Los Angeles Travel Guide
Millions of visitors arrive each year in Los Angeles eager to experience for themselves the epitome of the American Dream; to find the self-indulgent living soap-opera lifestyles, to experience firsthand the images that are strangely-familiar thanks to the ’big screen’, and to walk in the footsteps of the stars. The fantasy worlds of Disneyland and Hollywood, the famed extravagance of Beverley Hills and Malibu, and the sun-soaked beach culture are just some of the attractions within this ’City of Angels’.
Los Angeles is not really a city but rather a sprawling metropolis constituting more than 80 smaller city areas woven together by a daunting network of traffic-congested freeways without a clearly defined centre. LA is just one of these cities with Downtown at its heart, and lying outside the city limits is the surrounding conglomeration of cities that comprises LA County.
Los Angeles offers a dazzling variety of attractions and world-famous amusements. Downtown is a mixture of cultures and local communities: the traditional herbalists of Chinatown’s Bamboo Lane; Little Tokyo with its sushi bars and Japanese gardens; and the narrow Latino-influenced Olvera Street. Los Angeles County is endowed with a rich diversity of backgrounds and is a mix-and-match of people from 140 countries speaking 96 different languages, of those who have left home to seek acceptance for ideas or unconventional lifestyles not tolerated in the more conservative parts of the country, and would-be stars with dreams of fame and fortune. West Hollywood is the focal point of gay and lesbian culture, and the posh beachside resort of Santa Monica and body-builders at Muscle Beach, as well as the childhood fantasy of Disneyland are all a part of the diversity, although not always a harmonious one. There are exciting museums, cinemas featuring every conceivable production, swanky boutiques with the latest fashions, comedy clubs, poetry readings and coffee house recitals, and music of every kind played in various venues throughout the city.
Underneath the huge ’Hollywood’ sign on the crest of the Hollywood Hills, the high energy and pleasure-seeking atmosphere, bold billboards, sexy sun-bronzed people, bright lights and fancy cars are images of a city that everyone loves to hate; but whether one likes what one finds or not, Los Angeles must be experienced at least once in a lifetime.
Getting Around
The city of LA sprawls over such a large area that getting around without a car can be frustrating and time consuming. The complex network of freeways connecting the sprawl can be intimidating, especially if not used to driving in big cities, but with a map or good directions hiring a car is the best and most popular way to see LA. The city was designed with the automobile in mind and is more driver-friendly than most big cities with wide streets and plenty of parking. If possible, visitors should avoid rush hour traffic, which is heaviest from 7am to 10am and 3pm to 7pm. LA is one of the cheapest places in the country to rent a car. It is also possible to get around by bus, but frequent transfers and long distances can make this slow and impractical, and they are not recommended for late night travel. The MetroRail system has three lines that cover only a small area of LA, but are frequent and efficient. Taxis are also available, but can be expensive due to the long distances.
Attractions
Disneyland Resort:
Claiming to be ’The Happiest Place on Earth’, Disneyland is an integral part of an American childhood and was the world’s first mega theme park designed for the family by Walt Disney in 1955. It is one of America’s most famous attractions and despite competition from other similar parks in Florida, Paris and Tokyo, nothing can compare to the original. It is an enchanted kingdom of fantasy and imagination filled with magical entertainment and attractions. The park is divided into eight ’lands’ and each one features different rides, dining experiences and entertainment as well as daily live-action shows and parades. Adventureland, Fantasyland, Critter Country, Frontierland, Mickey’s Toontown, Tomorrowland, New Orleans Square and Main Street USA offer such attractions as a boat trip through the underground caverns of ’Pirates of the Caribbean’, an experience of the Wild West, a visit to Sleeping Beauty’s Castle and flying with Dumbo the elephant, a giddy journey with Indiana Jones, or the experience of a pitch-black rollercoaster ride inside Space Mountain, and a wet ride on Splash Mountain. There is also a new shopping, dining and entertainment district called Downtown Disney. The latest appendage to Disneyland is the adjacent California Adventure, a separate park with the same style that offers further rides and rollercoasters, but an additional ticket is required. The parks are busiest during summer from mid-June to mid-September and during school holidays and there are usually long queues at the popular rides. The new Fastpass system allows visitors to reserve a place in line at the park’s busiest attractions.
