Silver Lake, Los Angeles

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Silver Lake is a residential and commercial neighborhood in the east-central region of Los Angeles, California, United States,<ref>Los Angeles County—LA City (East Central/Silver Lake, Echo Park & Westlake) PUMA</ref> originally home to a small community called Ivanhoe, so named in honor of the 1819 novel by Walter Scott. In 1907, the Los Angeles Water Department built the Silver Lake Reservoir, named for LA Water Commissioner Herman Silver, giving the neighborhood its name.<ref name="LAMag Creason">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Ivanhoe">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The area is now known for its architecturally significant homes, independently owned businesses, diverse restaurants, painted staircases, and creative environment.

Geography and climate

Silver Lake looking southeast from Los Feliz

Silver Lake is flanked on the northeast by Atwater Village and Elysian Valley, on the southeast by Echo Park, on the southwest by Westlake, on the west by East Hollywood and on the northwest by Los Feliz.<ref name=MappingLACentralLA>"Central L.A.". Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 2, 2013.</ref><ref name=ThomasGuide>Thomas Guide: Los Angeles County, p. 594. Irvine, California: Thomas Bros. Maps, 2004.</ref><ref>"Silver Lake, Los Angeles, CA". Google Maps. Retrieved June 11, 2013.</ref>

Street and other boundaries are: the Los Angeles River between Glendale Boulevard and Fletcher Drive and Riverside Drive on the northeast, the Glendale Freeway on the east, Effie Street, Coronado Street, Berkeley Avenue and Fletcher Drive on the southeast, the Hollywood Freeway on the south, Virgil Avenue on the west and Fountain Avenue and Hyperion Avenue on the northwest.<ref name=MappingLASilverLake>"Silver Lake". Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 2, 2013.</ref>

The prime real estate around the Silver Lake Reservoir is known as Moreno Highlands. It was originally developed in the 1920s and 1930s by Daisy Canfield, wife of silent film star Antonio Moreno. Much of the Silver Lake Residential Historic District is associated with this tract.<ref>Historic Resources Survey Report: Silver Lake-Echo Park-Elysian Valley Community Plan Area, SurveyLA, May 2014.</ref><ref>Silver Lake – Echo Park – Elysian Valley Report: Historic Districts, Planning Districts and Multi-Property Resources – 05/09/14</ref>

The Silver Lake neighborhood council has mapped the boundaries of its council region.<ref>"Silver Lake NC Map — Boundaries and Regions". Silver Lake Neighborhood Council. Archived from the original on November 15, 2012. Retrieved March 16, 2013.</ref>

Template:Weather box

History

The area known as Ivanhoe to the north of the current reservoir was originally developed by Byram & Poindexter as early as 1887, named for Sir Walter Scott's book of the same name with many streets in that area referencing other works and characters of British literature such as Herkimer, Rowena, Kenilworth, Locksley, Ben Lomond, Hawick, and St. George.<ref name="SilverLakeOrg">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

a red train crossing above a street on a concrete bridge
A Red Car crossing over Fletcher Drive c. 1955

In 1904 the Fletcher Drive Viaduct was constructed at the northeastern boundary of Silver Lake for the Glendale Line of the Pacific Electric Railway Company, connecting the area to Downtown Los Angeles. Originally constructed of timber, the viaduct was replaced in 1928 by a steel span construction to make way for Fletcher Drive underneath it. It was demolished in 1959 and only its concrete footings remain.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

William Mulholland identified the area as an ideal location to place emergency reservoirs for the rapidly growing city, building the upper Ivanhoe Reservoir in 1906 and the eponymous Silver Lake reservoir in 1907. The reservoir was named for influential former LA City Councilman and then City Water Commissioner Herman Silver, who was instrumental in gaining the approvals to purchase the Template:Convert of land and the funding for the construction of the reservoir.<ref name="LAMag Creason"/>

The hills of Ivanhoe and the neighboring Edendale had always attracted bohemians seeking safe haven from the prying eyes of polite society, and the further development of Silver Lake as a lush parkland only increased its appeal. The 1930s and 1940s saw artists, writers, actors and musicians join other progressives such as union organizers, civic activists, and communists flock to the area. With them came the area's modern aesthetics as architects such as Gregory Ain, Craig Ellwood, John Lautner, Rudolph Schindler, Walter Dorwin Teague, and Raphael Soriano designed their houses and businesses, creating what local realtors now point out as having more architecturally significant homes per square mile in Silver Lake than in other parts of Los Angeles.<ref name="neutrahistory">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Glendale-Hyperion Bridge in eastern Silver Lake near the I-5 freeway

