Malibu Junction, Agoura Hills, California

Malibu Junction
Whizin's Row
Neighborhood of Agoura Hills
Malibu Junction
Whizin's Row

Location in Los Angeles

Coordinates: 34°9′12″N 118°45′42″W / 34.15333°N 118.76167°W / 34.15333; -118.76167
Elevation 281 m (922 ft)
Time zone PST
Area code(s) 818[1]

'Malibu Junction', also known as Whizin's Row after pioneer entrepreneur Art Whizin, is an Agoura Hills neighborhood in southern Agoura Hills, western Los Angeles County, California.

Malibu Junction is located in the eastern Conejo Valley between the Simi Hills and the Santa Monica Mountains. This district is on the Ventura Freeway (U.S. Route 101), and straddles the border between metropolitan Los Angeles to the east, and Ventura County to the northwest.

History

Originally Wizen's (Malibu Junction) was a travelers stop on along old 2 lane Route 101, centered around Art Wizen's businesses. In 1953 he bought 320 acres (1.3 km2) of the northern Paramount Ranch property, and established a little 12-stool, three-table hamburger stand with a couple of Mobile Oil Co. gasoline pumps out front. Soon he built a rodeo arena and held rodeos every Sunday. That lasted three years, then came motorcycle racing, and then midget car racing.[2]

Present

The Malibu Junction district has recently become Agoura Hills's entertainment center, with a movie theater, popular restaurants, clubs, and a hotel built in the 2000s. The new construction has expanded the district southward across Agoura Road, edging into the rustic Santa Monica Mountains.

Agoura Hills is called the "Gateway to the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area". Malibu Junction, at the junction of the Ventura Freeway and southbound Kanan-Dume Road, is a primary Entrance to the Parks,

Future

A proposed major development project for a large parcel along Agoura Road and Roadside Drive west of Kanan Road, included a master planned community using the principles of New Urbanism. In 2006 it was in a preliminary planning phase.[3] The local and regional negative community impacts, and environmental degradation would be significant from such a project, and would need in depth environmental impact assessment studies to produce an environmental impact statement (EIR), providing for the community, Planning Department, and elected representatives to review, discuss, and make decisions upon.

References

External links

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