Venice is named after the Italian city. According to history, some rich tobacco dude decided to drain the marshes, build and dig canals on this beach front property. Shops and town buildings closely followed Venetian architecture – with gondolas and all. After being incorporated into Los Angeles in 1925, Venice had descended into the “Slum by the Sea” for the next 50 years.
Today, most of the canals have been filled in and its image has been vastly improved. Venice’s slum history gives this area its bohemian/eclectic charm. Perhaps the most famous point of interest is Muscle Beach – where the governator trained before reaching celebrity status. The boardwalk is quite interesting because it doesn’t feel as commercialised as the other beaches. Artists, independent shops and weirdos who believe in doomsday are found along this walkway. Incidentally, I find it difficult to fathom anybody would think doomsday is coming when the sun is shining and the ocean breeze is blowing. Cheap $5 sunglasses and sombrero hats are the kind of things you will find while shopping on the boardwalk -- I heard this is a great place to find smoking materials too. If you are looking for something fancier, but still unchained from commercialised USA, then you should check out Abbot Kinney Street. Higher end Art stores, furniture stores and independent clothing stores are speckle the strip.
If you do decide to come to Venice, I would recommend park off the beach and ditch the ride – Venice is a walking neighbourhood. I would even recommend walking all the way to Santa Monica. It is beautiful and you don’t need to deal with parking there. Only people from LA whine when walking more than two blocks. The beaches are nice, but can get crowded at times during the summer weekends and traffic can also get rough as the major freeways are a few kilometres away.
Beach: Not usually crowded with a mixed 20-30 something crowd.
Parking: $0-15 and scarce during summer weekends.
Shopping: Few chain stores, independent artwork. Boardwalk, Abbot Kinney are great
Restaurants: Ranges from boardwalk stalls to high end spots on Abbot Kinney
Recommendations: Beachwood(bar), The other room(bar), Baja Cantina(bar), The Brig(bar), James Beach(bar), Chaya Venice(Restaurant), Primitivo(Tapas Bar), Ben & Jerry's (Ice Cream)
Friday, July 20, 2007
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