Arterial road traversing the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Victory Boulevard is a major mostly east–west arterial road that runs for 25 miles (40km) traversing almost the entire length of the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles and Burbank, California. About two miles of the boulevard runs north-south before reaching its eastern terminus.
When Van Nuys was plotted in 1911, Victory Boulevard was called 7th Avenue.[2] Around 1916, the name was changed to Leesdale Avenue when the city of Los Angeles annexed the San Fernando Valley after the Los Angeles Aqueduct was completed.[2] In the mid-1920s, the Leesdale Improvement Association unveiled plans to expand Leesdale Avenue as an 80-foot (24m)-wide "great east-and-west boulevard" through the Valley.[2] At that time, the city also changed the name to Victory Boulevard, in honor of soldiers returning from World War I,[1] and paved the boulevard as far west as Balboa Boulevard where it ended.[2] Victory Boulevard did not extend to the West Valley until the 1950s.[2][3]
The Metro Local Lines 96 and 164 runs along Victory Boulevard.
West Hills – It is west of Shoup Avenue to the Victory Trailhead entrance of Ahmanson Ranch Park in the Simi Hills, Victory Boulevard marks the southern border of West Hills and northern border of adjacent Woodland Hills.
Woodland Hills – It is between the western city limits, and Corbin Avenue on the east, Victory Boulevard marks the northern border of Woodland Hills, with West Hills, Canoga Park, and Winnetka to the north.
Canoga Park – Victory Boulevard marks the southern border of Canoga Park between Shoup, and DeSoto, with Woodland Hills to the south
Winnetka – DeSoto Avenue is the western boundary, Corbin Avenue is the eastern boundary, with the Los Angeles River and Woodland Hills to the south.
Reseda – Victory Boulevard marks the southern border of Reseda between Corbin Avenue and White Oak Avenue, with Tarzana to the south..
Tarzana – Victory Boulevard marks the northern border of Tarzana between Corbin Avenue (west) and Lindley Avenue (east)[5]
Fallbrook Center – 75-acre (300,000m2), 1-million-square-foot (93,000m2), open-air shopping center located at Victory Boulevard and Fallbrook Avenue in West Hills.
Westfield Topanga – opened in 1964 as Topanga Plaza, California's first enclosed shopping mall, and located on Topanga Canyon Boulevard at Victory Boulevard, Westfield Topanga was extensively renovated from 2006 to 2008 and features 230 stores.
Los Angeles Pierce College – opened in 1947 as an agricultural college and the San Fernando Valley's first institution of higher learning, Pierce College today is a two-year public college with almost 100 disciplines and 20,000 students, located on 426 acres (172ha) in the Chalk Hills, with 2,200 trees, thousands of rose bushes, a nature preserve, botanical garden, and a forest area boasting giant redwoods; Pierce still maintains large sections of tillable and range land and a 226-acre (91ha) farm at the west side of campus, with an equestrian center and small herds of cattle, sheep and goats[8]
Reseda Park and Recreation Center – park and recreation center located at 18411 Victory Boulevard. Includes barbecue pits, baseball diamond, basketball courts, children's play area, community room, picnic tables, seasonal pool, tennis courts, and volleyball courts.[9]
Sherman Oaks Center for Enriched Studies – located in Tarzana, SOCES is the largest magnet school in the Los Angeles Unified School District, 1780 students in grades 4–12; #1 High School API test score in LAUSD[10]
Lake Balboa – a 27-acre (11ha) lake south of Victory Boulevard filled with water reclaimed from the Tillman Water Reclamation Plant featuring fishing, boating, remote-control boating and jogging/walking[13]
Van Nuys Golf Course
Valley Plaza shopping center along Victory and Laurel Canyon Boulevards, opened in 1951 and by 1956 it claimed to cover 100 acres with 1,039,000 square feet of retail space, the third-largest in the nation at that time[14][15]