Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Family Entertainment in Palos Verdes- Palos Verdes Ice Chalet


Family Entertainment in Palos Verdes- Palos Verdes Ice Chalet
Take the family ice skating this weekend and grab dinner at Ruby's diner across from the rink. The Ice Chalet Rink was founded in 1972 as year-round indoor skating rink, perfect for the non existent Southern California winters.

The rink is open to the public, offering figure skating and ice skating lessons, adult and youth ice hokey programs, pickup hockey, ice hockey clinics, broomball, and private birthday parties and events.

Check the pricing and skating schedule before heading over there.

550 Deep Valley Dr, Palos Verdes Estates, CA 90274
(310)541-3143

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Homes for sale Rancho Palos Verdes

25 Crestwind Dr, Rancho Palos Verdes, CA 90275

$1,198,000




SaleType: Short Pay / Subject To Lender

Secluded single level Tudor style home nestled on a private 19,850 square foot lot at the end of a quiet cul-de-sac. Ideal floor plan offering 4 spacious bedrooms, 3 bathrooms and an office with custom built-ins. Cooks kitchen with large center island, separate breakfast bar, recessed lighting and adjacent to a huge family room. The family room has a beautiful open beam ceiling, hardwood floors and overlooks a private patio and grassy back yard. Warm and inviting living room with vaulted open beam ceiling, crackling brick fireplace, hardwood floors and top of the line remote ceiling fans. Other amenities include a formal dining room, free flowing open and airy floor plan, hardwood flooring, central a/c, recessed lighting, separate laundry room with Dutch door, newer double paned windows and sliding doors, enormous 3 car garage plus an additional storage room. Tranquil Ocean/ Catalina views from the front and green belt, mountain and shimmering city light views from the back. Close proximity to biking/hiking trails and Del Cerro Park.

Rancho Palos Verdes Home For Sale

5213 Sunny Point Pl, Rancho Palos Verdes, CA 90275

$839,000




Charming single level home ideally situated on a private cul-de-sac in close proximity to shopping and award winning Palos Verdes Schools. Open and airy floor plan with hardwood flooring and tons of natural light. Spacious living room with vaulted ceilings and natural stone fireplace. Large formal dining room overlooking the private back yard. Master bedroom with vaulted ceiling and beautifully updated master bath. In addition to 3 bedrooms this home has a private office with tons of built-ins and 3 spacious work stations. Well appointed eat in kitchen with tile counters and 5 burner Wolf cook top. Other amenities include beautiful contemporary lighting fixtures through-out, central A/C, freshly painted interior, newer aluminum windows(excludes sliding doors), private back yard with concrete and brick patios, peek-a-boo mountain and city light view, oversized interlocking paver driveway and 2 car garage.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Places to Visit in Palos Verdes: Trump National Golf Course


The Trump National Golf Club is located off the Palos Verdes Peninsula, just south of downtown Los Angeles. The Club offers the public a 45,000 square foot clubhouse with locker rooms, pro-shop, restaurants, conference rooms,  and gorgeous views of the Pacific Ocean. 

Aside from the main course, the Trump National offers a full driving range, practice putting green and short game practice areas. 

Restaurants at the Club include The Golfer's Lounge and the Cafe Pacific. The Golfer's Lounge offers a more casual option and best after a game of golf. The Cafe Pacific is an upscale casual dining restaurant. 


Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Rolling Hills History


The Rolling Hills story begins in 1930, at which time 16,000 acres of the Palos Verdes Peninsula was owned by the Palos Verdes Corporation of which Frank A. Vanderlip, a New York banker, was President and majority stockholder. This ranch had ten miles of shoreline starting just south of Lunada Bay. Vanderlip's plan for the development of Portuguese Bend was right but the time was wrong. 

A.E. Hanson was named landowner by Vanderlip to develop the community that he acquired in 1913. Hanson sold the idea of large lots with single-family vacation dude ranches. The home would have minimum upkeep- there would be no profit from the ranch operations but it would be a fun place for the children. But after a lack of interest from the public, Hanson altered his plan. He came up with the idea to turn the development into one-story luxury homes with enough room to board horses; a place for real living. 

By the middle of 1935, Palos Verdes Drive North was completed and more people from Long Beach to Redondo Beach were visiting the area, exploring the hills. Long Beach was only 20 minutes away from the Rolling Hills Gate (the city's first gatehouse built at the intersection of PV Drive North and Portuguese Bend Road to ensure residents' privacy; to this day remains the main entry gate into Rolling Hills). THe completion of Palos Verdes Drive North was the key to everything. For the first time it made the most favorable part of the scenic Palos Verdes Hills available for development. 

