Encino, Los Angeles, California

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Lake Balboa, an artificial lake in Encino's Balboa Park.
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Lake Balboa, an artificial lake in Encino's Balboa Park.
Rancho Encino, part of the town's original namesake, 1900.
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Rancho Encino, part of the town's original namesake, 1900.

Encino (Spanish for "Oak") is a district in the San Fernando Valley region of the City of Los Angeles, California. Specifically, it is located in the central portion of the southern San Fernando Valley. It derives its name from the Rancho Los Encinos (Ranch of the Oaks), a parcel of land given to three Mission Indians by the Spanish government following its abandonment of the California missions in the early 1800s. Rancho Encino was established in 1845.[1]

Encino was also the site of RKO Studios "Encino Ranch" and the site of such iconic movies as "It's a Wonderful Life" and "The Hunchback of Notre Dame."[2]

The portion of the Los Angeles River that runs through the Encino area is one of only two unpaved areas necessitated by the high water table. Apparently the original aquifer that fed the City of Los Angeles is the one located below Encino.

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[edit] Geography

Encino is bordered by Tarzana on the west, the Sepulveda Dam Recreation Area on the north, Sherman Oaks on the east, and the Encino Reservoir of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power on the south. The district's boundaries are roughly Mulholland Drive on the south, Lindley Avenue on the west, Victory Boulevard on the north, and the San Diego Freeway on the east. Major thoroughfares include Ventura, Magnolia, and Burbank Boulevards, as well as White Oak Avenue, Balboa Boulevard, and Hayvenhurst Avenue.

[edit] Demographics

As of the 2000 Census, the population of Encino was 40,946, with a population density 3,864.9 per square mile. 18.25% of the population was under 18, and 20.08% was over 64. The district contained 18,159 housing units in a land area of 10.59 square miles (27.44 square kilometers). Water covers 0.13 square miles (0.33 square kilometers) of the district.

[edit] Education

Encino is the location of Phillips Graduate Institute. Primary and secondary schools are operated by the Los Angeles Unified School District, and is also home to five private schools. The public elementary, middle, and high schools are: Emelita Elementary School, Encino Elementary School, Lanai Road Elementary School, Nestle Elementary School, Mulholland Middle School, Portola Middle School, Birmingham High School, Reseda High School, Sherman Oaks Center for Enriched Studies, and Zane Grey High School. The private schools are: Children’s Community School, Los Encinos School, Valley Beth Shalom Day School, Westmark School, Holy Martyrs Armenian High School, and Crespi Carmelite High School.

[edit] Notable residents

[edit] Encino in popular culture

It is the setting and namesake of the 1992 comedy, Encino Man.

Dave Grohl mentioned wearing a black "Encino" shirt to the MTV Movie Awards in a Spin Magazine interview and says of Encino, "There are some really good delis out here." [4]

Encino is mentioned in Frank Zappa's 1982 hit song, "Valley Girl."

"The Point" from Fast Times at Ridgemont High was located at one of the baseball fields in Encino Little League.

Encino was where Ali's family lived (Elisabeth Shue) in the movie "The Karate Kid". Their country club was Encino Oaks and they lived on Alonzo Avenue.

Encino is where live-action specials on the popular cartoon SpongeBob SquarePants take place.

Encino is the setting of the first half of Chilean author Alberto Fuguet's novel Las películas de mi vida (The Movies Of My Life)

Encino is where, according to a recurring on-air gag, Match Game panelist Brett Somers would take host Gene Rayburn to a nice hotel after the show if she were "feeling frisky."

The Jackson family has owned a mansion on Hayvenhurst Ave. in Encino since the 1970's, with all their children including Michael and Janet growing up there.

Butch Hartman formally resided there as well as actor Samuel L. Jackson (at 5128 Encino Ave; sold for around $2 million in 2002).

Irv "Lorenzo" Gotti, the head of The Inc. Records, formely known as Murder Inc. Records, owns a mansion in Encino.

On May 28, 1998, Actor/Comedian Phil Hartman was murdered by his wife in Encino.

The "40-year Old Virgin" was filmed in Encino.

[edit] Notable attractions

The Encino Velodrome has provided an outdoor oval bicycle racing track since 1963.

The Sepulveda Basin Recreation Area[5] is a large area in Encino with multiple golf courses, tennis courts, soccer fields, baseball diamonds, bike paths and a lake bordered by about 2,000 Pink Cloud Cherry Trees that blossom in the Spring and were donated anonymously.[6]

For over a millennium, the area known as Encino was the home of a massive California Live Oak Tree known as the Encino Oak (a redundancy as Encino means Oak in Spanish). It is possible that Encino is named because of this particular tree. It was known for both its size and longevity. The tree died on February 7, 1998 after an El Niño Storm felled it. Today there is a monument to the great tree at the corner of Ventura Boulevard and Louise Avenue where the Encino Oak once stood. [1]

[edit] External links