8 Ways Los Angeles Could Have Been Completely Different

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L.A. could have been a lot shorter.

L.A. could have been a lot shorter.

Up until 1957, the city enforced a strict height limit on buildings — they couldn't be taller than 13 stories.
(Above: Hollywood in 1925.)

Via: General Photographic Agency/Hulton Archive / Getty Images

There could have been a highway-beach.

There could have been a highway-beach.

This plan proposed building a man-made beach off the Santa Monica coast with a highway.

Source: untappedcities.com

Dodgers Stadium could have been a lake.

Dodgers Stadium could have been a lake.

In 1958, Assemblyman Don Anderson countered the Dodgers Stadium proposal with this idea — a public lake, which he said "would give people needed recreational facilities and help beautify downtown section."

Via: Courtesy USC Libraries Special Collections

Los Feliz, Silver Lake, and Echo Park could have been the movie studio hub.

Los Feliz, Silver Lake, and Echo Park could have been the movie studio hub.

In the 1910s, these east side neighborhoods were known together as Edendale, and this was the first home to Keystone Films and several major movie companies. Now it's home to hipsters and rich people.

Source: underthehollywoodsign.files.wordpress.com


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