Rolling Hills would run from Palos Verdes Drive, southerly to the Crest Road, and would be bounded on the east by Georgeff Canyon and on the west by Agua Negra Canyon, and would be platted into 100 homesites.  Hanson's goal was to build a community. The 600 acres of Rolling Hills would be used for two classes of single-family homes. The flatter area, immediately to the south of Palos Verdes Drive would be for one-acre homes. 

Hanson decided that all of the buildings built in Rolling Hills would have a white exterior. They would fit in with the emerald green of the new grain in the Spring and would harmonize with the bare earth after the hay was baled in the Fall. Following the theme of white, the city's first gatehouse was also painted white. The roofs were to be of shingle or shake, weathered. Hanson disproved of red tile roofs because they were not harmonious in a neighborhood unless all roofs were red tiled. The homeowner could do anything he wished to the interior. Every ranchito had to be fenced with a three-rail, white fence. The developers installed all the fences on the road frontage as well as roadside trees and shrubs.

In 1936, Hanson began advertising the ranches differently to increase sales. The advertisements states "Own your own dude ranch- country life, city conveniences" to sell Rolling Hills as a place out in the country with city conveniences. One advertising campaign consisted of three elements. First they sent out sales letters using a mailing list of 7,500 people within the general Long Beach- Redondo area. The second effort involved newspaper advertising- a real estate ad as well as a one column wide ad telling the public about the size of Rolling Hills. The third effort was mailing brochures showing photographs of the property. The aim of the advertising campaign was to get the prospects curious enough to drive out to Rolling Hills and to stop by the sales office.  

The Rolling Hills Post Office opened September 1, 1937. Rolling Hills was incorporated in 1957. The area remains a residential coomunity without businesses or industries within the gates. 


Monday, November 21, 2011

Palos Verdes History


There are many theories as to how the city came to be called Palos Verdes. According to W.W. Robinson, the author of Ranchos Become Cities, the name Palos Verdes originated in the Canada de los Palos Verdes, a valley shown on old maps, green with grass and willows, the valley was located between the present Sepulveda and Lomita Boulevards, east of Vermont and west of Figueroa (now intersected by the Harbor Freeway). 

Palos Verdes is a historic Peninsula. Many of the names on the Peninsula recall its historic past. A certain mystique always belonged to the Palos Verdes Hills, but in 1922 the community of Palos Verdes was only a dream uninhabited except from some vegetable fields and the Japanese farmers who cultivated them and people who lived on ranches with their cattle. The Rancho de los Palos Verdes, originally owned by the Sepulveda family, was partitioned into seventeen portions at the conclusions of a law suit in 1882. The largest share, 16,000 acres which constituted the Palos Verdes Peninsula, was awarded to Jotham Bixby. In 1894, Harry Phillips became the Ranch Manager and thus first resident of the Peninsula. He brought farming to the Peninsula and planted many of the eucalyptus trees. The rural, farming community began to change in 1913 when the Bixby family sold the land to internationally known banker, Frank A. Vanderlip, Sr. 

Born in Kane County, Illinois, Vanderlip became the president of National City Bank in New York in 1909 and by 1910, when he was 46 he was a millionaire. He was a man of vision; recognizing the strategic position of Palos Verdes- the only undeveloped section of coast in the center of a rapidly growing region, he dreamed of a magnificent residential city by the sea. 

As early as 1914, architects were hired to draw up plans for its development but WWI prevented Vanderlip from carrying out his plans. The only achievement of the first few years was the building of the "Old Ranch Cottage" in 1916, now known as the "Cottage" and occupied by Vanderlip's youngest son, John Mann Vanderlip. 

Vanderlip planned to develop the area above Point Vicente lighthouse as an Italian hillside village to be occupied by craftsmen who would live, work, and sell their wares on different levels of the same building but the stock market crash prevented the fulfillment of Vanderlip's dream. 

When the Palos Verdes Project was planned, many civic needs were anticipated. Over 4,000 acres were reserved for parks and playgrounds, and two recreational areas were established in the new community, La Venta Inn and Palos Verdes Golf Club. In order to dispense news about the Project to the lot owners and subscribers, the mangers began to issue monthly bulletins. By the time the fifth issue of the Palos Verdes Bulletin was published in March 1925, each edition numbered 8300 copies, mailed to every state in the union and to foreign countries all over the world.  

The roads in Palos Verdes were designed to fit the natural contours of the land. The men who laid out the roads sought the most beautiful use of the property in their charge. Reducing ugly cuts and fills provided better lots. In keeping with the principle that produced the use of curved roads, signs were strictly regulated. Billboards were not allowed. The street signs, chosen by the Art Jury, were suspended from a wooden standard, stained brown, with brackets of wrought iron. The signs were carved redwood with raised gilded letters. Business buildings were curtailed as to their use of signs. 

