Neighborhood in Los Angeles, California, United States
Kinney Heights neighborhood sign at Gramercy Place and 24th Street
Kinney Heights is a neighborhood in Los Angeles , California , bounded by Arlington , 23rd, Adams , and Hermosa (originally Gramercy Place), just south of Interstate 10 . Kinney Heights is a subdistrict of the West Adams district of South Los Angeles , California; Curbed also associates it with Jefferson Park .[ 1]
Before it was subdivided the land was owned by General Hanford Gordon Lennox.[ 2] The area was developed in 1899 by developer Abbot Kinney , for whom it is named.[ 3] [ 4] It was a suburban tract of large Craftsman style homes at what was then the western edge of Los Angeles. The homes featured amenities like "beveled-glass china cabinets, marble fireplaces and mahogany floors".[ 5] It was accessible to downtown via streetcar and attracted upper-middle-class families.[ 6] At least one house in the neighborhood had a carriage house built on the property.[ 1]
Many of the hundred-year-old homes are still standing and have been renovated and upgraded. The neighborhood is part of the West Adams Terrace Historic Preservation Overlay Zone (HPOZ). Neighboring subdistricts included Gramercy Park , Adams Place, and Berkeley Square.[ 7]
The Williams Andrews Clark Library is located in Kinney Heights.[ 8]
Kinney Heights, Los Angeles
Kinney Heights tract map
West Adams in 1921: Ainsworth Tract, Kinney Heights, Belvere Heights, Berkeley Square, Adams Place, West Adams Heights, Gramercy Park, Grand View Heights, and Adams Street Homestead Tract
"For Sale: Lots" Los Angeles Times , 1902
Valle Vista Tourist Home on Cimmaron (2021)
Houses at Cimarron and 24th (2023)
^ a b Chandler, Jenna (2017-07-18). "Enchanting Craftsman with original carriage barn asks $899K in Jefferson Park" . Curbed LA . Retrieved 2023-11-05 .
^ "Pioneer Dies" . Los Angeles Evening Post-Record . 1920-11-13. p. 15. Retrieved 2023-11-05 .
^ "West Adams Heritage Association | in Historic West Adams, Los Angeles, California" . westadamsheritage.org . Retrieved 2023-11-05 .
^ "West Adams Terrace | Los Angeles City Planning" . planning.lacity.org . Retrieved 2023-11-05 .
^ Mithers, Carol (April 17, 2005). "Vanishing: The history of one house in L.A." Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 28 July 2013 .
^ Oliver, Marilyn Tower (October 1, 1995). "In Touch with the Past: Craftsman-style homes in three neighborhoods recall gracious days of yore. Today they rate among L.A.'s best buys" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved 2023-11-04 . & "HOMES: Neighborhoods' Craftsman-Style Houses (part 2 of 2)" .
^ Mandel, Jennifer (2022-03-29). The Coveted Westside: How the Black Homeowners' Rights Movement Shaped Modern Los Angeles . University of Nevada Press. ISBN 978-1-64779-035-6 .
^ Cooper, Suzanne Tarbell; Lynch, Don; Kurtz, John G. (2008). West Adams . Arcadia Publishing. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-7385-5920-9 .
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34°02′10″N 118°18′48″W / 34.036027°N 118.313283°W / 34.036027; -118.313283