Archive for the ‘Echo Park’ Category

Another Way to Eat L.A.

January 15, 2009

Prospect Park Books’ Colleen Dunn Bates is the editor and publisher behind “Eat: Los Angeles,” a new book that looks at L.A.’s food neighborhoods, its influential restaurants, and, yes, its taco trucks.

Pat Saperstein, my Variety colleague who’s also behind the famed Eating L.A. site, is a contributor to the book and its companion blog. (Check out Pat’s round up of Boyle Heights eats here.

Colleen and Pat will sign copies of “Eat: Los Angeles” at the new Echo Park bookstore/café Stories this Thursday at 7 p.m. Bonus: The signing will include food samples from area restaurants including Andiamo, Stories’ own café, and the brand-new Allston Yacht Club.

Stories, 1716 Sunset Blvd., Echo Park

Pumpkins for Peace

October 20, 2008

Our friend Jenni invited us on Saturday to help celebrate “Pumpkins for Peace,” an event thrown by the Center for Nonviolent Education and Parenting.

While at the event, we carved our first jack o’lantern in years (above). We went the traditional route, but we’re proud of it nonetheless.

The CNEP advocates “the acceptance and practice of the principles of nonviolent child raising.”

Besides pumpkin carving, the well-attended event featured photos, a peace walk, face painting, cupcake decorating, snacks and drinks. The event also gave us a chance to spend some time in Echo Park, where it was held.

Not Everyone Will Get a Bang Out of Y-Que’s New Neighborhood Tees

August 19, 2008

Los Feliz boutique Y-Que’s new line of community t-shirts has something for virtually everyone, with neighborhoods large and small (not to mention a few cities from outside L.A.) represented. (Although, I’m thinking the “South Hollywood” shirt won’t be such a hot seller — is there such a thing?)

Each of the shirts carries an icon along with the neighborhood name — some designs generic, others purposely tied to the neighborhood mentioned. Most are harmless… but the idea of promoting the neighborhood formerly known as South Central with a gun? Hmmm…

Others, via the Y Que website (where we found all of these photos):

Boyle Heights is a little more tame, with a mariachi performer.

Vernon probably gets off easy. It’s actually the subject of two different tees, here’s the other one:

Burbank, meanwhile, is featured here:

Are those people flying on a plane? Can’t tell.

Echo Park, represented by swans.

And then there’s…

Eagle Rock.

Y-Que is located at 1770 N. Vermont; phone number is 323-664-0021.

L.A.’s Most Authentic Bagels

August 6, 2008

After hearing forever about the amazing bagels at Brooklyn Bagel Bakery near Echo Park, we finally decided to seek it out last Saturday.

Located at 2217 Beverly Blvd., Brooklyn Bagel Bakery — which has been around since 1953, pre-dating even the Dodgers’ arrival from the New York borough — isn’t pretty to look at. You simply walk in, order your bagels and go. There are no tables and chairs and no fancy coffee drinks (they’d probably make a killing if there were) — it’s all about the bagels.

Online comments from transplanted New Yorkers are bubbling with praise. For us, the bagels were… good. The fact that they maintained such a nice, soft texture even though they’d been sitting out there for some time was impressive. But maybe the hype was too high, or I’m not enough of a bagel nut, as I couldn’t tell a big difference between these and others I’ve had.

Nonetheless, they were still good bagels. We also appreciated the sheer variety of bagels — We bought a sesame, an egg, a jalapeno and a cranberry one, and were pleased with all of them. But with nowhere to go with our bagels, we drove around the neighborhood in vain, looking for coffee. We finally, sadly, ended up at the Lucy’s Laundromat in Echo Park, were a Starbucks sits across from a row of $6.95 mega washing machines.

More pics:

Lotus-Free Festival

June 30, 2008

Here’s how Echo Park looked in 2005, when Evan and I took in the annual Lotus Festival. It was the first big event I took him to — he was 6 months at the time — and I’ve taken him every year since. This year, he’s probably going to ask me — uh, Daddy, where are the flowers?

The Lotus Festival is coming up on July 11, 12 and 13. For the first time ever, though, it looks like there won’t be any actual lotus plants in the pond as part of the festival. Here’s how it’s looking at Echo Park these days, via the Los Angeles Times’ Ken Hively:

The LAT writes:

Some experts blame trash and debris for the demise of the lotus beds. Echo Park Lake is a storm drain catch basin in the winter, leading some to suspect that contaminants in the runoff may be the cause. The first sign of trouble came after the storms and floods of 2005-2006, after which the lotus blooms started appearing later, and smaller, than usual.