The United States Government established a lighthouse on Point Vincente in 1875. The present structure was built in 1926 and the spelling of the name was revised to Vicente.  Before the days of the lighthouse, ships were warned away from rocks by huge fires built upon the point. Between Point Fermin and Point Vicente lies Portuguese Bend, a place that owes its name to its history. 

in 1925, after two years of construction, Palos Verdes became a community. Residents were urged to trade in Palos Verdes, now that the new grocery and meat market had opened, and to encourage the early coming of the drug store, merchandise store, tailor, restaurant and other stores which were needed. 

The Palos Verdes Transportation Company was established in 1925, operating buses between Redondo Beach and Malaga Cove Plaza. The buses carried Palos Verdes children to Redondo schools and later to the Palos Verdes school. The fare cost 10 cents to Redondo and 5 cents within the Estates. Children were charged half fare. 

In 1925, the first Palos Verdes School Board was elected. The first Palos Verdes School opened September 8, 1925. Classes for twenty-four children were held in a room in the Gardner building until the Malaga Cove School Building was finally completed the following spring. The Malaga Cove School included three classrooms, a kindergarten, a principal's office, and an auditorium with a seating capacity of 294. 

Several general provisions were written into the restrictions: "There shall not be any saloon, founder, brickyard, cemetery, asylum, gun powder or fertilizer factory, slaughter-house, tannery, oil refinery, or fish cannery." Ninety percent of the lots were zoned for single-family dwellings, designated in Zone A. In addition, architectural restrictions were worked into the process. Requirements were established to provide enough space between dwellings and proper set-back from the street, varying with the lot from five to 60 feet. Trees over 20 feet were specified. Consultation with the Art Jury before building was required in order to assure the maintenance of certain minimum standards. The builders of Palos Verdes were building for permanence. Their dream of a better place to live influenced the development of the entire peninsula and made possible the beauty we see today. 

Two recreational centers were established in the new community, La Venta Inn was built first in early 1923, and quickly became a popular spot for dining. Situated high on the hill, the Inn was a landmark visible for miles around. It was the designation of many sightseeing trips made by visitors to the Los Angeles area, and by residents of the Beach Cities, Hollywood, Pasadena, Los Angeles, and Long Beach. Although some people chose to stay the night at the Inn, it could only accommodate a few overnight guests. The Palos Verdes Golf Club opened on November 15, 1924. The 213-acre golf course and golf park was highly rated and all but four holes had views of the ocean. 

A marble fountain and statue of Neptune, the Roman god known as the King of the Sea, was installed in the Malaga Cove Plaza in 1930. The figure of Neptune was considered appropriately symbolic for the city by the sea. The fountain is a replica of the bronze fountain of Neptune in Bologna, Italy. 

Despite the financial turmoil resulting from the Depression, many elements of daily life in Palos Verdes remained unchanged. Despite the scarcity of money, the forms of entertainment enjoyed remained the same. Because the residents of Palos Verdes loved their beautiful Peninsula, they had worked together to establish an ideal community. They had started with many built-in advantages, for which the designers of the Project were responsible: a community swimming pool, stables, a golf-course, landscaped parks, a plaza for shopping, a school, a homes association, and strict building restrictions. Gradually, they added many other facilities and institutions. By the late thirties, the residents of Palos Verdes had their own library and newspaper. Three schools, two public (Malaga Cove and Miraleste) and one private (Chadwick Seaside School), educated their children. A parent council had recently been organized within the public schools, and many parents also attended the family relations class conducted by the school district. The Post Office in Malaga Plaza was the social center of Palos Verdes. 

Because of the strategic location of the Peninsula, many WWII soldiers were stationed here during the war. The largest military establishment was Fort McArthur at San Pedro.  Three smaller camps were located along the coast, one on Long Point, on on Resort Hill (Lunada Bay), and one at Bluff point (the crest of Montemalaga). The army hospitals received their share of attention from the women of Palos Verdes throughout the war. Red Cross Gray ladies frequented the Fort McArthur Hospital. 

The Wayfarers' Chapel, near Abalone Cove in Rancho Palos Verdes, sometimes referred to as the "Glass Church," was built as a national monument to Swedenborg- one of Sweden's most famous citizens.  In 1954, the 59-foot bell tower was erected, and in 1959 the library and museum building and the Cloister were constructed. A hillside near the chapel was contoured in steps and planted to form a natural amphitheater for the performance of Biblical plays. A garden was later planted with the flowering plants and trees mentioned in the Bible. With the building of Wayfarer's Chapel, the early period of the modern history of the Palos Verdes Peninsula comes to a close. The 1950's began a period of rapid real estate development that changed the course of history. In one year, 190 new residences were built in Palos Verdes Estates and 55 other building permits were issued. On the rest of the Peninsula, an average of 148 homes were under construction each month during that year. Following the Chapel's construction was the opening of the Marineland in 1955, the establishment of the cities of Rolling Hills Estates in 1957 and Rancho Palos Verdes in 1978, after many years of debate the Portuguese Bend Landslide in 1956 and the Abalone Cove Landslide in 1978, the unification of the Palos Verdes Peninsula School District in 1960, and the continued explosive growth to the Peninsula that has led to a recent property evaluation of three billion dollars. 

