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Moving to LA
I know a lot of you are in LA, so I'm hoping you can suggest good areas to me to look in for a rental. I'm coming from the Inland Empire, so it's not a big move, but I'm not too familiar with the LA area.
I would like to be within a 30-45 minute commute of UCLA. I was thinking about somewhere around Pasadena but I think that will be too far. So, where can I move that's really nice and really cheap and close to UCLA? I want champagne at beer prices! Seriously, I'm hoping to keep it at $1400/month maximum, less would be nice. I would also prefer to not be murdered. |
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Hour+ east of el lay
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If I were you I would get as close to UCLA as possible, "commuting" in that part of town is a nightmare. |
east of LA. between LA and palm springs. Ontario, Riverside, San Berdoo, etc
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It took me 40-45 minutes to go from Chino Hills to Hollywood when traffic was light |
Bodie was known as the roughest mining town in the old west. A little girl's family was moving there and wrote in her diary, "good bye God, I'm moving to Bodie."
So......"good bye God, I'm moving to LA" |
There might be an apartment coming available in the building across the street from me.
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Pasadena is a great town but as you say a bit too far IMHO.
Don't know if there is anything in your price range but I would check Santa Monica and Century City. I think Todd (nostatic) lives on the west side and might be some help. |
You're going the wrong way.
And would La Verne and San Dimas be considered part of the "Inland Empire"? |
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Hopefully, they replace the carpet rather than trying to clean up the blood stains. |
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I don't think Speeder's neighborhood is a hotbed of violent crime. Certainly no more than any other place in LA where you could find sub-$1500 rents
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I currently work in San Berdoo; the plan is find a new job closer to our new place. I'm okay with my wife commuting a bit to get to UCLA, she doesn't need to be RIGHT there. Based on just eyeing Google Maps I'm looking at Torrance, Thousand Oaks, Glendale as possible locations.
I'm also okay with closer, but need to skip over Inglewood and Compton and I'm assuming right in the middle of LA will get pricey. West Hollywood is also not of the top of the list. NTTAWWT. |
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Frankly, if you are both going in opposite directions and want to be 45 min to UCLA, I would look at Long Beach and western OC. Of course 45 min to UCLA can be less than 15 miles at peak periods. Torrance is good, but most of it is not freeway friendly. You need the freeway to be only minutes from the house.
If you do look down this way, look in the Grunion Gazette paper for rentals. |
There are a lot of safe a inexpensive places to live in LA.
Lower Alabama has a nice range of places to live. |
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I grew up in Hollywood, and would consider that about 30-45 minutes from UCLA. So I don't know if I would look too much further east than that.
Ask nostatic about the west side (Santa Monica). Culver City, maybe? You can also try the Valley. That's nearly a straight shot via the 405/Sepulveda Pass to UCLA. During rush hour, that can easily take 30-45 minutes from Encino, Sherman Oaks, or Van Nuys. Even Tarzana or Studio City. In the Valley, I've found that the further south you are (closer to LA) or the closer you are to Studio City (from an East-West perspective), the more expensive it gets. Are you both commuting to UCLA? Or did I miss something and it's just one of you? |
Maybe you can talk them into moving UCLA to a nicer area, like Orange county for example ;)
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You will hate the drive to UCLA from Glendale Pasadena area. I don't know your budget, and I have no idea of what rent is over there, but Palms area, Culver City area. Look at the freeways, the 405 and the 10 are probably the busiest freeways in the World. UCLA is where those two freeways meet.
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Check El Segundo too... cool little town... I have taken to hanging out there while waiting to pick people up at LAX... lot of nice shops and restaurants.
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I'd go with Culver City or the westside. If you're going to be north in the valley, try to be near Beverly Glen so you can shoot over the hill. Or check out near Denis, getting "whacked" in his area was an isolated incident.
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People hardly ever get OJ stabbed on my block. In fact, it's never happened to me and I've been there for years.
Seriously, where I live is an extremely popular and hip neighborhood. It's also beautiful and close to downtown and 3 major freeways. It's particularly popular with USC students but less so for UCLA people. SC is just a hop/skip/jump from here. Unfortunately, the rents have gone up commensurately over the last 10-15 years as the place caught on. It's the most densely populated neighborhood in L.A. and the 3rd most densely populated in the U.S., after DT and midtown Manhattan. At least according to Wiki: Koreatown, Los Angeles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Long commutes blow the quality of living completely in Los Angeles. Whoever mentioned Pasadena has no clue about this city. If you could find something in West Hollywood, that would be the ultimate. The commute through Beverly Hills to UCLA is one of the milder, (and prettier), that is possible. Relatively close-in parts of the valley like Sherman Oaks would not be too terrible for UCLA, Westwood or Brentwood would be best but they're pricey. You get what you pay for in terms of lifestyle, though. The areas are nice and practically in UCLA's backyard. I get your joke about West Hollywood but that's an outsider's view only. It is a desirable area for anyone and gays make good neighbors for the most part. It's chock-full of young chicks and rockers, etc. The only drawback, IMO, is the proximity to clubs on the Sunset Strip. If you are too close to Sunset, it can be a PIA on weekends. Palms and WLA blow dick but they're affordable, I guess. The geography is nothing but concrete and freeways + crap box post-war apartment bulidings, sort of the stereotypical schit image of L.A. |
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UCLA, you're f' ked with the the traffic and the price range plus not getting murder. How about Atwater village, Los Feliz, or echo park? They are a bit far but pretty safe for the most part and not too crowded like Mid-city or West LA and a bit cheaper. Just a little bit. Pasadena is a nice town. Burbank is good, about an hour with traffic, it will be a b1tch when it rains. Eagle Rock, highland Park is hip, and are right within your budget, still factor in an hour, without traffic, 20-25 minutes. I know a couple of people that work in UCLA but live in Echo Park. They seem ok with the traffic.
Are you looking for a house, condo, or an Apt? I may have a back house by the June in Eagle Rock. |
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Culver City and the Valley sound like good areas to check out further, along with Hollywood. Brentwood probably isn't in my budget right now (see note about wife going to UCLA). Half of the cities you guys mention I'll need to lookup on Google Maps, but that's good, that's why I asked here. Thanks. |
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i use to live in park la brea apts next to the tar pits around that area you can find near nbc studios
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now i live in i.e. outside of moreno valley
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Yeah, he meant CBS. BTW, Pasadena is gorgeous. Just too far from the target, IMO.
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yes i meant cbs
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Some of you guys have optimistic ideas about commute time to/from/around UCLA. It once took me 2+ hours to drive from Santa Monica to The Mint (9.4 miles). It is time dependent, but the reality is that the 405/10 area is incredibly busy. Also, getting to K-town and places like Silverlake, etc can be a royal PITA from the westside (K-town less so as at least it is west of the 101). And the valley? I wouldn't do that commute regularly unless you can timeshift or have lots of meds.
I love Pasadena. No way you want to live there and commute to the west side. btdt. $1400/mo for what size place? Your best bet is west LA, Culver City, Palms. I had a 1-br place in west LA (almost walking distance to UCLA) that was about $1400/mo. The 2br place was more than that. Highly dependent on the building and location. You can check CL or pay $60 for westside rentals subscription. My 2br place in Santa Monica was $2300/mo. Do you know where your job will be? And is she a student and what's her schedule on campus? Those things all go into the equation. |
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