Downtown Los Angeles skyline
Many major companies are headquartered in Southern California, particularly Los Angeles.
Southern California, or So Cal, is defined as the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Its population centers on the cities of Los Angeles, San Diego, San Bernardino, and Riverside. Southern California is home to over 23 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, behind only the BosWash Region in the Northeastern United States.
There is no official definition for the northern boundary of Southern California, however, most definitions in use include all the land south of the Tehachapi Mountains, located about 70 miles (113 km) north of Los Angeles.
On the west of Southern California lies the Pacific Ocean; to the south is the international border between the United States and Mexico; to the east are the Mojave and Colorado Deserts and the Colorado River at the state's border with Arizona and Nevada.
Significance
Within its boundaries is a major world city, Los Angeles, and three of the country's largest metropolitan areas.[1]
Its counties of Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, San Bernardino, and Riverside are in the top 15 most populous counties in the United States. The region is also home to Los Angeles International Airport, the third-busiest airport in the United States by passenger volume,[2] and the 2nd by international passenger volume,[3] Van Nuys Airport, the world's busiest general aviation airport, Ontario International Airport, John Wayne International Airport, San Diego International Airport, and LA/Palmdale Regional Airport . Southern California is also home to the Port of Los Angeles, the United States' busiest commercial port, and the adjacent Port of Long Beach. Also of note in the region is the freeway system, which is the world's busiest. Six of the seven lines of the commuter rail system, Metrolink, run out of Downtown Los Angeles, connecting Los Angeles, Ventura, San Bernardino, Riverside, Orange, and San Diego counties with the other line connecting San Bernardino, Riverside, and Orange counties directly, the nation's first suburb-to-suburb commuter rail line.
Part of downtown San Bernardino
The Tech Coast is a moniker that has gained use as a descriptor for the region's diversified technology and industrial base as well as its multitude of prestigious and world-renowned research universities and other public and private institutions. Amongst these include five University of California campuses (Los Angeles (UCLA), Irvine, Riverside, Santa Barbara, and San Diego (UCSD) campuses), 12 California State University campuses (Bakersfield, Channel Islands, Dominguez Hills, Fullerton, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Pomona (Cal Poly Pomona), Northridge (CSUN), San Bernardino, San Diego (SDSU), San Luis Obispo (Cal Poly), and San Marcos campuses), as well as private institutions such as Caltech, the University of Southern California, Pepperdine University, Loyola Marymount University, the Claremont Colleges and the University of San Diego (USD).
The famous Hollywood sign in Los Angeles, a symbol of the city's world famous entertainment culture.
Southern California is also the entertainment (motion picture, television, and recorded music) capital of the world and is home to Hollywood, the center of the motion picture industry. Headquartered in Southern California are The Walt Disney Company (which also owns ABC), Sony Pictures, Universal, MGM, Paramount Pictures (parent company of Dreamworks), 20th Century Fox and Warner Brothers, and as well as Univision, Activision, and THQ. Southern California is also home to the world's largest adult entertainment industry, located primarily in the San Fernando Valley. More than 85% of adult film and video production in North America takes place in the area.
Besides the entertainment industry, Southern California is also home to a large surf and skateboard culture. Companies such as Volcom, Quiksilver, O'Neill clothing division, Lost Enterprises, Sector 9[4], RVCA, Body Glove and Surfline[5] are all headquartered here. Professional skateboarder Tony Hawk, professional surfers Rob Machado, Tim Curran, Bobby Martinez, Pat O'Connell, Dane Reynolds, and Chris Ward, and professional snowboarder Shaun White live in Southern California. Some of the world's legendary surf spots are here as well, including Trestles, Rincon, The Wedge, Huntington Beach, and Malibu, and it is second only to the island of Oahu in terms of famous surf breaks. Brand name skate parks including the Vans Skate Park in Orange, the Etnies Park in Lake Forest, and the YMCA Skate Park in Encinitas are in Southern California. Some of the world's biggest extreme sports events including the X Games[6], Boost Mobile Pro[7], and the U.S. Open of Surfing[8] are all in Southern California.
