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Chinatown, Los Angeles

Chinatown is a neighborhood in Downtown Los Angeles, California, that became a commercial center for Chinese and other Asian businesses in Central Los Angeles in 1938. The area includes restaurants, shops, and art galleries, but also has a residential neighborhood with a low-income, aging population of about 7,800 residents.

Chinatown

94 m (308 ft)

UTC-7 (PDT)

90012

The original Chinatown developed in the late 19th century, and was demolished to make room for Union Station, the city's major ground-transportation center.[2][3][4] This neighborhood and commercial center, referred to as "New Chinatown," opened for business in 1938.

Broadway

to the west and northwest, Beaudry and Figueroa streets and the greater neighborhood

Echo Park

Los Angeles State Historic Park

on the south, and the Civic Center and Los Angeles Plaza historic districts of Downtown Los Angeles

Cesar Chavez Avenue

According to Community Redevelopment Agency of the City of Los Angeles (CRA/LA), borders of (the current) Chinatown neighborhood are:[5][6][7]

Central Plaza

The dragon mural painted by Tyrus Wong and restored by Fu Ding Cheng (1984)

The dragon mural painted by Tyrus Wong and restored by Fu Ding Cheng (1984)

New Chinatown main plaza - Dec 2011

New Chinatown main plaza - Dec 2011

Wishing Well, 2001

Wishing Well, 2001

Demographics[edit]

The 2020 U.S. census counted 7,798 residents.[26] The 2010 U.S. census counted 20,913 residents in the 0.91-square-mile Chinatown neighborhood, excluding the population of the Los Angeles County Jail complex. That made an average of 9,650 people per square mile, which included the empty Cornfield area.[27]


The ethnic breakdown in 2010: Asian, 68.8%; Latino, 14.7%; blacks, 6.7%; whites, 8.7%; mixed race, 0.8%; and others, 2.3%.[28]


The median household income in 2010 dollars ($29,000), was the third-lowest in Los Angeles County, preceded by Watts ($28,200) and Downtown ($24,300). The percentage of households earning $20,000 or less (53.6%) was the third-largest in Los Angeles County, preceded by Downtown (57.4%) and University Park (56.6%). The average household size of 2.8 people was just about the city norm. Renters occupied 91% of the housing units, and home- or apartment owners the rest.[27]

Economy[edit]

Retail[edit]

Small, specialized grocery stores are important to the aging population but few remain as gentrification impacts the neighborhood.[29] The Chinese-Vietnamese residents own many bazaars. The stores sell products such as soap, toys, clothes, music CDs at low prices. Several restaurants in Chinatown serve mainly Cantonese cuisine but there are also various Asian cuisine restaurants such as Teochew Chinese, Vietnamese, Indonesian, and Thai, which reflects the diverse character of Chinatown. Few boba cafes have opened in Chinatown, but a large number are to be found in the Chinese enclaves in the San Gabriel Valley.


Dynasty Center, Saigon Plaza, and the Chinatown Phuoc Loc Tho Center feature many Vietnamese-style bazaars with people engaged in bargain shopping for items such as clothing, toys, Chinese-language CDs, pets, household items, funerary products, and so on. Its entrepreneurs are ethnic Chinese from Vietnam.


There are over 20 art galleries to see, mostly featuring non-Chinese modern art, with works from up and coming artists in all types of media.[11]

also known as the Cornfield,[41] consists of a long open space between Spring Street and the tracks of the Metro A Line.

Los Angeles State Historic Park

Alpine Recreation Center, at 817 Yale Street, has a combined and multipurpose room with a capacity of 250. Two indoor gymnasiums have capacities of 450 each. There are also basketball courts (lighted/indoor/outdoor), a children's play area and volleyball courts (lighted).

[42]

Endeavor College Preparatory Charter School, middle, 126 Bloom Street

Castelar Street Elementary School, LAUSD, 840 Yale Street; second oldest school in the district

[49]

a private Catholic boys' school, just down the hill from Dodger Stadium, is located on the north side of Chinatown. [5]

Cathedral High School

- largest stand-alone ESL adult school in the nation[50]

Evans Community Adult School

According to U.S. Census data, 20.2% of Chinatown residents aged 25 and older possessed a four-year degree in 2023.[47] There are three schools operating within Chinatown. They are:[48]


Los Angeles Public Library operates the Chinatown Branch.

[54]

Chinatown

[55]

Rush Hour

[56]

I Love You, Man

[57]

Gangster Squad

Lethal Weapon 4

[58]

Beverly Hills Ninja

[58]

Strange Days

[58]

Hard to Kill

Balls of Fury

[59]

15 Minutes

Chinatown has served as the setting for many Hollywood films. The conclusion of the film Chinatown was filmed on Spring Street.[54] The movie Rush Hour was filmed on location in Chinatown.[55]

(1847–1889), 19th Century property owner[60]

Cayetano Apablasa

(1927-2009), architect

Helen Liu Fong

(1898–1977), attorney, community leader[61]

You Chung Hong

animator, artist and actor[62]

Milton Quon

(Chinese: 李小龍) (1940 – 1973), actor, whose statue is located at Central Plaza[14]

Bruce Lee

(Chinese: 吳漢潤) (1940–1996), actor[63][64]

Haing S. Ngor

(1899–1999), "Mama Quon," chef at Quon Bros. Grand Star Restaurant

Yiu Hai Seto Quon

author[65]

Lisa See

(ca. 1858–1893), liquor and wine dealer, member of the Los Angeles Common Council[66][67]

Otto G. Weyse

(1910–2016), artist

Tyrus Wong

(1915-2012), businessman and leader in the Chinese-American community[68]

Wilbur Woo

(天后宮) located in Los Angeles's Chinatown

Thien Hau Temple

Chinese American Museum

Chinese Historical Society of Southern California

List of Chinatowns

List of districts and neighborhoods of Los Angeles

Sonoratown, Los Angeles

Chinese massacre of 1871

Bonnie Tsui, 2009 ISBN 978-1-4165-5723-4.

American Chinatown: A People's History of Five Neighborhoods

China Blues, Eio Books 2012, ISBN 0-9759255-7-1. Contains detailed history of Chinese immigration to California and other historical information relating to Chinatown. Also, how the Chinese were treated in California.

Ki Longfellow

Los Angeles Chinese American Museum

Los Angeles Chinatown Firecracker Run

Chinese Historical Society of Southern California (Los Angeles Chinatown)

Chinese Chamber of Commerce of Los Angeles

Los Angeles Chinatown Business Council Official Website

Chinatown community leader

KCET Departures interview with Munson Kwok

Chinatown crime map and statistics

from the UC Berkeley Bancroft Library

Pictures of Chinatown in 1911