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Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area, or Kenneth Hahn Park, is a state park unit of California in the Baldwin Hills Mountains of Los Angeles. The park is managed by the Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation. [ 1 ]
Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area Established 1983 as Baldwin Hills SRA, [ 9 ] Kenneth Hahn is a 400-acre (1.6 km 2 ) major regional park built on the site of the 1965 Baldwin Hills Dam disaster . Trails to navigate through the park include La Brea Loop Trail to the maintenance road to the Bowl Loop (aka Janice’s Green Valley), or the Five ...
Park property Alameda: 1985 Anderson Marsh State Historic Park: State historic park Lake: 1,298 525 1982 Preserves a tule marsh and ancient archaeological sites of the Pomo people. [4] Andrew Molera State Park: State park Monterey: 4,766 1,929 1968 Offers a primitive walk-in campground on the Big Sur coast. [5] Angel Island State Park: State park
L.A. Times readers share their favorite places to walk in Los Angeles, from the Ballona Lagoon nature path to Gloria Molina Grand Park in downtown L.A.
The building was renamed the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration in 1992 in honor of Hahn's father, who was the county's longest-serving supervisor and a former Los Angeles City Council member.
Google Maps includes in Crenshaw areas labelled by Brightwell as being Baldwin Hill Estates, Baldwin Hill, Baldwin Village, and southern parts of West Adams and Jefferson Park. Google Maps plots Crenshaw as bounded by Crenshaw Boulevard, Stocker Street, and South La Brea Avenue, with the border going along West Jefferson Boulevard to Vineyard ...
The looming purchase could move workers and public services out of existing county offices, including the well-known Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration, which dates to 1960. The building is one ...
La Cienega canyon through the Baldwin Hills, looking north to the Santa Monica Mountains from Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area (2025) Sanchez Adobe de Rancho La Cienega o Paso de la Tijera. The adobes, with thick walls and high, redwood-beamed ceilings, were once the center of the rancho.