Southern California is home to many successful sports franchises and sports networks such as Fox Sports Net. Teams that are located in the region include the Los Angeles Lakers, Los Angeles Clippers, Los Angeles Dodgers, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, San Diego Padres, Los Angeles Kings, Anaheim Ducks, Los Angeles Galaxy, Chivas USA, Los Angeles Riptide, and San Diego Chargers. Southern California also hosts a number of popular NCAA sports programs, such as the UCLA Bruins, the USC Trojans, and the SDSU Aztecs.
With inhabitants from all over the world, Southern California has always been at the forefront of popular culture as well as a pioneer of several subcultures, including the hippie movement, and various musical movements such as skate punk, hardcore punk, and West Coast Rap with its gangster/"g-funk" style. The Los Angeles area in particular has always been one of the most important areas for entertainment, the arts, architecture, and food, all of which reflects the broad influence Los Angeles has on the world's culture.
Northern boundary
Southern California counties
The region's northern boundary is subject to a broader degree of interpretation than those of the West, East, and South. The most commonly used physical boundary between "Southern California" and the rest of the state is the Tehachapi Rangecitation needed, located about 70 miles (113 km) north of Los Angeles, and the Transverse Ranges[9] in Santa Barbara County west to Point Conception. Seven counties (listed in descending order of population) are included: Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange, San Bernardino, Riverside, Ventura, and Imperial, as well as the southern part of Santa Barbara.
A more inclusive definition coinciding neatly with county lines uses the sixth standard parallel south[10] of Mount Diablo (144 miles south of Mt. Diablo at 35°47′28″N) which forms the northern borders of San Luis Obispo, Kern, and San Bernardino counties as the boundary. The rest of Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Kern County, California are included as well for a total of ten counties.
| County |
Population (Jan 2007 estimate) |
Land Area (mi²) |
Density (per mi²) |
| San Bernardino County |
2,028,013 |
20,105 |
100.9 |
| Los Angeles County |
10,331,939 |
4,061 |
2,544.2 |
| San Luis Obispo County |
257,005 |
3,304 |
77.8 |
| Ventura County |
825,512 |
1,846 |
447.2 |
| San Diego County |
3,098,269 |
4,200 |
737.7 |
| Riverside County |
2,031,625 |
7,207 |
281.9 |
| Orange County |
3,098,121 |
789 |
3,926.6 |
| Santa Barbara County |
421,625 |
2,737 |
145 |
| Kern County |
779,869 |
8,141 |
95.8 |
| Imperial County |
172,672 |
4,175 |
41.36 |
| Southern California |
23,044,650 |
56,565 |
407.4 |
| City |
Population (2007 estimate) |
| Santa Barbara |
89,456 |
| Goleta, Santa Barbara County |
30,169 |
| Carpinteria, Santa Barbara County |
14,123 |
| Summerland CDP, Santa Barbara County |
1,545 (2000 Census) |
| Isla Vista CDP, Santa Barbara County |
18,344 (2000 Census) |
| Mission Canyon CDP, Santa Barbara County |
2,610 (2000 Census) |
| Toro Canyon CDP, Santa Barbara County |
1,697 (2000 Census) |
| Hope Ranch, Santa Barbara County |
2,200 (2000 Census) |
| Southern Coast of Santa Barbara County |
170,144 |
| Kern County |
801,648 |
| SoCal boundary disputed |
971,792 |
Source : http://www.dof.ca.gov/HTML/DEMOGRAP/ReportsPapers/Estimates/E1/documents/e-1press.pdf
Urban landscape
Southern California is in part a heavily developed urban environment, along with vast arid areas that have been left undeveloped. It is the second-largest urbanized region in the United States, second only to the Washington, D.C./Philadelphia/New York/Boston megalopolis (BosWash). Whereas the BosWash cities are dense, with major downtown populations and significant rail and transit systems, much of SoCal is famous for its large, spread-out, suburban communities and use of automobiles and highways. The dominant areas are Los Angeles, Orange County, San Diego, Riverside, and San Bernardino, each of which is the center of its respective metropolitan area, which are in turn composed of numerous other cities and communities.
Traveling south on Interstate 5, the main gap to continued urbanization is Camp Pendleton. The communities along Interstate 15 and Interstate 215 are so inter-related that Temecula has as much connection with San Diego County as it does with the Inland Empire. To the east, the United States Census Bureau considers the San Bernardino and Riverside County areas, Riverside-San Bernardino Area as a separate metropolitan area from Los Angeles County. While many commute to L.A. and Orange Counties, there are some differences in development, as most of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties were developed in the 1980s and 1990s.