The communities of Palos Verdes Estates, Miraleste, Portuguese Bend, Rolling Hills, Rolling Hills Estates, and Rancho Palos Verdes form the Palos Verdes Peninsula, an entity loved by all its residents. According to the consensus of opinion, the factors that brought families to Palos Verdes were the beauty of climate and scenery, the security of a planned and protected community, and the opportunity for simple outdoor pleasures. All of which are still true and offered in Palos Verdes today. A community based upon beauty, Palos Verdes Estates soon received a reputation as a paradise. 


Wednesday, November 16, 2011

A Day With The Family in The South Bay- San Pedro Cabrillo Marine Aquarium


A Day with the family in the South Bay- San Pedro Cabrillo Marine Aquarium


The Cabrillo Marine Aquarium is a public aquarium located in San Pedro. It engages all visitors in education, recreation, and research, concentrating on the marine life of Southern California. It is operated by the City of Los Angeles Department of Recreation and Parks. 

Admission is free. School and group programs are available. 

Cabrillo Marine Aquarium
Tuesday through Friday - 12 noon to 5 pm
Saturday and Sunday - 10 am to 5 pm
Closed Mondays, Thanksgiving and Christmas

ADDRESS:
3720 Stephen M. White Drive
San Pedro, CA 90731


Places to Visit in Palos Verdes: Palos Verdes Art Center

Places to visit in Palos Verdes: Palos Verdes Art Center

The Palos Verdes Art Center offers non-profit visual arts education, exhibition, and community service programs in Palos Verdes, Los Angeles County. The center provides art classes and workshops, free exhibitions, cultural activities, and events for the Palos Verdes community. 

For the past 78 years, the Art Center aims to "inspire individuals to celebrate, appreciate, and create art." 

Current exhibit: Off the Wall
The current "Off The Wall" exhibit runs from October 14-November 20,2011.  Artists rent space at the gallery to display their favorite pieces. This gives guests a great opportunity to view and learn about all types of artwork. 

550 Deep Valley Drive, Suite 261, Rolling Hills Estates, CA 90275
http://www.pvartcenter.org


Ways to Conserve Energy at Home

Looking for ways to conserve energy at your home and thus lower your electric bill? Follow these tips-

1. The easiest way to conserve energy is to unplug devices when they are not in use. 

2. Turn off unnecessary lights, even if you'll be back in that room in 5 minutes, that is 5 minutes of waisted electricity. 

3. Change out your lightbulbs for CFL's (Compact fluorescent light bulbs). They use at least 75% less energy and last longer. 

4. Install motion sensors on the lights in your home, particularly those outside. 

5. Turn off your computer at night. It will not only extend the life of your hard drive but you can save $90 of electricity a year. Even better of an option- use a laptop instead of a desktop. Laptops draw 15 to 25 watts during regular use versus desktops that use 150 watts. 

6. When shopping for new appliances, look for the Environmental Protection Agency's Energy Star label. They may cost more but make up for it in the additional cost on energy savings. 

7. If you live in a place that gets strong winters, install storm windows which can reduce temperature loss by sealing leaks. 

Friday, November 4, 2011

Palos Verdes Community Links and Information

Here you will find handy links that you can use to find additional information on Entertainment, Restaurants, Sports, Recreation and live beachcams for the Palos Verdes Peninsula and South Bay.
Newspapers and Magazines
Beach Information
Entertainment
Museums, Etc.
Sports & Recreation

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Fall Decorating

Fall Home Decorating Ideas-

Here are some great decorating ideas from HGTV to celebrate the Fall season. 

-Cozy up your family room. This is where you'll spend most of your time as the weather gets colder. Add plush pillows of all sizes and patterns and soft throw blankets to create a comfortable and inviting room. 

-Change the bedding and bring out a heavy down comforter and thermal blankets. 

-Set the table with festive pieces of fall. Think pumpkins, fresh herbs, and rustic-designed table accessories. 

-Light scented candles around the house. Daylight savings time will end and the darkness will arrive sooner. Candles are an easy way to create a warm and cozy environment while reducing stress.

-Bring fall scents into the house- wether through potpourri or candles. Scents such as cinnamon, pumpkin, and pine tree all remind us of the holiday season. 

-The easiest way to dress the house up for fall is with a front door wreath. Look for wreaths with seasonal foliage and garden-fresh fruits.