Chinatown Visitor Map.indd
Transcription
Chinatown Visitor Map.indd
ce Pla yle Do eS y 0 100 7 Points of Interest North Spring Street Prudent Stre et 500 North Broadway North Hill Street West College Street 500 6 West College 200 St. N. Alameda St 900 900 900 8 ★ Site of mixed use development and new shopping center. Street North Spring St 2 nS yra tree t 1. Bamboo Plaza 988 North Hill Street 2. Chinese Consolidated Benevolant Association 925 North Broadway 3. East Gate (Central Plaza) 727 North Broadway 4. Chinese Historical Society 411 & 415 Bernard Street 5. Hop 300Louie Restaurant 200 950 Mei Ling Way 6. Metro Gold Line Station 901 North Spring Street 7. South Plaza Spring & College Street 8. Little Joe’s Restaurant Site 900 North Broadway (College St.) 9. St. Peter’s Church & Casa Italiana 1039 & 1051 North Broadway 10. West Gate to New Chinatown Hill St. between Bernard & College St. 11. West Plaza & Chung King Road Hill St. between Bernard & College St. 12. You Chung Hong Office Building 445 North Broadway 13. Far East Plaza 727 North Broadway Eas Bruno Street treet Main S North Nor 800 n Street North Mai lameda Street Alha mbra Aven u e 100 North A Stree North Spring Street North Broadway 700 North Hill Street 700 Yale Street Ord Street Site of mixed use development and new shopping center. 700 13 FARMERS MARKET New High Street 400 Cathay Bank 700 800 800 800 Alpine Street 500 Street 100 a Street th Alamed Yale Street Cleveland Street North Roundout Street 1000 3 New High Street Lei Min Way lace Gran Text and photos are reprinted courtesy of Angels Walk L.A. – www.angelswalkla.org elly Elm 900 5 Sun Mun Way Mei Ling Way Chung King Road Llew 12 Pacifi c Alliance Medical Center (Urgent Care and Medical Service) ill P th H e. d Av Nor The Chinatown Visitors Map is produced and made available through a partnership of the following organizations: Wes t Gin Ling Way Yale Street This plaza, built in 1978, is considered by many to be the first modern ethnic shopping mall in America. West College Street Originally planned as a space exclusively for food, the building is still home to the600 original Sam Woo (restaurant upstairs), take-out downstairs, featuring Chinese barbecue specialties, Pho 79 (a Vietnamese restaurant known for its beef noodle soup, rich t e e Str coffee, and boba teas in a variety of flavors), pot e wD Ne and Mandarin Deli (great dumplings and noodle soups), all of which have gone on to create chain outlets in Southern California ue and beyond. Multilingual signs on restaurant ve n A l H il er windows beckon customers in English, k n Alpine Street Korean, and Chinese, Spanish, Vietnamese, 600 many other languages. The Wing Hop Fung Ginseng and China Products Center is the largest department store in Chinatown. Hours can be spent exploring the aisles. which are fragrant with herbs, incense, barrels of ginseng, and teas, and overflowing with porcelains, clothing, foodstuffs, and arts and crafts. The t downstairs area has a vast selection Streeof dried seafood products, including shrimp and shark’s tin. A Chinese pharmacy is located inside and a doctor of Chinese medicine provides consultations during business hours. h Nort North B roadwa North Hill Stree Street y wa ree aF en sad Pa 10 11 FUTURE CALIFORNIA STATE PARK “CORNFIELDS” GOLD LINE CHINATOWN STATION 13 727 North Broadway, Suite 208, Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 680-0243 ◆ Fax: (213) 617-3298 info@chinatownla.com ◆ www.chinatownla.com et Bamboo Lane Far East Plaza Adobe Street ium 9 tre 1 �� �������� � ���� ������� �� ��������� ��������� ���� �� �� � �� �� y Wa Bu All of the buildings have upstairs living quarters. For many years, these apartments—combined with the block’s grocery stores, bookstores and newspaper offices—contributed to creating a greater neighborhood ambiance than the more tourist-oriented blocks to the east. The gentle sound of wind chimes and Cantonese conversations floated on the air. The scent of