Regions
Major cities (over 200,000 inhabitants)
Population figures for California cities are 2008 State of California estimates[12]
- Los Angeles - 4,045,873
- San Diego - 1,336,865
- Long Beach - 492,642
- Santa Ana - 353,184
- Anaheim - 346,823
- Riverside - 296,842
- Chula Vista - 231,305
- Irvine - 209,806
- Glendale - 207,157
- San Bernardino - 205,493
- Huntington Beach - 201,993
Principal cities (over 100,000 inhabitants)
Ventura City Hall in Old Town Ventura
- Oxnard - 194,905
- Fontana - 188,498
- Moreno Valley - 183,860
- Oceanside - 178,806
- Santa Clarita - 177,045
- Rancho Cucamonga - 174,308
- Ontario - 173,690
- Garden Grove - 173,067
- Pomona - 163,405
- Torrance - 148,965
- Pasadena - 148,126
- Palmdale - 147,897
- Corona - 147,428
- Lancaster - 145,243
- Escondido - 143,389
- Orange - 140,849
- Fullerton - 137,437
- Thousand Oaks - 128,650
- El Monte - 126,053
- Simi Valley - 125,657
- Inglewood - 118,878
- Costa Mesa - 113,955
- Downey - 113,379
- West Covina - 112,666
- Norwalk - 109,695
- San Buenaventura - 108,261
- Burbank - 108,029
- Victorville - 107,408
- Carlsbad - 103,811
- South Gate - 102,816
- Temecula - 101,057
- Murrieta - 100,173
Counties
- South of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino mountains
- North of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino mountains
Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Ventura are also counties in the Central Coast.
ZIP Codes
See Southern California Zip Codes
Geographical regions
Marriott Hotel in downtown San Diego
Southern California is also divided into the Coastal Region (Orange County, Los Angeles County, San Diego County, Santa Barbara County, and Ventura County) and the larger, more sparsely populated, desert Inland Empire (San Bernardino County, Riverside County, and Imperial County). The division between the Coastal Regions and the Inland Empire winds along the backs of the coastal mountain ranges such as the Santa Ana Mountains. A related geographical term is cismontane Southern California, which refers to the portion of California on the coastal side of the Transverse and Peninsular mountain ranges. The term "Southern California" often refers to this region specifically, as opposed to largely desert areas comprising the rest of the southern portion of the state, which are referred to as transmontane Southern California.
Geographic features
View from La Jolla Cove in San Diego
Coachella Valley Preserve in the Colorado Desert in Riverside County
- Antelope Valley (Los Angeles and Kern Counties)
- Ballona Wetlands (Los Angeles County)
- Big Bear Lake (San Bernardino County)
- Cajon Pass (San Bernardino County)
- Channel Islands (Ventura County)
- Coachella Valley (Riverside County)
- Colorado River (San Bernardino, Riverside & Imperial Counties)
- Conejo Valley (Ventura County)
- Cucamonga Valley (San Bernardino County)
- High Desert (Los Angeles, Kern, & San Bernardino Counties)
- Imperial Fault (Imperial County)
- Imperial Valley (Imperial County)
- In-Ko-Pah Mountains (San Diego County)
- Inland Empire (Riverside, San Bernardino and parts of Los Angeles Counties)
- Jacumba Mountains (San Diego County)
- La Jolla Cove (San Diego County)
- Laguna Mountains (San Diego County)
- Lake Arrowhead (San Bernardino County)
- Lake Casitas (Ventura County)
- Lake Castaic (Los Angeles County)
- Lake Piru (Ventura County)
- Lakeview Mountains (Riverside County)
- Los Angeles Basin (Los Angeles County)
- Los Angeles River (Los Angeles County)
- Low Desert (Imperial, Riverside & San Bernardino Counties)
- Mojave Desert (Los Angeles, Kern & San Bernardino Counties)
- Mugu Lagoon (Ventura County)
- New River (Imperial County)
- Orange Coast (Orange County)
- Oxnard Plain (Ventura County)
- Palomar Mountain (San Diego County)
- Palos Verdes Peninsula (Los Angeles County)
- Peninsular Ranges (San Diego County)
- Point Mugu (Ventura County)
- Pomona Valley (Los Angeles and San Bernardino Counties)
- Puente Hills (Los Angeles County)
