Getting to Know El Segundo
How El Segundo Sits
El Segundo is a small independent city in the South Bay region of Los Angeles County, on Santa Monica Bay just south of Los Angeles International Airport. Its land area is only about 5.5 square miles, and its population sits around 17,000. But those numbers tell only half the story, because roughly three-quarters of the city is given over to industry and commerce. Because it is its own city, El Segundo sets its own rules on truck parking, oversized vehicles, and permits, separate from the City of Los Angeles. It is bounded by LAX to the north, Manhattan Beach to the south, the Pacific Ocean to the west, and Aviation Boulevard to the east, with Sepulveda Boulevard splitting the residential west from the industrial east.
The western side is the residential heart, a compact, walkable grid of older single-family homes, small apartment buildings, and a downtown Main Street, with a small-town character that residents prize. The eastern side is a major employment center. It holds aerospace and defense firms, technology offices, corporate headquarters, and the Chevron refinery, which alone covers more than a quarter of the city. El Segundo carries the nickname the Aerospace Capital of the World, and a Guinness World Record for the most roads with a hill or grade, a nod to its gently sloping streets.
From Rancho to the Aerospace Capital
The coast here was home to the Tongva people, and the land later became part of Rancho Sausal Redondo, a Mexican land grant that stretched across much of the South Bay. The modern city began with oil. In 1911, the Standard Oil Company bought 840 acres here and built a refinery, naming it El Segundo, Spanish for the second, because it was the company’s second refinery in California. The town grew up around the refinery to house its workers and was incorporated as a city in 1917.
For a time, El Segundo was a one-industry town, until Los Angeles Municipal Airport, later LAX, opened to the north in 1930. That changed everything. Through the 1940s and 1950s, aircraft and aerospace companies set up in El Segundo, drawn by the airport and the open land. Among them were Douglas Aircraft, Hughes, Northrop, and North American Aviation. The Douglas plant built the SBD Dauntless dive bombers flown at the Battle of Midway, and that site still operates as an aircraft plant today. Standard Oil became Chevron in 1984, and its refinery passed its hundredth year of operation in 2011. The oil and aerospace roots remain visible across the city, even as technology firms and corporate headquarters have joined them.
What an El Segundo Move Really Involves
El Segundo 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 keep curb space clear at the address, which we organize and post in advance. On the narrow residential streets west of Sepulveda, where parking is tight, that reserved space matters. It matters again for a commercial move, where a truck needs a loading position near the building.
The two sides of El Segundo call for two different plans. A residential move runs through the compact western grid, with older homes, short driveways, gently sloping streets, and limited parking. So we size the truck to the block and plan where it can be loaded. A commercial move on the eastern side runs on building access, loading docks, freight elevators, and a schedule built to keep the business operating. So we coordinate with building management, file any certificate of insurance the property requires, and often work outside business hours.
The city sits right against LAX, and Sepulveda and the surrounding corridors carry heavy traffic. So we plan the route and the timing with the airport and the rush hours in mind. We sort the permit, the access, and the truck size before the day, so nothing slows the move once the crew arrives.