home-cooked meals drifted down from upstairs apartments, while the smell of incense wafted out of shops. In recent years, many of the old families and enterprises have moved on. In their place, several clothing designers and art galleries have opened, many of which have kept the original names on their storefronts. d Sta nk homes for a new land. The central figure with its arms raised symbolizes both gratitude for being in America and protest against violence and injustice encountered here. The figures on the left—a sailor, farmer, mason, miner and railroad worker—symbolize industrial progress. The figures on the right are metaphoric, representing sacrifice, struggle, education, marriage, and spiritual life. Adjacent to the complex, Cathedral High School, (1923) is the oldest Catholic high school in the city. 4 r th West Plaza opened in 1948 11 The with street names that signify the importance of the city of Chungking (now called Chongqing), China’s capital during World War II. Like its predecessor to the east, the West Plaza also features a gate and a wishing well. Metro Gold Line Chinatown Station—one of three landmark stations on the Metro Gold Line, 6 The which runs along the old alignment of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad—embraces the layered history, rich culture, and stimulating art found throughout the area. Familiar Asian architectural elements are instantly recognizable—from the green-tiled upturned roof of the shelter on the elevated upper platform to the red accents throughout the station—while the public art invites visitors to look deeper into the area’s compelling past. om Bernard Street No West Plaza & Chung King Road 3 it was built, New Chinatown can be seen today as an early blueprint for outdoor malls, mixed-use development, even as a precursor to “theme-park” shopping like The Grove and Universal City Walk. 10 The West Gate was actually the first of Chinatown’s four gates to be constructed. Built for New Chinatown’s grand opening in 1938, the gate is partially composed of 150-year-old camphor wood imported from China. At the top of the gate an inscription composed by Chinese Consul T.K. Chang reads “Cooperate to Achieve” in Chinese characters. During opening ceremonies, California Governer Frank Merriam dedicated a bronze plaque commemorating the contributions the Chinese made to the building of the railroads. From here, visitors can explore the western end of Gin Ling Way and adjacent side streets. Just inside the gate on the right, the Wishing Well–modeled on the Seven Star Caverns in Guangdong Province–invites visitors to toss West College Street coins for wisdom, love, vacation and other wonderful dreams. . Ave Metro Gold Line Station Chung Hong, the first Chinese12 You American to graduate from USC Law School and the first to pass the bar in California, worked tirelessly for Chinese-American civil rights. y Wa He testified before a U.S. Senate ium tS ad Bernard Street Committee on immigration issues and fought to repeal the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. He was also very involved in the Los Coronel Street Angeles Chinatown community, where he served as president of the local lodge of the Chinese American Citizens Alliance, provided legal advice, and invested in New Chinatown. The relocation of his office from Old Chinatown to this site represented the confluence of law, community spirit and wealth. ill er H New Chinatown, now often referred to as “Old Chinatown”, opened on June 25, 1938. It was built in response to the demolition of Los Angeles’ original Chinatown on the present site of Union Station and to this day is the only planned Chinatown in America. Absolutely unique when 1941 to house the Golden Pagoda Restaurant—is yet another instantly recognizable sight in Chinatown. Pagodas are traditionally erected to commemorate unusual acts of devotion, as omens of goodness, to trap unruly dragons, or merely as lookout towers. Just past Cottage