Warner Center, Los Angeles, California

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Warner Center is an edge city in the Woodland Hills district of Los Angeles, California. It was built to relieve traffic to/from downtown Los Angeles, as well as generate jobs in the San Fernando Valley. It was first envisioned in the 1970s and considered complete in the mid-1990s.

It contains many low rise office buildings, as well as several high rise skyscrapers, notably three that are all in the same lot of land (all three being zoned out for commerce). There is also some residential and industrial, as well as some retail such as the Promenade Mall. The western-most stop of the Metro Orange Line ends at the Warner Center Transit Hub on Owensmouth Street, in between Erwin and Oxnard streets. Los Angeles Pierce College (a community college) is located east of the Center.

The three tallest skyscrapers of Warner Center, with lower mid-rises around them. Taken from the corner of Owensmouth and Erwin in December 2004.
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The three tallest skyscrapers of Warner Center, with lower mid-rises around them. Taken from the corner of Owensmouth and Erwin in December 2004.

The three tallest skyscrapers of Warner Center are all next to each other as to create a miniature skyline that blends in with the other high rises of the Valley, let alone Warner Center itself. The center skyscraper of the three is the tallest (even more of a favor to the skyline), having approximately 25 stories above ground, and as of the time of writing, has the company logo of AIG at the top. They are owned by Douglas Emmet Properties, which has an overview of these towers here.

The skyline of Warner Center is visible from the 101 freeway, with the farthest view of the entire skyline being visible to the west from the off-ramp of Parkway Calabasas Road, in the city of Calabasas, and with the closest western view being shortly after the Fallbrook Avenue off-ramp in Woodland Hills. The farthest eastern view is unknown at this time, but, on the clearest of days, can probably be seen from Van Nuys.

The three tallest skyscrapers are photographed on the front page here: http://www.woodlandhillscouncil.org/

Warner Center is named for Harry Warner, the eldest of the Warner Brothers, who had owned the land as a small part of his 1100 acre (4.5 km²) horse ranch. Robert Voit led the commercial development of the land after it was sold in the late-1970s.

On October 29, 2005, a Metro station opened in Warner Center, near the intersection of Topanga Canyon/Victory, as the first stop of the Orange Line.

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