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It's about time you know NoHo
Los Angeles Times
|September 07, 2025
WITH A VIBRANT FOOD AND ARTS SCENE, NORTH HOLLYWOOD WILL CHARM YOU
ON THE TANGLED family of Hollywoods, Hollywood would be the obvious golden child, West Hollywood its ritzy older sister and East Hollywood its indie-cool younger brother. North Hollywood, however, is harder to classify. Perhaps you can call it the elusive half sibling — sharing the family name but somewhat lacking in family resemblance.
Separated from its siblings by sprawling mountains, the oft-slighted San Fernando Valley neighborhood has been described as a bedroom community and a way station for fledgling actors. It’s a socio-architectural liminal space, one in which a historic train depot is home to a hip coffee shop and downtown streets are immediately bordered by suburbia. North Hollywood's lingering sense of fragmentation is consistent with its slew of past lives — from late-1800s wheat titan to modern cultural center — punctuated by infrastructural milestones like the 1913 completion of the L.A. Aqueduct and the 2000 extension of the Metro Red Line.
The neighborhood has even gone by a few different names: first Toluca, then Lankershim, for the real estate pioneer Isaac Lankershim, who helped catalyze the development of the San Fernando Valley. North Hollywood adopted its current moniker in 1927, as film studios poured into the area and residents at the behest of enterprising developers petitioned to rebrand their town as a Hollywood hot spot. It was, as Tom Link wrote in his 1991 book about the neighborhood's history, “like a new movie star discarding an old name in order to appear more attractive.”

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