Home Street, St. 9 Peter’s Church and the Casa Italiana stand together as gathering places for religious, cultural and social functions for Italian Americans in Southern California. Alberto Biasi’s 1970 abstract sculpture entitled “The Immigrants” sits atop the back wall of the parking lot between the two buildings. The sculpture celebrates men and women of all backgrounds courageous enough to leave their eH t East Gate (Central Plaza) Hop Louie Restaurant 5 The five-story Hop Louie Restaurant pagoda—originally built in St. Peter’s Church & Casa Italiana tag ree Established in 1890 to 2 advocate political and social advancement for the Chinese community, the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association’s first home was near the old Plaza in the Gamier Building in the new Chinese American Museum. Since its inception, the CCBA—which represents an alliance of nearly 30 family and district associations—has mediated between individuals and organizations, fought against discriminatory laws, and served as a political voice for the Chinese-American community Little Joe’s Restaurant Site Figueroa Terrace Chinese Consolidated Benevolant Association In the South Plaza located at the intersection of Spring and College Streets hangs a replica of a Yong Bell—one of five 2,000-year-old bronze percussion instruments unearthed in the mausoleum of Zhao Mai in downtown Guangzhou, China, in 1983. The bell—which symbolizes harmony and everlasting peace—was given in commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the Sister City agreement between Guangzhou and Los Angeles. 7 Closed since 1998, the site is scheduled for redevelopment with a 8 new housing and retail project, parking facility and public passageway linking the Metro Gold Line to the heart of Chinatown. The restaurant has in the past doubled as the set for numerous television shows and films. The lively settlement of Little Italy peaked along North Broadway in the 1920’s and 30’s then gradually disappeared with the appearance of new Chinatown. Cot You Chung Hong Office Building t St The Chinese Historical Society 4 of Southern California was founded in 1975 to discover and share Chinese-American history. In 1995, the Society moved into these two Victorian houses, which were built in 1886 and 1888 by Philip Fritz, an emigrant from Alsace, for his family. Today, the Visitors Center features displays documenting the history of the Chinese in Southern California, including artifacts from the archaeological dig conducted during excavations for the Metro Red Line at Union Station (the site of Los Angeles’ original Chinatown). The research collection includes manuscripts, photographs, artifacts, as well as tapes and transcripts from a Chinatown oral history project. The bookstore stocks volumes on local and national Chinese-American history. CHSSC offers a free self-guided tour map and conducts private and public tours through Chinatown. For more information, visit www.chssc.org West Gate to New Chinatown d ou Bamboo Plaza 1 opened in 1989, with a large variety of shops, eating establishments and the largest parking structure in busy Chinatown. Eschewing the traditional free-standing Chinese pailou, such as the one used at the entrance to Chinatown’s Central Plaza, Bamboo Plaza’s developers asked artist Dora de Larios to create a stylized gate that could be incorporated into the overall architecture. The work employs highly abstracted Chinese motifs, including water, bamboo and mountains. On the second floor, the Empress Pavilion is the most popular of the large Hong Kong-style dim sum restaurants in Chinatown. South Plaza Roun Chinese Historical Society South Bamboo Plaza t Co lleg eS tree t Bern Restaurants Stadiu m Wa y Doy le P lace e St 727 N. Hill St. Kan Shing Market 658 N. Broadway Lau’s Ranch Market 705 N. Spring St. 711 N. Spring St. Superior Poultry 750 N. Broadway 8 Wing Hop Fung 727 N. Broadway, Suites 102-108 Bakeries Phoenix Bakery 969 