2026年7月18日 我的行程 English中文
世界新聞 · 旅遊 · 文化
Taiwan The Taiwan Times
台灣國際報 — Taiwan's window to the world

Eastside Los Angeles

United States · Americas

Eastside Los Angeles, United States
Eastside Los Angeles, United States. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.

關於Eastside Los Angeles

The Eastside of Los Angeles is the sprawling region of the city east of the Los Angeles River. It covers many distinct and vibrant neighborhoods, from East LA--the center of Latino culture in the city--at the southern end to hilly Eagle Rock at the north. Even though much of the area sits within sight of the Downtown skyline, it has a very local character that most visitors to LA don't experience.

This page covers the various communities of the Eastside (East LA, City Terrace, Boyle Heights, Lincoln Heights, and El Sereno) that sit just east of Downtown, as well as the neighborhoods of Northeast LA (Atwater Village, Cypress Park, Eagle Rock, Glassell Park, Highland Park, Montecito Heights and Mount Washington).

Eastside Los Angeles旅遊指南

城市概覽

The Eastside of Los Angeles was originally settled in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, starting with the neighborhoods immediately across the river from Downtown LA. For much of its history, it has contained many of Los Angeles' ethnoburbs: Lincoln Heights once had a substantial Italian-American population, and Boyle Heights used to have substantial Jewish, Eastern European, and Japanese populations, although both are predominantly Latino today. Some of the largest and oldest cemeteries in the City of Los Angeles are on the East Side, as is LA County's General Hospital. Lincoln Heights and Boyle Heights are directly east of Downtown and among the oldest neighborhoods in the city, with lots of turn-of-the-century houses and apartments and old business districts lining the main streets. Boyle Heights, along with its eastern neighbor East Los Angeles, are often considered the heart of Latino culture in Los Angeles. Both are predominantly Mexican-American and are home to many Spanish-speaking businesses and locally-oriented celebrations. Both neighborhoods figure massively in Mexican-American cultural identity: This was where the Chicano Moratorium protests of the 1960s and 1970s took place. Whittier Boulevard through East LA was the birthplace of lowrider culture, and many of the most popular cultural depictions of Latinos, from Colors to Stand and Deliver, were set here. The gangs that once dominated local news stories here in the 1990s have since cooled off; nowadays the bigger concern is the encroaching gentrification spreading from Downtown LA. City Terrace and El Sereno are two quiet neighborhoods perched on the hills along Interstate 10 east of Lincoln Heights, home to the campus of Cal State University Los Angeles. Northeast LA is a very hilly region with lots of charming old neighborhoods set within the rolling hills, and historically a more bohemian character--although this is also being threatened by gentrification. Cypress Park, Glassell Park, and At

如何抵達

Six freeways serve the Eastside of Los Angeles. Interstate 5 parallels the Los Angeles River in Atwater Village, Glassell Park, Cypress Park and Lincoln Heights, before veering east in Boyle Heights. U.S. Route 101 and California State Route 60 also have a few exits in Boyle Heights before ending at the East Los Angeles Interchange. Interstate 10 runs for a few miles between Boyle Heights and Lincoln Heights. California State Route 110 (the Arroyo Seco Parkway) parallels the Arroyo Seco through Northeast LA. California State Route 2 runs north-south through Glassell Park and along the edge of Eagle Rock. The Eastside is served by the Metro E Line train. The E Line makes three stops in East Los Angeles (on 3rd Street at Atlantic, East LA Civic Center, and Maravilla) and four stops in Boyle Heights (along 1st Street at Indiana, Soto, Mariachi Plaza, and Pico/Aliso). It then continues into Downtown Los Angeles and then to the Westside. Northeast LA is served by the Metro A Line train. The A line travels up from Union Station and makes stops at Lincoln/Cypress (at Avenue 26), Heritage Square, Southwest Museum, and Highland Park (at Avenue 57) before continuing northeast to Pasadena and into the San Gabriel Valley. A number of bus lines connect the Eastside to Downtown. These include Metro Bus Lines 18, 62, 66, 70, 76, 78, 81, 90, 94, and Montebello Bus Lines 40 and 50 (see below for timetables). The J Line busway has one stop near the USC+LAC Medical Center, and another at Cal State University Los Angeles. The CSULA Silver Line station is also a Metrolink station. The closest Amtrak and Metrolink train stations to the Eastside are Los Angeles Union Station (all lines), Cal State LA (San Bernardino Line) and Glendale (Antelope Valley Line, Ventura Line, Pacific Surfliner)