- Pyramid Lake (Los Angeles County)
- Rio Hondo (Los Angeles County)
- Saddleback Valley (Orange County)
- Salton Sea (Imperial & Riverside Counties)
- San Andreas Fault (All Counties)
- San Bernardino Mountains (San Bernardino County)
- San Bernardino Valley (San Bernardino County)
- San Diego River (San Diego County)
- San Fernando Valley (Los Angeles County)
- San Gabriel Mountains (Los Angeles and San Bernardino Counties)
- San Gabriel River (Los Angeles County)
- San Gabriel Valley (Los Angeles County)
- San Jacinto Mountains (Riverside County)
- San Pedro Bay (Los Angeles County)
- Santa Ana Mountains (Los Angeles, Riverside & Orange Counties)
- Santa Ana River (San Bernardino, Los Angeles & Orange County)
- Santa Ana Valley (Orange County)
- Catalina Island (Los Angeles County)
- Santa Clara River (Ventura County)
- Santa Clara River Valley (Ventura County)
- Santa Clarita Valley (Los Angeles County)
- Santa Margarita River (Riverside, Orange & San Diego Counties)
- Santa Monica Bay (Los Angeles County)
- Santa Monica Mountains (Los Angeles & Ventura Counties)
- Santa Susana Mountains (Los Angeles & Ventura Counties)
- Sonoran Desert (San Diego County, Arizona, Mexico)
- Tijuana River (San Diego County)
- Ventura River (Ventura County)
- Victor Valley (San Bernardino County)
Transportation
One of the large LAX signs that greet visitors to LAX. This sign is at the Century Boulevard entrance to Los Angeles International Airport
Airports
For major airlines and commercial air carriers
Central business districts
Downtown San Bernardino Hotel, known as The Clarion Hotel
The following are central business districts in Southern California:
Transport
Freeways
-
Interstate Highways
U.S. Highway system
California State Routes
- Note: highway segments with names listed in italics are surface streets and not freeways.
Major public transit organizations
Metrolink commuter lines
-
Communication
Telephone area codes
Map of major Southern California area codes
- 213 - Downtown L.A. - originally covered all of Southern California.
- 323 - Doughnut-shaped area surrounding downtown, including Hollywood, Mid-Wilshire, East L.A., northern South L.A.
- 310 - West L.A., Santa Monica, and the South Bay
- 424 - shared with 310
- 562 - South and South-Eastern Los Angeles County, Norwalk, Cerritos, Long Beach, Whittier, Pico Rivera area and Northwest Orange County {Seal Beach, Los Alamitos and La Habra}.
- 619 - San Diego including downtown, East County and The South Bay
- 626 - Pasadena, San Gabriel Valley
- 657 - Overlay area code with 714 beginning February 23, 2008. New telephone numbers in the 714 geographic region will be given the 657 area code.
- 661 - Santa Clarita Valley and Antelope Valleys including Palmdale (Antelope Valley), Lancaster (Antelope Valley); Santa Clarita (Santa Clarita Valley), Val Verde (Santa Clarita Valley), Stevenson Ranch (SCV), and Castaic (SCV).
- 714 - Northern Orange County (Anaheim, Santa Ana & Huntington Beach) and parts of San Bernardino County, (Chino Hills)
- 760 - North County San Diego (Oceanside, Escondido, San Marcos); Palm Springs; El Centro; Victor Valley; Barstow; Ridgecrest Proposed Area Code 442, either as an overlay or an entire new area code for the North San Diego County area and/or the Coachella Valley remains in debate.
- 805 - All of Ventura County as well as Santa Barbara County and San Luis Obispo County
- 818 - The San Fernando Valley, Glendale
- 858 - Some northern neighborhoods of San Diego (Clairemont, La Jolla, Mira Mesa, Rancho Bernardo); Del Mar and Poway
- 909 - Eastern Los Angeles County and western parts of the Inland Empire/Southwestern San Bernardino County (Pomona & San Bernardino)
- 949 - Southern Orange County (Irvine, Newport Beach, Laguna Niguel & San Clemente)
- 951 - Inland Empire South/Western Riverside County (Riverside, Temecula, & Murrieta)
Sports teams
See also
References
External links
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