N. Broadway Queen’s Bakery, Inc. 809 N. Broadway 943 Sun Mun Way 4 Mountain Bar 475 Gin Ling Way 6 Hill Street Café 818 N. Hill St., Ste K 213.617.1108 Hop Li Seafood 526 N. Alpine St. 213.680.3939 Hop Woo BBQ Seafood 845 N. Broadway 213.617.3038 Wonder Bakery 943 N. Broadway Night Clubs Grand Star Jazz Club 625 W. College St., #109 4 Hop Louie 950 Mei Ling Way 213.628.4244 JC Cafe 4 Hop Louie 950 Mei Ling Way 843 N. Broadway St. 213.621.2642 Philippe’s, the Original 1001 W. Alameda Ave. 213.628.3781 8 Pho 79 Vietnamese 727 N. Broadway, Ste 120 213.625.7026 Pho 87 1019 N. Broadway 323.227.0758 Pho Au Pagolac Cholon 861 N. Spring St., #103 213.680.8838 Pho Hoa 818 N. Spring St., #103 213.485.0074 3 Pho Hoa 640 N. Broadway, #5-6 213.626.5530 Nort Way Won Kok 210 Alpine St. 213.613.0700 Alpin e Str 13 Zen Mei Bistro 800 Yale St. 213.626.7113 ASIAN CENTER 1 ★ Dim Sum served at lunch Ord Public Library 639 N. Hill St. Stree t ay dw roa 3 St. t St ree t Street meda Nort N. Ala 1. Asian Center ree 2. Bamboo Plaza 200 988 North Hill Street 8. Far East Plaza (20+ Shops) 700 block of Broadway 4. Central Plaza (10+ Shops) 947 North Broadway 5. Chinatown Plaza 818 North Broadway Take Spring St. to: L.A. City Hall 6. Dragon Plaza 818 North Hill Street t 100 7. Dynasty Center (125+ Shops) 800-815 North Broadway 3. BC Plaza 711 North Broadway FAR EAST PLAZA BC PLAZA Spring 900 Stree h Sp New ring High t t Stree eet Take Hill Street to: 8 Ahmanson Theatre Cathedral of Our Lady Of the Angels Dorothy Chandler Pavilion Walt Disney Concert Hall Site of mixed use development and new shopping center. e St Bru no S Art, Chinese Clothing and Cooking Equipment, tree Candies, Herbs, Jewelry, Luggage, Shoes, Teas of all kinds, andt much much more… ALL NEGOTIABLE – LOTS OF FUN! 300 FARMERS MARKET lleg Shopping Plazas 7 400 Cath ay Bank North 900 ay oadw 500 819 N. Broadway 213.625.0811 706 Broadway 213.625.7847 Way Mun Sun 900 et DYNASTY CENTER Yang Chow Wol Deli (old Lucky Deli) ★ 1 Ling Mei 900 727 N. Broadway, Ste 107 213.626.0764 00 No 0 rth B eet h Hi ll Str GA Chun LLERY g Kin R g Ro OW ad A RT treet Yale S Adob e Str eet 8 Viet Huong 5 t Co Take Alameda St. to Union Station et 818 N. Broadway, Ste 103A Shang lee Poultry Good Taste 451 Gin Ling Way 213.617.1481 Wes tre International Grocery 717 N. Broadway 213.680.2588 CHINATOWN PLAZA in S 758 New High Street 930 Chung King Road 600 4 Via Café 200 Ma Far-East Supermarket Hong Sang Lung Co. 859 N. Broadway 213.625.1688 10 rth 711 N. Broadway, Ste 117 Far-East Seafood Co. (Live Fish) 711-1/4 New High St. 213.617.3511 Peking Poultry (Live Duck) Pacific SAIGON PLAZA 7 9. Mandarin Plaza (20+ Shops) 970 North Broadway No 3 B C Market 716 N. Broadway Golden Dragon ★ 422 Ord St. 213.680.3608 6 100 10. Saigon Plaza (30+ Shops) 800 North Broadway e 860 N. Hill St. 960 N. Broadway 213.626.2039 656 N. Broadway 213.617.3400 eet ★ 500 nu Hoi Yeung Seafood, Inc. 672 N. Spring St. e Str GOLD LINE CHINATOWN STATION Av e Ai Hoa Supermarket 706-1/2 N. Broadway Nam-Hoa Fish Market (Live Fish) 8 Ten Ren’s Tea Time Alpin Site of mixed use development and new shopping center. bra G.W. Market 6 8 Street AB Market 960 N. Hill St. 213.253.2660 750 N. Hill St. 213.687.3088 reet lameda Pick your duck, rabbit, fish, frog or turtle. Take it home alive or have it dressed to go. Farmer’s Market Chinatown Visitor Map © 2005 – Chinatown B.I.D. / LaeRoc Partners, Inc. Text and photos are reprinted courtesy of Angels Walk L.A. – www.angelswalkla.org Ocean Seafood ★ 750 N. Hill St., #F 213.680.0640 ge St am The Chinese New Year in Los Angeles is famous for its Golden Dragon Parade, Fashion Show, the Annual Miss L.A. Chinatown Pageant, the Chinese New Year Festival and Banquet. Golden City Seafood 963 N. Hill St. 213.617.8382 Colle DRAGON PLAZA 711 1/2 New High St. 213.687.7333 Thanh Vi Street 00 3 North A Chinese New Year February 4-5, 2006 O.K. Seafood Tai Wong B.B.Q. Express 727 N. Broadway, Ste 136 213.626.8844 10 4 Alh Los