Getting to Know Long Beach
The Lay of the Land
Long Beach is an independent charter city on the coast of southern Los Angeles County, about 20 miles south of downtown LA, where it borders Orange County on San Pedro Bay. With around 467,000 residents across roughly 50 square miles of land, it is the seventh-largest city in California and one of the most diverse, home to the largest Cambodian community outside Cambodia. It runs its own city government, its own police, fire, and utilities, its own airport, and the Port of Long Beach, the second-busiest container port in the country. That independence shapes a move, because Long Beach sets its own rules on truck parking, oversized vehicles, and permits, separate from the City of Los Angeles. The 405, 710, 605, and 110 freeways and the Pacific Coast Highway all serve the city.
The neighborhoods are remarkably varied. Downtown holds high-rise condos and lofts along Ocean Boulevard and the Pine Avenue corridor, near the convention center and the waterfront. To the southeast, Belmont Shore centers on the shops and restaurants of 2nd Street, with 1920s Spanish bungalows and apartments, and neighboring Naples Island is laced with canals and waterfront homes around Alamitos Bay. The city has a deep stock of protected historic districts, including Bluff Park, Belmont Heights, California Heights, Carroll Park, and Willmore City, full of Craftsman bungalows and early-century homes. To the north, Bixby Knolls and California Heights are settled residential neighborhoods, and Cal State Long Beach anchors the east side with its student population.
From Willmore City to the Port
The land was home to the Tongva people, then part of the Spanish ranchos Los Cerritos and Los Alamitos, which the Bixby family acquired and ranched from the 1860s. The modern city began in 1882 as Willmore City, a development laid out by William Willmore, but the venture struggled, and in 1888, residents renamed the town Long Beach for its long, wide beaches and incorporated it. The arrival of the Pacific Electric trolley in 1902 set off explosive growth, and from 1902 to 1910, Long Beach was the fastest-growing city in the United States.
Two forces defined the century that followed. The 1921 discovery of oil on neighboring Signal Hill turned Long Beach into a major oil town and drove a surge of demand for housing, filling out neighborhoods like Belmont Shore. And the port, opened in 1911, grew into the great gateway for trans-Pacific trade that it remains today. The Queen Mary arrived in 1967, the downtown was extensively redeveloped from the 1970s onward, and the city now balances its working port and its beach-town identity, a big, diverse coastal city that has reinvented itself more than once.
What a Long Beach Move Actually Involves
Long Beach is its own city, so its rules, not the City of Los Angeles’s, shape every move. For larger moves, the city issues temporary no-parking permits that reserve curb space at the address, and these need to be arranged and posted in advance. Oversized vehicles face restrictions on some streets, particularly the narrow lanes around Naples and the older shore neighborhoods, so the truck has to suit the block.
The housing sets much of the work. Downtown high-rise condos run their own freight-elevator reservations, loading-dock windows, and certificate-of-insurance requirements through building management, and a move that has not booked the elevator does not happen that day. The historic districts, with their protected Craftsman and Victorian homes, have narrow doorways, tight original staircases, and finishes worth protecting. The canal homes of Naples sit on tight lanes with limited approach. Apartments near Cal State Long Beach cluster their turnover at the start and end of terms.
We sort the permits, the elevator and dock bookings, the historic-home protection, and the right truck size before move day, so none of it stalls the job once we are on site.