Address: 1313 Harbour Boulevard, Anaheim Telephone: (714) 781 4565 Website: www.disneyland.com Opening Time: Open daily from 8am to 1am in summer; and Monday to Friday from 10am to 6pm, Saturday from 9am to midnight, Sunday from 9am to 10pm Admission: Tickets to each park are US$53 (adults), US$43 (children, under 10 years of age) which includes all rides, festivities and entertainment. Two, three and four-day passes, or combination tickets for both parks are also availableHollywood:
Los Angeles is the film and entertainment capital of the world and the name ’Hollywood’ is the embodiment of glamour, success and money; the place where films are made, television shows are recorded and stars take up residence. The famous Hollywood sign on the hills above the city has become the enduring symbol of the movie industry and of Los Angeles itself - the 50ft-high (15m) white letters can be seen from miles away. The historic heart of the movie industry is centred on Hollywood Boulevard where millions of visitors flock to see landmark attractions and museums. The impressive Mann’s (Grauman’s) Chinese Theatre is famous for its courtyard where over 200 stars like Elizabeth Taylor, Paul Newman, Clint Eastwood and Frank Sinatra have set their signatures and imprints of their hands or feet in cement. For many years the theatre has been the spot for movie premieres and is modelled on a Chinese temple with columns, dragons and an ornate interior. Passing in front of the theatre is the mile-long Walk of Fame, the world-famous sidewalk embedded with the names of legendary television, film, radio, theatre and recording greats engraved within pink granite stars. More than 2,500 celebrities are honoured, including Elvis Presley, Charlie Chapman, Marilyn Monroe and Michael Jackson. The cylindrical Capitol Records Tower is one of the most recognisable buildings in the city and is supposed to resemble a 12-storey stack of records with a needle on top that blinks out ’h-o-l-l-y-w-o-o-d’ in Morse code. Other attractions include the Kodak Theatre designed to host the Academy Awards, and the Hollywood Entertainment Museum, as well as the Hollywood Guinness World Records Museum, the Hollywood Wax Museum and the Ripley’s ’Believe It or Not!’ Museum.
Telephone: Mann’s Chinese Theatre (323) 461 3331, Walk of Fame (323) 469 8311, Hollywood Entertainment Museum (323) 465 7900, Guinness World Records Museum (323) 463 6433, Wax Museum (323) 462 5991, Ripley’s ‘Believe It or Not!’ Museum (323) 466 6335 Website: www.hollywoodmuseum.com Opening Time: Hollywood Entertainment Museum opens daily 10am to 6pm (summer) and 11am to 6pm in winter (closed Wednesdays). The Guinness World Records Museum opens from Sunday to Thursday 10am to midnight, and Friday and Saturday 10am to 1am; Wax Museum daily 10am to midnight; Ripley’s ‘Believe It or Not!’ Museum open daily 10am to 10.30pm (winter), and 9am to 11pm/midnight (summer) Admission: Mann’s Chinese Theatre movie tickets US$9. Hollywood Entertainment Museum US$10. Guinness World Records Museum and Wax Museum US$10.95 each. Ripley’s ‘Believe It or Not!’ Museum $11.95. Concessions are availableThe Beach Communities:
The miles of sandy beaches along the Pacific Ocean are a celebration of the Californian lifestyle with distinct neighbourhoods and oceanfront walks linking the communities. Malibu is popular with the privacy seeking rich and famous and their mansions line strips of privately owned shoreline; the wide sandy beaches, rocky outcrops and green open-spaces make Malibu the most scenic neighbourhood in LA. It presents the classic Californian beach babe image immortalised by the ‘Beach Boys’ and ‘Baywatch’. LA’s premiere beach community, Santa Monica, is known for its alternative beachfront atmosphere, as well as its famous hideaway Hollywood residents. The palm-lined cliffs - once the location of the homes of Clark Gable, Joan Crawford and Greta Garbo - are today home to celebrities like Merryl Streep, Rod Stewart and Michelle Pfeiffer. The neighbourhood’s famous landmark is the Santa Monica Pier, boasting old-world carnival attractions, including a wooden 1920s carousel with painted horses, and plenty of seafood restaurants. Third Street Promenade is a lively pedestrian mall bustling with buskers, street vendors, evangelists and original shops, and is the heart of Santa Monica’s cafes, restaurants and bars. Venice is best known for its Ocean Front Walk that is a non-stop parade of jugglers, artists, vendors, musicians and joggers. Venice Beach provides a classic Los Angeles lifestyle experience where beautiful sun-bronzed bodies on bicycles and rollerblades cruise along the walkway to Muscle Beach, where the outdoor weightlifting gym gleams with the sweat of muscle-bound hunks flexing their pecs for the onlookers. The area is full of laid back cafes and restaurants, health food shops, bike and blade rentals, and second hand record stores. After dark however the area becomes the haunt of street gangs and drug dealers; and visitors are advised to exercise caution in the area.
