Pasadena, More Than an Address
Pasadena by the Numbers
Pasadena is an independent city of about 23 square miles in the San Gabriel Valley, northeast of downtown Los Angeles. It runs its own city government, its own police and fire departments, and its own water and power utility, Pasadena Water and Power, all separate from Los Angeles. That independence shapes a move because Pasadena sets its own rules on truck parking, oversized-vehicle permits, and protections for its historic districts and tree-lined streets.
The city has roughly 138,000 residents, making it one of the larger cities in Los Angeles County. The housing is unusually varied: Craftsman bungalows and historic estates, mid-century apartment buildings, and a growing stock of modern condominiums near the Metro A Line, the rail corridor most residents still call the Gold Line. Pasadena has formally recognized historic districts, including Bungalow Heaven, where exterior changes are regulated.
The city is organized around recognizable districts: Old Pasadena, the restored 1880s commercial core on the west end of Colorado Boulevard; the Playhouse District and South Lake shopping area; Bungalow Heaven and the other Craftsman neighborhoods; and the estate streets near the Arroyo Seco, the canyon that runs along the city’s western edge and holds the Rose Bowl.
The History of the City
The land was home to the Tongva people for thousands of years before the San Gabriel Mission era. The modern city began in 1873, when a group of settlers from Indiana, organized as the Indiana Colony, bought part of the Rancho San Pascual and started a farming community drawn by the mild climate. Pasadena incorporated as a city in 1886, one of the earliest in Los Angeles County.
Through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Pasadena grew as a winter resort for wealthy visitors from the East and Midwest, and grand hotels and estates followed. The Tournament of Roses began in 1890, and the Rose Bowl Stadium opened in 1922, giving the city its two best-known traditions. The Arroyo became a center of the American Craftsman movement, and architects Greene and Greene built the Gamble House here in 1908.
Pasadena also became a center of science and education. The institution now known as Caltech was established in the city in the early twentieth century, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory grew out of Caltech research in the decades that followed. Today, Pasadena balances that scientific and cultural weight with its preserved architecture, which is exactly why moving here rewards a crew that understands old homes.
What a Pasadena Move Actually Involves
Pasadena has municipal rules that directly affect moving logistics. The city issues temporary no-parking permits that reserve curb space in front of an address for larger moves, and these need to be arranged and posted in advance. Oversized vehicles face restrictions on some residential streets, particularly the narrow, tree-lined blocks in the older neighborhoods, where mature street trees and protected parkways limit how a large truck can approach.
The housing itself sets the pace of the work. Many Pasadena homes are historic Craftsman houses and estates with narrow doorways, tight original staircases, and finishes that cannot be repaired easily if they are scuffed. Older apartment buildings often have no elevator and no loading dock. Newer condominiums near the A Line corridor add freight elevator reservations and certificate of insurance requirements from building management.
Timing matters too. The area around the Rose Bowl and the Colorado Boulevard parade route is heavily affected around the Tournament of Roses at the start of each year, and a move scheduled then needs to account for closures and crowds.
We handle the permits, the building coordination, the historic-home protection, and the truck sizing before moving day, so none of it delays the job once we arrive.