927; Tudor Revival architecture by Clarence Aldrich.[26] It appears in Not Another Teen Movie, Weird Science, and Donnie Darko.
- Northeast view of the Los Cerritos house used in the 1986 comedy film Ferris Bueller's Day Off as the Bueller family home. It also appears in Not Another Teen Movie and Red Dragon.
- Appears in American Pie and American Pie 2
- Appears in American Pie
- Appears in American Pie 2
- House by architect Hugh Gibbs, with addition by Edward Killingsworth.[10] It appears in the film Donnie Darko, an episode of the drama Joan of Arcadia, and in an advertising campaign for the Honda Fit.
- Bixby Ranch House/Harbottle Residence
- Then & Now, Los Cerritos Neighborhood Centennial October 7, 2006. Archived February 13, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Accessed March 16, 2008.
- Lachnit, Carroll. (May 2, 1999) Long Beach Press-Telegram Spotlighting Cutter's California Style Architecture. Section: Lifestyle; Page J3.
- Dudley, Stephen (28 June 2017). "Stopped at Cerritos". Pacific Electric Railway Historical Society. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
- Gonzaga, Samantha. (August 10, 2007) Long Beach Press-Telegram Are our houses getting too big? Section: News; page 4A.
- "PCAD - Clarence Nelson Aldrich". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
- "George Montierth Designed MCM in Long Beach". Curbed LA. 8 June 2013.
- Grobaty, Tim. "Country Club house was the home of Apple Valley's founder • Long Beach Post News". lbpost.com.
- O'Connor, Pauline (29 April 2019). "Groovy 1960s modern in Long Beach asking $975K". Curbed LA.
- "Sold: The Pekrul House, Paul Tay (1968)". Unique California Property.
- O'Connor, Pauline (17 September 2019). "Case Study architect's Long Beach home for sale for $3.3M". Curbed LA.
- "Our Story". lalindadrive.
- Grobary, Tim. (November 27, 2001) Long Beach Press-Telegram What's up: A month to remember. Section: Local News. Page A1.
- Grobaty, Tim. (February 21, 2003) Long Beach Press-Telegram What's Up:Filmers stay for the Pie. Section: Locan news. Page A2.
- Grobaty, Tim. (March 6, 2001) Long Beach Press-Telegram What's Up: L.B. Gets a Big Slab of Pie. Section: Locan news, page A2.
- Grobaty, Tim. (March 8, 2004) Long Beach Press-Telegram What's Up: Is your pad a movie house? Section: News, page A2.
- Grobaty, Tim. (May 9, 2006) Long Beach Press-Telegram What's Hot! Showtime for your house? Section News, Page A2.
- "PCAD - Clarence Nelson Aldrich". pcad.lib.washington.edu.
- Andriesse, (Summer 1987) "Los Cerritos: The Development of a Neighborhood," The Branded Word (newsletter of the Rancho Los Cerritos Historic Site).
- Knatz, Geraldine. (2004) History of the Los Cerritos neighborhood. (as noted in Preservation Honored.)
- Fugami, Caryn. (October 19, 2005) Long Beach Press-Telegram Morrison: Jewel of L.B. Section: News; page A12.