More info on the festival at the Los Angeles Recreation and Parks website. It’s still a nice festival, even minus the Lotus plants… but it’s definitely not the same.

The Staircases of Los Angeles

April 17, 2008


(Flickr pic by Cory.)

Five years ago we talked up Los Feliz’s Radio Walk and Prospect Walk staircases in the Franklin Hills. Back when Franklin Avenue actually lived on Franklin Avenue, we used to hike those steps all the time for exercise.

The L.A. Times this week reminded us that there are staircases all over the city — and they’re popular among hikers and exercise fiends. The paper writes:

The “Music Box” staircase, which shoots straight up from Vendome Street to Descanso Drive, is one of 52 stairways in 46-year-old writer Dan Koeppel’s personal 16.2-mile stair hike — comprising 4,182 steps, with a 7,445-foot elevation gain.

The walk hopscotches up and down a matrix of city-owned steps around Silver Lake and Echo Park, just north of downtown Los Angeles, and offers up dazzling overlooks of East Los Angeles, Griffith Park Observatory, the Hollywood sign, the Silver Lake Reservoir and downtown Los Angeles. The overall effect is a little like taking a local historical garden tour while going full throttle on a StairMaster.

Bob Herzog, co-chairman of the Silver Lake History Collective, notes that the steps around the older parts of the city were built mostly in the mid 1920s, and led down to Red Car transit points. The Red Cars are long gone, of course, but the stairs remain.

The Staircases of Los Angeles

April 17, 2008


(Flickr pic by Cory.)

Five years ago we talked up Los Feliz’s Radio Walk and Prospect Walk staircases in the Franklin Hills. Back when Franklin Avenue actually lived on Franklin Avenue, we used to hike those steps all the time for exercise.

The L.A. Times this week reminded us that there are staircases all over the city — and they’re popular among hikers and exercise fiends. The paper writes:

The “Music Box” staircase, which shoots straight up from Vendome Street to Descanso Drive, is one of 52 stairways in 46-year-old writer Dan Koeppel’s personal 16.2-mile stair hike — comprising 4,182 steps, with a 7,445-foot elevation gain.

The walk hopscotches up and down a matrix of city-owned steps around Silver Lake and Echo Park, just north of downtown Los Angeles, and offers up dazzling overlooks of East Los Angeles, Griffith Park Observatory, the Hollywood sign, the Silver Lake Reservoir and downtown Los Angeles. The overall effect is a little like taking a local historical garden tour while going full throttle on a StairMaster.

Bob Herzog, co-chairman of the Silver Lake History Collective, notes that the steps around the older parts of the city were built mostly in the mid 1920s, and led down to Red Car transit points. The Red Cars are long gone, of course, but the stairs remain.

One L.A. Attraction Slowly Disappears; One L.A. Eyesore Is Slowly Dismantled

March 25, 2008


(Pic credit: Los Angeles Times)

The Los Angeles Times reports that the ugly parking lot off of 1st and Olive — you know the one, it’s that terrible structure you park in when you go downtown for jury duty — is finally going away.

When it was built, the Times notes, city leaders complained — and were promised that it was a temporary parking fix. That was nearly 40 years ago:

Even before it opened in 1969, the “Erector set” parking lot at the corner of 1st and Olive streets downtown was one of Los Angeles’ most reviled structures.

Richard G. Mitchell, head of the Community Redevelopment Agency, complained that it was just another monolith of concrete, asphalt and steel atop Bunker Hill. The mass of girders and slabs, perched atop what look like stilts, “fights you,” Mitchell said. He predicted it would have a “depressing effect” on downtown.

Robert Bolling, president of the Southern California chapter of the American Institute of Architects, agreed, warning that the structure would have a “deleterious effect on the fabric of the city.”

At the time, the 1,062-car structure’s saving grace was that it was temporary. Planners promised the “portable parking structure” would be dismantled and moved somewhere else, replaced by a more fitting form of architecture.


(Pic credit: Los Angeles Times)

Meanwhile, the Times also digs into the mystery of the disappearing Echo Park lotus plants. As everyone has noticed in recent years, the plants — which inspired the park’s annual Lotus Festival — have been dying off at an alarming rate. The paper writes:

Only 30 blossoms appeared in 2007, down from hundreds the year before. Park employees blamed cold weather and drought. When the lotuses bloomed too late for the 2006 festival, cool winter and an extra-hot June were considered the culprits. When the 2004 blooms came early, some cited an extra-hot May.