William Selig set up what may have been the first permanent film studio in Los Angeles in the Edendale neighborhood to the east of Ivanhoe valley in 1909, soon followed by Mack Sennett in 1912. Walt Disney's first studio was at the corner of Griffith Park Boulevard and Hyperion Avenue, currently the site of Gelson's Market. As a consequence, the name "Hyperion" is used by The Walt Disney Company and its subsidiaries, with company entities past and present carrying the name, such as Hyperion Books and the Hyperion Theater at Disney California Adventure Park.<ref name="mulholland">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The fictional Seattle neighborhood of Hyperion Heights in the final season of the Disney-owned ABC series Once Upon a Time traces its name to the same origin.

William Fox would buy Selig's former Edendale lot on Glendale Boulevard in the 1917, building a 12-acre (4.9 ha) backlot called Mixville for Western film star Tom Mix. The location is now known as the Mixville Shopping Center and occupied by a Whole Foods Market. It is rumored that Mix buried his steed "Old Blue" on the property.<ref name="mulholland"/><ref name="Old Blue">Template:Cite news</ref>

The neighborhood is crisscrossed by numerous municipal staircases that provide pedestrian access up and down the neighborhood's signature hills. Among these are the Descanso Stairs, Redcliff Stairs and the Music Box Stairs. The famous flight of stairs in Laurel and Hardy's film The Music Box is located between lower Descanso Drive and Vendome Street, as it winds up and around the hill.

In the 1940s, Chinese-American architect Eugene Kinn Choy sought to build a house for his family in Silver Lake, but due to racial covenants still in effect prohibiting the sale of property to "any person not of the Caucasian race," he was prevented from doing so. He went door to door to seek the approval of every house in the neighborhood before he was given approval to build in 1949.<ref name="Choy">Template:Cite news</ref>

Choy's groundbreaking efforts opened the door to the Asian American and Latino communities in the 1950s and 1960s. Beginning in the 1970s, the neighborhood became the nexus of Los Angeles' gay leather subculture, similar to the SoMA neighborhood in San Francisco.<ref name="Townsend, Larry 1972">Townsend, Larry. The Leatherman's Handbook. New York: Other Traveller, 1972.</ref> Since the late 1990s, gentrification has changed the area by pushing out public sex and "gay cruising"<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and facilitating the opening of many independent upscale boutiques, coffee shops, fitness studios, and restaurants.

The community continues to evolve, incorporating its bohemian roots with its racial and sexual diversity of the mid-20th century as architects such as Barbara Bestor and Gustavo Gubel, artists such as cache and Eric Junker, and musicians like Moby and Flea continue to define Silver Lake’s environment as a cultural and creative enclave.<ref name="hous">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

LGBT+ community

Early history

The Black Cat gay bar, site of a controversial 1967 police raid.

In the 1930s, Silver Lake and Echo Park still comprised Edendale and acted as a space where members of the LGBT community were able to express their identities. Prominent female impersonator Julian Eltinge built his house in Silver Lake and performed until the city passed laws criminalizing cross-dressing, after which he continued to recount his drag performances to audiences.<ref>Hurewitz, Daniel (2007). Bohemian Los Angeles and the Making of Modern Politics. Berkeley: University of California Press. Retrieved March 8, 2016.</ref>

Silver Lake was also home to Harry Hay, credited with founding the first gay organization, the Mattachine Society, which began as Bachelors' Anonymous. Hay lived and had meetings in Silver Lake at the time the group began in 1950. Kevin Roderick wrote in his eulogy for Hay in Los Angeles that many consider the house located near Silver Lake to be the birthplace of the gay-rights movement.<ref>Roderick, Kevin (January 2003). "Epitaph: Harry Hay". Los Angeles. Retrieved March 8, 2016.</ref>