Angeles Chinatown Firecracker 5/10K runs every year. The next run is Feb. 12, 2006. Also known as the Mid-Autumn Festival or the Lantern Festival, takes place each year on the fifteenth day of the eighth lunar month. Full House Seafood 934 N. Hill St. 213.626.6050 FUTURE CALIFORNIA STATE PARK “CORNFIELDS” MANDARIN PLAZA Sttrreeeett This farmers’ market is unlike any other in the region. offering quality produce from certified growers and producers in Southern California and a tremendous selection of Asian produce. It occurs every Thursday from 3:00pm to 7:00pm at the public parking Lot at 727 North Hill, between Alpine and Ord. New Dragon Seafood 949 N. Hill St. Chinatown Events The Moon Festival September 18, 2005; October 6, 2006; September 25, 2007 Foo Chow SHOPPING PLAZAS CENTRAL PLAZA 800 750 N. Hill Street, #R-S 304 Ord St. West 500 eet Lian Shing Hong Mien Nghia Noodle Express Bu St., #215 724 rN.th Hill No 213.680.7836 9 Lane h Br 988 N. Hill St., 2nd Floor 213.617.9898 nue et 2 g Str 2 Empress Pavilion ★ 818 N. Spring Street #108 685 N. Spring St., #H 213.625.0588 ve H ill A 8 Sum Wu Seafood nker boo Way Nort Yosemite Natural Products 686 N. Spring St. 213.626.1678 May Flower B.B.Q. Seafood POINTS OF INTEREST in W ay Sprin Specialty Shops & Markets Chow Fun Spring Street Smoke House 640 N. Spring St. 213.626.0535 Lei M North 715 New High Street, #A 951 Chung King Road 727 N. Broadway, Ste 109 213.623.6054 600 800 Fushing Ginseng Herb Co. 657 N. Broadway 722 N. Broadway,#A 8 Mandarin Deli 5 t 970 North Broadway #213 213.687.4107 Kang Kang Pharmacy 970 N. Broadway #207 818 N. Broadway, Ste 103A 984 N. Broadway 213.626.1837 727 N. Broadway, Ste 215 213.617.0638 Stree 734 N. Broadway 10 Jennie Tea Health Center 727 N. Broadway, Suites 102-108 Chinese Friends 8 Sam Woo Café High Far-East Center 8 Wing Hop Fung Win Sun Co. 970 N. Broadway, Ste 114 213.625.1195 P a cifi A ll ia c M ed nce ic C e n te a l r New 650 N. Spring Street 949 Chung King Road 213.628.3883 727 N. Broadway, Suite 129 818 N. Broadway, Ste 110A 10 Mandarin Chateau 803-807 epoN.t SBroadway 213.687.7238 New D l Stre Essential Chinese Herbs 8 JC Natural Herb Center Kim Tho Diamonds 700 N. Spring St. 213.617.2323 8 Sam Woo B-B-Q treet h Hil 640 N. Broadway, #4 818 N. Broadway, Ste 202 5 Shun Phat Jewelry, Inc. CBS Seafood ★ 637 N. Spring St. 213.613.1115 Nort 3 Duc Hiep Company, Inc. 818 N. Broadway, Ste 113B 5 Heng Hong Jewelry 5 Kim Seng Jewelry Co. 818 N.Broadway, Ste 104A MaiThai Thai Restaurant 00 510 Bernard Street 323.222.1482 963 Chung King Road 213.625.1360 663 N. Broadway 5 Heang Yeak Heng Jewelry 801 N. Broadway 727 N. Broadway, Ste 117 213.680.3838 ay 10 Mandarin Gallery Wing Hing Co. 827 N. Broadway, #1 823 N. Broadway 818 N. Broadway, Ste 114 8 B’s Wonton Noodle House 4 1 Ling oadw David Kordansky Gallery 510 Bernard Street 323.221.0016 Hing Ning Company, Inc. 861 N. Broadway 733A New High Street 5 Shun Heng Jewelry, Inc. 815-1/2 N. Broadway reet h Br 12 LMAN Gallery Columbus Pharmacy 961 N. Broadway 7 Kim Phuoc Jewelry 800 N. Broadway, #A ge St Nort Daniel Hug Gallery 975 Chung King Road 323.962.5069 5 Heang Yeak Chun Jewelry 818 N. Broadway, Ste 112B 818 N. Broadway, Ste 206A Colle 700 930 North Hill Street 323.810.8830 Van Hoa Duong Herbs 7 Shun Hak Heng Jewelry 818 N. Broadway, Ste 104B 828 N. Broadway, #1 213.625.8721 800 933 Chung King Road 213.613.0384 Hip Woo Hong, Inc. 7 Kim Phat Jewelry Co. 726 N. Broadway Saigon Sandwich treet 12 The Happy Lion Chung Hing Hong 750 N. Hill Street #N 5 Heang Hua Heng Jewelry 721 N. Broadway 213.625.5001 Yale S Leefahsalung 990 Hill St., #205 323.225.1288 Tan De Chinese Herbs 718 N. Broadway 5 Power Tech Jewelry Tools Lien-Hoa Deli Stre 12 Gin treet 12 China Art Objects Galleries 504 Chung King Court 213.625.1604 Hing-Fat, Co. 823 N. Broadway 5 Kim Ly Heang Jewelry 643 N. Spring St. 213.617.1083 West h Hill S 12 Telic Chiropractic/Acupuncture Han Hoa Jewelry Co. Asian Noodles 739-747 N. Main