當地交通

By car There are very few car rental locations on the East side, of the few being an Enterprise location in Highland Park/Eagle Rock. Nearby places to rent a car are in Downtown LA, Burbank, Glendale, Pasadena and Montebello. Here are some of the major streets in the region:

1st Street: Runs east-west between Downtown and Monterey Park. Served by Metro Lines 106 4th Street: Runs east-west between Downtown and East Los Angeles, where it splits into Pomona and Beverly Boulevards. Served frequently by Montebello Bus Line 40 Broadway Runs east-west in Lincoln Heights, then north-south into Downtown and South Los Angeles. Served frequently by Metro Line 45. Cesar Chavez Avenue: Runs east-west between Downtown and East Los Angeles College. Originally named Brooklyn Avenue when Boyle Heights was still a Jewish community. Served frequently by Metro Line 70. Colorado Boulevard: Runs east-west between Glendale and Monrovia, including through Eagle Rock. Served frequently by Metro Line 180 Eagle Rock Boulevard Runs north-south in Glassel Park and Eagle Rock. Served by Metro Line 251 Eastern Avenue: Runs north-south in El Sereno and East Los Angeles. Served by Metro Bus Line 665. Figueroa Street: Runs north-south between Eagle Rock and Lincoln Heights, and again from Downtown to the Harbor. Served frequently by Metro Line 81. Huntington Drive: Runs east-west between Lincoln Heights and Duarte, along a former streetcar right-of-way. Served frequently by Metro Lines 78 and 179 Indiana Street Runs north-south on the border of the City of Los Angeles and East Los Angeles. Served by Metro Bus Line 665. Olympic Boulevard: Runs east-west between Downtown and Montebello. Served by Metro Lines 62, 66, 665 and Montebello Bus Line 50. San Fernando Road: Runs north-south between Lincoln Heights and the San Fernando Valley. Served frequently by Metro Lines 90, 94 and 603. Soto Street: Runs north-south through Boyle Heights. Served frequently by Metro Line 251. Valley Boulevard Runs ea

必看景點

1 Heritage Square, 3800 Homer St (Off CA-110 at Ave 43 exit), ☏ +1-323-225-2700. F-Su and M holidays 11:30AM-4:30PM. A collection of historic houses and buildings from the late 19th century moved from other parts of Los Angeles to a museum on the Arroyo Seco. Features guided tours of those buildings, often by people in Victorian dress. $10 Adults (13-64), $8 seniors (65+), $5 children (6-12). 2 Lummis House, 200 E Ave 43, ☏ +1 323-435-9745. F-Su noon-4PM. Arroyo stone house and gardens designed and built by Charles Lummis, author/journalist of the American West and founder of the Southwest Museum. Listed on the NRHP. 3 Los Angeles Police Museum, 6045 York Blvd (between Branch and Aldama), ☏ +1-323-344-9445. M-F 10AM-4PM, third Sa of the month 9AM-3PM. Located in the former Highland Park Police Station, it displays the history of the LAPD from its 1869 beginnings General (13-61) $8, seniors (62+) $7, children (under 13) free. 4 Southwest Museum, 234 Museum Dr (above Marmion Way and Southwest Museum Gold Line Station), ☏ +1-323-344-9445. Sa 10AM-4PM. Extensive collection of American Indian art and artifacts. It is a subsidiary of the Autry Museum and undergoing major renovations

城市概覽改寫自 Wikipedia,旅遊指南來自Wikivoyage (CC BY-SA)。照片來自 Wikimedia Commons.

Explore Americas