Bluff Park, Long Beach, California

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Bluff Park is a small, upscale neighborhood in Long Beach, California. There is a bluff along much of the beach in Long Beach, and on one stretch, there is the narrow Bluff Park from which the neighborhood gets its name.

Bluff Park is the location of the Long Beach Museum of Art, as well as many older, well-maintained homes. There is also a Buddhist monastery that once was a Roman Catholic convent.

The boundaries for the Bluff Park Historic District (founded in 1982) are defined as Ocean Boulevard on the south, Junipero Avenue of the west, a jagged line between 2nd St. and Broadway on the north, and Loma Avenue on the east. The community of Belmont Heights is to the east of Bluff Park, and the community of Bluff Heights is to the north.

Contents

[edit] Bluff Park

Bluff Park is a 25.8 acres park located between Ocean Blvd. and a tall bluff above the large sandy beach in the area. It is frequented by joggers, strollers, and dog walkers. Hobbyists with radio-controlled gliders like to use the natural updrafts of the bluff for their model planes. There is a replica of the Lone Sailor Statue in the park in honor of Long Beach's Naval heritage.[1]

[edit] Historic buildings

The historic district includes a variety of architectural styles, including Greene and Greene, American Craftsman, California Bungalow, Spanish Revival, Prairie Style, American Colonial Revival, Tudor and Mediterranean from the early 1900s.

  • The Heartwell/Lowe House, 1919, 2505 East 2nd St., Colonial Revival (just outside of the Bluff Park Historic District)
  • Long Beach Art Museum (the Elizabeth Milbank Anderson house and carriage house), 1912, 2300 East Ocean Blvd., California Craftsman Bungalow [2]
  • Long Beach Monastery, 3361 E. Ocean Blvd., (affiliation: Mahayana, Ch'an (Zen), Dharma Realm Buddhist Association)

[edit] References

  1. ^ "The Lone Sailor Statue". The United States Navy Memorial website. Retrieved on 2008-03-18.
  2. ^ "Long Beach Art Museum". BeachCalifornia.com. Retrieved on 2008-03-18.

[edit] External links

Coordinates needed: you can help!

Personal tools