St. No rt L2kontemporary 835 N. Broadway 711 N. Broadway, #104 727 N. Broadway, Ste 103 213.687.7215 10 11 ard S out h Rou nd out Str e et 12 Bowie Van Valen Tak Ching Hong 722 N. Broadway 3 Ming Chung Jewelry, Inc. 205 Ord St., #101 213.680.2887 Regent Seafood 700 437 Gin Ling Way 213.628.7000 750 N. Hill Street 818 N. Broadway, Ste 102A Kim Hoang II Jewelry 818 N. Broadway, Ste 103 8 Kim Chuy Restaurant 2 Bam t 945 Sun Mun Way 213.626.0403 Heng Sang Hong 5 Hak Heng Huak Jewelry 818 N. Broadway, Ste 111 ABC Seafood ★ 937 N. Hill St. 213.613.1819 Bern BAMBOO PLAZA 12 800 961 Chung King Road 213.620.0030 Sister 838 N. Hill St., Suite A 818 N. Hill Street Suite A 818 N. Broadway, Ste 102B 650 N. Broadway, #A 5 Millennium Fine Jewelry �� �������� � ���� ������� �� ��������� ��������� ���� ��������� Stree 4 Jack Hanley Gallery Chinatown Chiropractic 988 N. Hill Street #123 6 Tai On Pharmacy 818 N. Broadway, Ste 112A ay land 12 Black Dragon Society 969 Chung King Road 213.617.1100 421 Alpine Street 2 Han San Company 685 N. Spring Street, #B 5 Ka-Hing Diamonds Co. 964-1/4 N. Hill Street 942 N. Broadway, #102 213.572.2507 Cleve 990 N. Hill 323.227.6788 Chanh Thai, Inc. Ta Chong Pharmacy 5 Hak Heng Fine Jewelry 638 N. Broadway 213.617.8698 treet 963 Chung King Road 213.617.0978 12 Peres Projects 307 Ord Street 640 N. Broadway, #3 Mei Hing Lung Jewelry Co. Yale S Grand Union Stone 709 N. Hill Street, #17 Guo Yi Tong 3 Ping On Pharmacy 818 N. Broadway, Ste 105 ew North Hill Place 12 BETALEVEL 945 Chung King Road 213.626.1984 841 N. Broadway 5 JAJ & Associates, Inc. 5 Lina Jewelry North Grand Ave. 990 Hill St., #180 323.226.9311 C.T. Pharmacy Ginseng Herb Grocery Good World Jewelry 727 N. Broadway, Ste 135 en re aF Way Ave. 418 Bamboo Lane 213.620.1188 12 Oulous Repair Shop 750 N. Hill Street, #J 8 Ing Brothers Jewelry 818 N. Broadway, Ste 101 ium Grand Furthermore Gallery Acupuncture Center 810 N. Broadway 5 G.N.D. Jewelry, Inc. Stad ad Pas North 4 Bamboo Lane / Revisited 648 North Spring Street 213.621.7645 655 N. Broadway 800 N. Broadway, #B 942, 953 Chung King Road ce 943 N. Hill Street 213.621.4011 711 N. Broadway, #106 7 PCT Ginseng & Herbs 701 N. Spring St. 931 Chung King Road Terr a 427 Bernard Street 323.441.1624 North Spring Street Gallery 3 Ginseng & Herbs 956 N. Hill Street eroa Flux 970 N. Broadway #107 3 AAA Ginseng City 7 Man Cheong Ginseng North Bunker Hill Ave. Acuna-Hansen Gallery 932 Chung King Road 213.617.8217 Gin Herb Corp. West Many specialties are to be found Collein Chinatown – Kung Pao Chicken, Peking ge S Duck, Dim Sum (at lunch ★), noodles treet with anything you can imagine, lobster in black bean sauce, steamed whole fish, salt & pepper pork & so much much more. Ask your proprieter…“What’s the house special?” Khang Lac Vietnam/Chinese Plum Tree Inn A BBQ Dim Sum ★ Figu 510 Bernard Street 10 AA Nutrient & Products Shopping here is unique, negotiable and more fun than Beverly Hills! Chong Hing Jewelers Hong Chong Jeweler Li Hing of Hong Kong Inc. eet t 977 Chung King Road 213.617.4948 Consult the local medical practitioner for an on-site consultation. They will prescribe a treatment for whatever might ail you. 9 ree Reprinted from The Los Angeles Chinatown 50 th Year Guidebook, June 1988. Authors are indebted to Peter SooHoo, Jr., George W. Tom and to E. Bingham, “Saga of the Los Angeles Chinese.” el Str Dodger Stadium 1000 Elysian Park Ave. www.dodgerstadium.com Chinatown Farmers Market “This new Chinatown is the only Chinese community in America which was planned beforehand, something which is typical of the present American trend of community planning. Whether it will live up to the expectations of those who are responsible for its birth remains for the future to decide.” et om Coron Paintings, Watercolors, bronze sculptures – Relics from the past. Buy a painting from the artist in residence. Dianepruess Gallery 12 4-F 12 Mary Goldman Gallery Chinese girls, in the traditional cheongsam, served as