Getting to Know Azusa
How Azusa Sits
Azusa is its own city in the San Gabriel Valley, set against the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains about 20 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. It covers roughly 9.7 square miles and holds about 50,000 people. Because it is its own city, Azusa sets its own rules on truck parking, oversized vehicles, and permits, separate from the City of Los Angeles. The 210 freeway runs through the city, and Azusa Avenue, which is State Route 39, climbs north into San Gabriel Canyon and the national forest, giving the city its direct line to the mountains.
The land tilts from the canyon down to the valley floor. The northern neighborhoods rise into the foothills, with streets that climb toward the canyon mouth, while the bulk of the city sits on flatter ground, a grid of older homes, postwar tracts, and apartments. Downtown Azusa runs along Azusa Avenue and Foothill Boulevard, the old Route 66 alignment, and the two Metro A Line stations have brought newer apartments and condos to the area around them. Azusa Pacific University sits along the eastern edge near Citrus College. Irwindale lies to the west, Glendora to the east, Covina to the south, and the mountains close off the north.
From Asuksa-nga to the Canyon City
The land was home to the Tongva people, whose settlement of Asuksa-nga gave the city its name, near the mouth of the canyon long before the Spanish era. The area later became part of a Mexican land grant, and in 1887, J.S. Slauson laid out the modern town on the Azusa grant. The city was incorporated in 1898, when it was a small community of a few hundred people built around citrus.
For decades, Azusa was citrus and packing-house country, one of the many San Gabriel Valley towns built on orange groves, and Route 66 ran right through it along Foothill Boulevard. After the war, the groves gave way to homes, and the city grew into the residential and college town it is today. Azusa Pacific University, founded in 1899, grew into a large campus along Foothill Boulevard, and the city has long held its annual Golden Days celebration each fall. More recently, the Metro A Line reached Azusa, adding transit and new housing while the canyon and the national forest at the city’s back have kept it the Canyon City at heart.
What an Azusa Move Really Involves
Azusa runs its own affairs, so the rules that shape a move come from the city, not from Los Angeles. For larger moves, the city issues temporary no-parking permits that hold curb space at the address, set up and posted ahead of time. Some streets restrict oversized vehicles, so we match the truck to the block.
The terrain is the local factor that sets Azusa apart. The foothill neighborhoods toward the canyon have streets that climb and narrow, so we check the grade and the driveway in advance and bring the right size truck so the approach is no problem. Down on the valley floor, the older homes and tracts usually load easily, which keeps those moves quick.
The campuses and the new transit housing add their own timing. Move-ins around the university and the colleges cluster at the start and end of terms, when parking and access tighten, so we plan around those weeks. The newer apartments and condos near the A Line stations bring elevator reservations, loading windows, and certificate-of-insurance rules through building management. We line up the permits, the access, and the right truck before the day, so nothing holds up the move once we arrive.