The lotuses’ recent strange behavior remains a mystery, park staff told the Echo Park Advisory Board at its regular meeting Tuesday.

“No one can give you a rational scientific explanation,” said board member Isa-Kae Meksin. And their condition this year? “It’s too early to tell,” Meksin said. The underwater plants don’t send up new green shoots until late April or May.

The lotus problem is unrelated to the 13 turtles found dead at the park last year, said Stephen Moe, the park department’s water manager.

The lake is scheduled to be drained and cleaned in 2010; park officials hope the removal of contaminants in the water might lead to healthier, more plentiful plants.

One L.A. Attraction Slowly Disappears; One L.A. Eyesore Is Slowly Dismantled

March 25, 2008


(Pic credit: Los Angeles Times)

The Los Angeles Times reports that the ugly parking lot off of 1st and Olive — you know the one, it’s that terrible structure you park in when you go downtown for jury duty — is finally going away.

When it was built, the Times notes, city leaders complained — and were promised that it was a temporary parking fix. That was nearly 40 years ago:

Even before it opened in 1969, the “Erector set” parking lot at the corner of 1st and Olive streets downtown was one of Los Angeles’ most reviled structures.

Richard G. Mitchell, head of the Community Redevelopment Agency, complained that it was just another monolith of concrete, asphalt and steel atop Bunker Hill. The mass of girders and slabs, perched atop what look like stilts, “fights you,” Mitchell said. He predicted it would have a “depressing effect” on downtown.

Robert Bolling, president of the Southern California chapter of the American Institute of Architects, agreed, warning that the structure would have a “deleterious effect on the fabric of the city.”

At the time, the 1,062-car structure’s saving grace was that it was temporary. Planners promised the “portable parking structure” would be dismantled and moved somewhere else, replaced by a more fitting form of architecture.


(Pic credit: Los Angeles Times)

Meanwhile, the Times also digs into the mystery of the disappearing Echo Park lotus plants. As everyone has noticed in recent years, the plants — which inspired the park’s annual Lotus Festival — have been dying off at an alarming rate. The paper writes:

Only 30 blossoms appeared in 2007, down from hundreds the year before. Park employees blamed cold weather and drought. When the lotuses bloomed too late for the 2006 festival, cool winter and an extra-hot June were considered the culprits. When the 2004 blooms came early, some cited an extra-hot May.

The lotuses’ recent strange behavior remains a mystery, park staff told the Echo Park Advisory Board at its regular meeting Tuesday.

“No one can give you a rational scientific explanation,” said board member Isa-Kae Meksin. And their condition this year? “It’s too early to tell,” Meksin said. The underwater plants don’t send up new green shoots until late April or May.

The lotus problem is unrelated to the 13 turtles found dead at the park last year, said Stephen Moe, the park department’s water manager.

The lake is scheduled to be drained and cleaned in 2010; park officials hope the removal of contaminants in the water might lead to healthier, more plentiful plants.

The Lotus Plants Have Dwindled, But the Fest is Still On

July 13, 2007

Blogging.la sounded the alarm a few weeks ago: With the Lotus Festival fast approaching, where have all the plants gone?

The Lotus plant count has dwindled in Echo Park, but this weekend’s 30th Annual Lotus Festival is still on as planned.

We’ve taken Evan to the event every year since his birth, and we hope to make a return trip this year. It’s a fun way to spend a summer morning or afternoon — with music, food, booths and a fantastic vibe. For the toddlers, there’s also a playground to keep them entertained. There’s also a children’s area; a Friday night jazz concert; art exhibits and more.

Last year, I <a href=”http://franklinavenue.blogspot.com/2006/07/lotus-festival-without-lotus.html
” target=”_blank”>noted the late bloom of the Lotuses — which didn’t happen fast enough for the fest.

The annual event celebrates the giant pink flowers that emerge every summer from the lotus bed in the northwest corner of Echo Park. According to the park’s history, no one knows who initially planted the lotus — legend has it that they were planted by missionaries from the nearby Angelus Temple after returning from work in China.

Here’s this year’s schedule:

Friday, July 13: 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. (Fireworks at 9:00 p.m.)
Saturday, July 14: 12:00 noon to 9:00 p.m. (Fireworks at 9:00 p.m.)
Sunday, July 15: 12:00 noon to 8:00 p.m.


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