guides to the visitors. A display of art by Chinese American artists was available to the public. Some of the artist exhibitors remain familiar: Tyrus Wong, Keye Luke, Gilbert Leong, Jade Fon, George Chinn. Tyrus Wong, in particular, would later leave his creative mark in New Chinatown with outdoor and indoor murals which can be seen to this day. The festivities moved toward a fitting climax in the evening. Traffic at the street intersections had, by now, been jammed for hours. Anywhere from 25,000 to 100,0000 had taken part.Ceremonies began around seven o’clock with bands, one Chinese and one American, at the West Gate and on the east side of the Plaza. The bands took turns performing. Lion dances and singing lasted more than two hours. Finally, with the crowd at a high level of exhilaration and anticipation, two Chinese opera singers from San Francisco’s famed Tai Mou Toi troupe lit the “tons” of firecrackers. New Chinatown had thrown a great party and made an auspicious start. Eyewitness historian William Hoy could declare in his “CHINATOWN” column in 1938, Stre eH were open, and street booths were set up to attract even more customers. Some booths run by the youthful Federation were raising funds for civilian relief in war-torn China. About thirty high school and college ard den Jewelers Pru Chinese Medicine, Herbs & Pharmacies tag Fifty years ago on the sunny Saturday of June 25, 1938, California’s Governor Merriam and a host of dignitaries dedicated Los Angeles Chinatown’s Central Plaza in a gala Grand Opening ceremony. One of the Nation’s first malls and certainly the first modern American Chinatown, owned and planned from the ground up by Chinese, Central Plaza would provide a magnificent hub and lexus for growth into the famous colorful, vibrant Chinese American community we all know today. Originally, New Chinatown consisted of many notable restaurants, shops, an herbal store, a grocery store, a bean cake factory, a Chinese deli and offices. In 1938, these longtime establishments were all moved from Los Angeles’ Old Chinatown, not quite a mile away. By 1870, an identifiable “Chinatown” of 200 or so was situated on Calle de Los Negros - Street of the Dark Hued Ones – a short alley 50 feet wide and one block long between El Pueblo Plaza and Old Arcadia Street. Old Chinatown flourished, expanding eastward from the Plaza across Alameda Street and eventually attaining a population of over 3000. The Chinese densely settled a major part of Old Chinatown on the Juan Apablasa grazing grounds and vineyards. Old Chinatown in its heyday, 1890 to 1910, could count 15 or so streets and alleys, and perhaps 200 building units. Old Chinatown was a residential as well as commercial community. Old Chinatown, with restaurants, curio shops, and “strange” entertainments, even became an attraction for the early, pioneering breed of American tourist. The climax of years of planning and hope took place on June 25, 1938. A full-page ad in Section I of the Los Angeles Examiner greeted the morning reader, inviting him to partake of “The Enchanting Charm of Old China in Los Angeles.” New Chinatown was decorated with colorful lanterns and banners. The fl ags of the United States and the Republic of China were seen everywhere. These gala preparations were made by the youths of Chinatown, organized in a unique 1930’s Chinese American group - the Federation of Chinese Clubs in Los Angeles. Ex-California Governor Frank F. Merriam noted that New Chinatown “represented a monument to those Chinese who played such an important role in building the West and a lasting evidence of American Chinese amity.” Gov. Merriam then dedicated a curved plaque mounted on a column of the pailou, which was “Dedicated to the Chinese Pioneers Who Participated in the Constructive History of California.” Meanwhile, the public festival was in full swing. All stores Art Galleries Cot The Golden Years of Chinatown 11. The Shop (50+ Shops) 12. West Plaza Chung King Road