Universal Studios Hollywood:
One of the most popular attractions in Los Angeles is Universal Studios Hollywood, reputedly the world’s biggest film studio and theme park. The main attraction is the Studio Tour, a narrated tram ride that traverses the huge complex, passing stars’ dressing rooms and famous back-lot sets, including an Old West town, the town square in ‘Back to the Future’ films, as well as Jurassic Park III and ‘Curse of the Mummy’s Tomb’ sets. Along the way visitors will experience several realistic staged-disasters such as an earthquake, an avalanche, an attack by ‘Jaws’ and a meeting with an enormous version of ‘King Kong’. Besides the tours there is a theme park that provides a thrilling introduction to the principles of special effects with several attractions and movie-related rides. The popular ‘Back to the Future’ ride is a simulated jerky flight in a time machine with exceptional special effects and is one of the park’s best rides. The ‘Jurassic Park’ ride is a tour through a jungle full of frightening dinosaurs ending with an 84ft (26m) near-vertical drop into water. Other attractions include the spectacular ‘Waterworld’ live action stunt performance, a realistic warehouse fire in ‘Backdraft’, a ‘Terminator 2’ 3-D show, and animal tricks on ‘Animal Planet Live!’ Universal CityWalk is a separate venue with shops, restaurants, cinemas and nightclubs.
Address: 100 Universal City Plaza, University City Telephone: (818) 622 3801 Website: www.universalstudioshollywood.com Transport: Universal City station on the Metro Red Line, or numerous public bus routes to Universal City Opening Time: Opening times vary according to season and visitors are advised to check beforehand. Open daily in summer from 8am to 10pm (June to September), and in winter from 9am to 7pm (September to June) Admission: US$53 (adults), US$43 (children under 10)Warner Bros Studios:
The tour at Warner Bros offers a comprehensive behind-the-scenes look at an authentic working studio and provides more of a technical slant than the Universal Studios tour, focussing on the authentic filmmaking procedure. The informative two-hour tour takes visitors to view the sets, prop construction, wardrobe and sound department, as well as visiting active film and television sets where it is sometimes possible to watch actors in the midst of filming. There is also an introductory film and museum depicting the studio’s film history.
Address: 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank Telephone: (818) 954 3000 Email: wbsf@warnerbros.com Website: wbsf.warnerbros.com Opening Time: Open for tours from Monday to Friday between 9am and 4pm (9am to 3pm in winter). Reservations are required Admission: Tours US$32 per personWest LA:
West LA is famous for its trend-setting style; the place where the ’stars’ live, shop and go out on the town. The area includes some of the most prestigious neighbourhoods in Los Angeles, particularly Beverley Hills and Bel Air. Home of the rich and famous, and one of the world’s most expensive residential areas, Beverley Hills flaunts its wealth with luxurious manors, tree-lined streets, grand estates and security gates concealing landscaped grounds that are home to the likes of Jack Nicholson and Harrison Ford. Scheduled tours are available or Star Home Maps can be picked up at any street corner vendor for the latest on who lives where. The neighbourhood is also home to the famous shopping district centred on Rodeo Drive with expensive shops oozing designer labels such as Gucci, Armani and Vuitton. West Hollywood, between Beverley Hills and Hollywood, is the centre of LA’s gay community and boasts the area’s best restaurants, trendiest shops, eccentric boutiques and modern galleries along Melrose Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard. Sunset Strip, a section of Sunset Boulevard, is famed for its nightlife with rock clubs, bars and posh hotels attracting a huge variety of characters, and many places have a history of big names. In the 1930s Errol Flynn and Rita Hayworth went dancing at nightclubs like Trocadero, by the 1970s it had become the focus of rock and roll with stage performances by the Doors and Elton John at Whisky-a-Go-Go club. The actor River Phoenix died of drug-related problems at the Viper Room, and Thunder Roadhouse was where Mickey Rourke bought his Harley-Davidson.
Transport: Getting around by car is by far the easiest way to tour the area as public transport doesn’t reach everywhereTravel Guide powered by Word Travels, copyright © 2006 Globe Media Ltd. All rights reserved. By its very nature much of the information in this guide is subject to change at short notice and travellers are urged to verify information on which they're relying with the relevant authorities. Neither Globe Media nor Cheapflights can accept any responsibility for any loss or inconvenience to any person as a result of information contained above.