Queer liberation

The Black Cat Tavern, a fairly popular bar that has now become a historic-cultural monument, was the site of a police raid in 1967 that spread to adjacent bars, becoming a full-blown riot, which resulted in more than a dozen arrests. The protests in response to the raid predated the Stonewall riots by two years.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Beginning in the 1970s, the neighborhood became the nexus of Los Angeles' gay leather subculture.<ref name="Townsend, Larry 1972"/>

HIV/AIDS epidemic

As the HIV/AIDS epidemic gripped the US in the 1980s, tensions between gay men and the Los Angeles Police Department escalated. Several LGBT activists in Silver Lake claimed they felt unsafe reporting hate crimes against them to the police, who they felt harbored anti-LGBT sentiments. Their complaints grew to the point that then-City Council member Michael Woo advocated establishing a hotline to relay information to police indirectly and compile statistics on the frequency of gay-bashings.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Some bath houses, which acted as social spaces for gay men, were shut down by the city government in an effort to curb the spread of the virus. The ensuing controversy reflected a nationwide debate about whether this type of action constituted public health policy or perpetuation of discrimination against the LGBT community.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Circus of Books was a bookstore and gay pornography shop that was notable as a gay cruising spot in the 1980s.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Gentrification

2025 Off Sunset Festival held next to an Erewhon Market location, contrasting the longstanding LGBT+ community with recent gentrification.

Beginning in the 1990s, gentrification changed the area by pushing out cruising for sex.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 1992, about 85 activists protested gay-bashing and violent acts against homosexuals in the area, carrying banners emblazoned with “Stop the Violence” along Sunset Boulevard.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Gay bar Akbar opened on New Year's Eve 1995. In 2004, fearing displacement through gentrification, the bar's owners purchased the building and converted the neighboring unit into a dance floor.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Since 2006, Eagle LA has served as a popular gathering point for the local gay leather subculture. Its location was home to several prior gay bars: Shed (1968-1972), Outcast (1972-1983), and Gauntlet II (1983-2005).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Beginning in 2011, the City of Los Angeles removed anti-cruising traffic signs installed in Silver Lake,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> but additional such signs were identified and removed in 2024.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In response to gentrification and the closure of several local gay bars, the Off Sunset Festival was launched in 2013 to celebrate the neighborhood's rich LGBT+ history.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2019, Maebe A. Girl became the first drag queen ever elected to public office in the United States, joining the Silver Lake Neighborhood Council.<ref name="auto">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Reservoir

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Silver Lake Reservoir and environs, 1921

The neighborhood was named for Water Board Commissioner Herman Silver, who was instrumental in the creation of the Silver Lake Reservoir in the neighborhood, one of the water storage reservoirs established as part of the controversial Los Angeles Aqueduct project in the early 1900s.<ref name="Ivanhoe"/> This is one of ten that still remain in Los Angeles.<ref name="latimes2">de Turenne, Veronique (March 13, 2008). "Silver Lake goes dry". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 28, 2010.</ref>

In the community of Silver Lake lies the namesake reservoir composed of two basins, with the lower named Silver Lake and the upper named Ivanhoe. The lower body of water was named in 1906 for Herman Silver; the upper body received its name from the 1819 Sir Walter Scott novel Ivanhoe.<ref name="funfacts">Rob (June 16, 2009). "13 Facts About The Silver Lake Reservoir". Take Sunset. Retrieved January 28, 2010.</ref> In 1989 the City of Los Angeles, Cultural Heritage Commission, Cultural Affairs Department declared both reservoirs Historic-Cultural Monument No. 422.<ref>Template:Cite sign</ref>

The reservoirs are owned and maintained by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP) and provided water to 600,000 homes in downtown and South Los Angeles until 2013 when federal water quality regulations mandated reservoirs be covered;<ref name="dwprefill">"LADWP Begins Refilling the Silver Lake Reservoir"Template:Dead link. (May 7, 2008). Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. Retrieved January 28, 2010.</ref> The Headworks Reservoir complex replaced the Silver Lake and Ivanhoe reservoirs with two underground reservoirs, Headworks East and Headworks West located north of Griffith Park.<ref>"Headworks Reservoir – Silver Lake Reservoir Complex Storage Replacement". (March 2, 2012). Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. Archived from the original on March 1, 2014. Retrieved December 3, 2015.</ref><ref name="Masters">Template:Cite news</ref>

