![]() Much of the Redondo Beach lifestyle is a blend of the neighborhoods, activities and people of the three Beach Cities of Southern California's South Bay. Lifestyle Redondo Beach, 1890 Redondo Beach Pier The Marina, Harbor and Pier complexes are planned centers of activity that host seafood restaurants, bars, and smaller shops. There is a citywide height limit of 32 ft (9.8 m) for new homes but rooftop living spaces and decks are allowed. Zoning allows properties within two to three blocks of the beach to be developed as large, two to three-unit luxury townhomes inland areas are more likely to have single-family homes. The North Branch of the Redondo Beach Library serves this area. North Redondo is the home of the Redondo Beach Performing Arts Center and the Los Angeles Ballet. It is also home to the South Bay Galleria shopping center and Artesia Boulevard. While primarily residential, North Redondo contains some of the city's major industrial and commercial space, including the inland aerospace and engineering firms that are part of Southern California's long space legacy. North Redondo, north of 190th Street, is an inland community separated from the beachfront by Hermosa Beach and Manhattan Beach. The main library is located in the Civic Center. That district was once focused on fishing and canning when the pier was used to transport fish-based foodstuffs and canned fish to American and Asian consumers, but that industry experienced an economic downfall in the 1970s and 1980s. The small business district near the pier and marina was revived in the 1990s. South Redondo is along the beachfront with the pier and marina/harbor complex. Redondo Beach has a distinct division between the north and south sections of the city, with 190th, Anita, and Herondo streets forming its east–west boundary line. ![]() This power plant sports Whaling Wall number 31, a 586 ft × 95 ft (179 m × 29 m) whale mural by artist Robert Wyland titled "Gray Whale Migration". Redondo Breakwall is a well-known surf spot in the South Bay. The ocean side of Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) has restaurants and boating activities while inland of PCH is largely residential. ( January 2023) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Tourists gathered moonstones from the many mounds that had washed ashore during storms. Moonstone Beach was a tourist attraction from the late 1880s to the early 1920s. The Chowigna were relocated to missions in 1854, when Manuel Dominguez sold 215 acres (87 ha) of Rancho San Pedro, including the lake, to Henry Allanson and William Johnson for the Pacific Salt Works. Their village by the lake was called "Onoova-nga", or "Place of Salt." In the 1700s, the Chowigna bartered salt from the old Redondo Salt Lake, "a spring-fed salt lake about 200 yards wide and 600 yards long situated about 200 yards from the ocean", with other tribes. ![]() The wetlands located at the site of today's AES power plant in Redondo Beach were a source of foods including halibut, lobster, and sea bass, and also of salt. The Chowigna Indians used the site of today's Hopkins Wilderness Park, formerly Nike missile site LA-57 from 1956 to 1963, in Redondo Beach, California, as a lookout place. View of Redondo Beach Pier and railroad station from the Redondo Hotel, c. History Don Manuel Domínguez, a signer of the Californian Constitution and owner of Rancho San Pedro, which included all of modern-day Redondo. The western terminus of the Metro Rail C Line (formerly the Green Line) is in North Redondo Beach. The primary attractions include Municipal Pier and the sandy beach, popular with tourists and a variety of sports enthusiasts. ![]() Redondo Beach was originally part of the 1785 Rancho San Pedro Spanish land grant that later became the South Redondo area. The population was 71,576 at the 2020 census, up from 66,748 at the 2010 census. It is one of three adjacent beach cities along the southern portion of Santa Monica Bay. Redondo Beach (Spanish for ' round ') is a coastal city in Los Angeles County, California, United States, located in the South Bay region of the Greater Los Angeles area. ![]()
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