Food scene
My top List for eating.....
Breakfast or Coffee:
1. Hilltop in Inglewood for coffee and food.
2. South LA for coffee, great swag
3. Sip & Sonder
Lunch: heavier meals, I tend to have bigger portions at lunch.
1. Dulans
2. The Serving Spoon
3. Woody's BBQ
4. Alta Adams
5. Earls
Dinner:
1. The Family
2. Comfort LA
3. Rusty Pot Cafe
4. Post & Beam
5. Roscoes Chicken & Waffles
Bakery:
Cobblers Cakes & Kream
Randy's Doughnuts
Convenient store if you need to buy more than just a few items. There is also some fast food and home depot if you need fire wood.
63 il-persuni tal-post jissuġġerixxu
Food 4 Less
1748 W Jefferson BlvdConvenient store if you need to buy more than just a few items. There is also some fast food and home depot if you need fire wood.
Neighborhoods
The Sofi Stadium is located here. There are two amazing coffee shops: Top of the Hill and Sip & Sonder.
34 il-persuni tal-post jissuġġerixxu
Inglewood
The Sofi Stadium is located here. There are two amazing coffee shops: Top of the Hill and Sip & Sonder.
City/town information
Historic South Central Los Angeles is a 2.25-square-mile neighborhood in Los Angeles, California, within the South Los Angeles region. It is the site of the Bob Hope Patriotic Hall.[1][2]
From the late 1800s to early 1910s, African Americans began relocating to the area, mostly organizing around landholdings of Los Angeles pioneer Biddy Mason.[3] The African American population continued to grow into the 1940s, and countless Jazz nightclubs lined South Central Avenue. In the 1990s, the neighborhood shifted to becoming a hub for Latino immigrants, with many being drawn by low rents and central City location.[4] Also with the addition of the Metro Blue Line on the Washington Boulevard corridor has spurred growth, and a community plan recently adopted by the L.A. City Council hopes to revitalize the neighborhood.[5]
234 il-persuni tal-post jissuġġerixxu
Los Angeles
Historic South Central Los Angeles is a 2.25-square-mile neighborhood in Los Angeles, California, within the South Los Angeles region. It is the site of the Bob Hope Patriotic Hall.[1][2]
From the late 1800s to early 1910s, African Americans began relocating to the area, mostly organizing around landholdings of Los Angeles pioneer Biddy Mason.[3] The African American population continued to grow into the 1940s, and countless Jazz nightclubs lined South Central Avenue. In the 1990s, the neighborhood shifted to becoming a hub for Latino immigrants, with many being drawn by low rents and central City location.[4] Also with the addition of the Metro Blue Line on the Washington Boulevard corridor has spurred growth, and a community plan recently adopted by the L.A. City Council hopes to revitalize the neighborhood.[5]
Pariri dwar il-belt
Kif tista' tmur minn post għall-ieħor
Take the streets if you can
If you have to get on the 10 Freeway, 110 Freeway, 405 Freeway or the 105 Freeway, they are all in driving distance that can be accessible by the streets.
You can take the streets to Downtown LA, LAX, Inglewood, SpaceX, KoreaTown