Also within the grounds of the reservoir are several popular recreational facilities: the Silver Lake Recreation Center, which includes an adjacent city park; the Template:Convert Silver Lake Walking Path, which circumnavigates the reservoirs; two enclosed dog parks, and the Silver Lake Meadow, modeled after NYC's Central Park Sheep Meadow. On the northeast corner of the property is the Neighborhood Nursery School, which since 1976 has been at the corner of Tesla Avenue and Silver Lake Boulevard. It is a parent-participation cooperative preschool, affiliated with the California Council of Parent Participation Nursery Schools.<ref>"The Neighborhood Nursery School". Retrieved February 25, 2013.</ref><ref>"Parent Involvement in Child's Education". California Council of Parent Participation Nursery Schools. Retrieved February 25, 2013.</ref>

Government

As of 2024, Silver Lake is represented by Los Angeles City Council Members Hugo Soto-Martinez and Nithya Raman and the Silver Lake Neighborhood Council.<ref>"City of Los Angeles Council Directory". Retrieved August 5, 2017.</ref> The Silver Lake Neighborhood Council (SLNC) was formed in the early 2000s and certified as part of the City of Los Angeles Neighborhood Council system in February 2003. Its 21-member governing board is elected for two-year terms in September.<ref>"Silver Lake Neighborhood Council". Retrieved September 2, 2013.</ref> Recent projects have included "Street Medallions" created by artist Cheri Gaulke, "ArtCans", the "Electrical Art Box Project", and the second annual "Make Music LA"<ref>amyclarke (June 28, 2013). "Make Music LA: Sunset Triangle Plaza Acoustic Concert, Silver Lake". Gaia Grove. Retrieved September 2, 2013.</ref> created by several different artists, groups, and the SLNC Arts & Culture Committee, whose current co-chairs are Renee Dawson and Dulce Stein.<ref>"SLNC Arts & Culture Committee". Silver Lake Neighborhood Council. Retrieved June 3, 2021.</ref>

The Silver Lake Residents Association,<ref name="Welcome">"Welcome to Silver Lake". Retrieved August 1, 2008.</ref> the Silver Lake Improvement Association,<ref>"Silver Lake Improvement Association". Retrieved April 22, 2011.</ref> the Silver Lake Reservoirs Conservancy,<ref>"Silver Lake Reservoirs Conservancy". Retrieved April 22, 2011.</ref> and the Silver Lake Chamber of Commerce<ref>"Silver Lake Chamber of Commerce". Retrieved April 22, 2011.</ref> are all active in the area.

Demographics

The 2010 U.S. census counted 37,019 residents in the Template:Convert neighborhood—an average of 11.99k people per square mile, ranking Silver Lake 38th in population density among 121 Los Angeles Neighborhoods. The median age for residents was 35, about average for Los Angeles, but the percentages of residents aged 19 to 49 were among the county's highest.<ref name=MappingLASilverLake/>

The neighborhood was highly diverse ethnically. The population was 42.9% Non-Hispanic White, 35.8% Hispanic or Latino, 15.1% Asians and Asian Americans, 3.4% Black, and 2.7% mixed race or of other origins. The most common foreign place of birth was elsewhere in the Americas (57.9%), including Mexico (22.7%), El Salvador (17.6%), Guatemala (8.4%), Columbia (1.7%), and Nicaragua (1.5%); followed by Asia (32.6%), with the Philippines (19.2%) being the most common Asian place of birth. Residents born in the United States comprised 67.4% of the neighborhood's population, slightly higher than the 64.4% average for Los Angeles County.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The median yearly household income in 2010 dollars was $74,587, approximately 44.7% higher than the $51,538 median household income for Los Angeles. By neighborhood track, medians can range from $42,991 to $135,011 depending on location.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The average household size of 2.3 people was low for the city. Renters occupied 64.3% of the housing stock, and house or apartment owners the rest.<ref name=MappingLASilverLake/>

The percentages of never-married men (55.8%) and women (49.0%) were among the county's highest.<ref name=MappingLASilverLake/>

Education

The majority of residents (56.8%) aged 25 years and older have obtained a higher degree, compared to the 38.5% for Los Angeles in general.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Schools

The schools within Silver Lake are as follows:<ref name="mulholland"/><ref>"Silver Lake Schools". Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 5, 2013.</ref><ref>"Los Angeles Schools". GreatSchools.org. Retrieved June 5, 2013.</ref> Template:Div col

  • Allesandro Elementary School, public K–5, 2210 Riverside Drive
  • Bellevue Primary School, public K–1, 610 North Micheltorena Street
  • Clifford Street Elementary School, public K–5, 2150 Duane Street
  • Ivanhoe Elementary School, public K–5, 2828 Herkimer Street
  • Kids' World School, private K–12, 2132 Hyperion Avenue
  • Micheltorena Street Elementary School, public K–6, 1511 Micheltorena Street
  • Neighborhood Nursery School, non-profit pre-K, 2700 Tesla Avenue
  • St. Francis of Assisi Elementary School, parochial K–8, 1550 Maltman Avenue (closed in 2021)
  • St. Teresa of Avila Elementary School, parochial K–8, 2215 Fargo Street
  • Thomas Starr King Middle School, public 6–8, 4201 Fountain Avenue

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Library

The Silver Lake District is also served by the Silver Lake Branch of the Los Angeles Public Library. It is located at 2411 Glendale Boulevard, in northeastern Silver Lake between the reservoir and the I-5 freeway.<ref>"Silver Lake Branch Map". Los Angeles Public Library. Retrieved June 5, 2013.</ref>

Entertainment and nightlife

Sunset Junction

Silver Lake, known as one of "the city's hippest neighborhoods",<ref name=InUrbanLA>Khouri, Andrew (July 13, 2013). "In urban L.A., developers are building trendy homes on tiny lots". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 14, 2013.</ref> has many bars, nightclubs and restaurants. Since the 1990s, the neighborhood has become the center of the alternative and indie rock scene in Los Angeles. It was home to two major yearly street festivals: the Silver Lake Jubilee,<ref>"Silver Lake Jubilee". Retrieved April 22, 2011.</ref> held in May and the Sunset Junction Street Fair, held in August. The last Sunset Junction festival was held in 2010 and abruptly cancelled in 2011 just days before it was supposed to take place, after years of neighborhood controversy.<ref>Perpetua, Matthew (August 24, 2011). "Sunset Junction Festival Officially Canceled". Rolling Stone. Retrieved October 22, 2013.</ref><ref>Lewis, Randy; Wappler, Margaret (August 26, 2011). "Junction's spirit lost in growth". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 5, 2017.</ref> The Silver Lake Jubilee, the more recent addition, featured live music by local musicians, local artists and community businesses. It moved to the Arts District and changed its name to the Jubilee Music and Arts Festival in 2013.<ref>Staff (March 1, 2013). "Music Festival Coming to Arts District". Los Angeles Downtown News. Retrieved October 22, 2013.</ref>

A comparison has been drawn between New York City's Williamsburg neighborhood and Silver Lake, which has been called the "Williamsburg of the West".<ref>JT (May 31, 2011). "Silver Lake California and Williamsburg Brooklyn: Two ends of a secret hipster worm-hole?". Flying North. Retrieved August 13, 2013.</ref><ref>Broverman, Neal (October 8, 2009). "Dubious Claims? Silver Lake is the New Williamsburg". Curbed LA. Retrieved August 13, 2013.</ref>

The Micheltorena Steps draws visitors looking for prime selfie shots since it was painted with hearts and bright colors ("Stair Candy") in 2015.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In addition to being the site of early Western films' star Tom Mix's studio on Glendale Boulevard,<ref name="mulholland"/> Silver Lake has been used as the film location for several films and television shows and also shown in some video games.

  • Silent star Antonio Moreno and his wife Daisy Canfield Moreno's Canfield-Moreno Estate has been frequently used as a filming location.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • In Dragnet (season 3, episode 27), it is revealed that Sergeant Joe Friday lives in Silver Lake.
  • Much of the second season of You on Netflix was filmed and set in Silver Lake.
  • In Grand Theft Auto V, a Los Santos neighborhood called Mirror Park is based on Silver Lake.
  • A film adaptation of Steve Martin's novel Shopgirl, about a complex love triangle between a bored salesgirl, a wealthy businessman and an aimless young man was shot in Silver Lake starring Martin, Claire Danes and Jason Schwartzman.
  • Billie Eilish mentions Silver Lake in her 2019 song Xanny.

Notable residents

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See also

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References

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