Getting to Know Thousand Oaks
How Thousand Oaks Sits
Thousand Oaks is a city in southeastern Ventura County, in the heart of the Conejo Valley, about forty miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles and just over the Los Angeles County line. It covers roughly 55 square miles, which makes it large for its population, and it held about 127,000 people at the 2020 census, making it the second-largest city in Ventura County. It sits along the 101, the Ventura Freeway, with State Route 23 crossing through. It borders Newbury Park and the open hills to the west, Westlake Village and the county line to the east, Simi Valley to the north, and the Santa Monica Mountains to the south.
The city is defined by its planning and its open space. It was laid out as a master-planned community, with neighborhoods, parks, and commercial centers set out from the start, and that design gives it wide streets, generous lots, and a green, suburban feel. It holds 15,000 acres of parks and open space and more than 150 miles of trails, much of it tied into the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. The oak trees that gave the city its name are protected, and the city seal carries one.
Thousand Oaks is also the economic center of the Conejo Valley. Major employers, led by the biotechnology company Amgen, are based here, and the office and business parks along the 101 corridor draw workers from across the region. The Civic Arts Plaza, a performing arts and civic center, anchors the city’s cultural life, and the commercial centers cluster around Thousand Oaks Boulevard and The Oaks mall. The result is an affluent, family-centered city that pairs suburban neighborhoods with open hills and a strong local economy.
From Chumash Valley to a Master-Planned City
The land was home to the Chumash people, who lived in the Conejo Valley for thousands of years. Spanish explorers reached the area in 1542, and under Mexican rule it became ranch land. For a time in the mid-twentieth century, the valley was best known for Jungleland USA, an animal park near the present civic center that supplied trained animals to Hollywood films before it closed in 1968.
The modern city was planned. In the early twentieth century, the Janss Investment Company assembled about 10,000 acres in the Conejo Valley, and in the 1950s it began building a master-planned community of custom homes, tract neighborhoods, and commercial centers. The completion of the freeway and the postwar housing demand drove rapid growth.
The community voted to incorporate in 1964, choosing the name Thousand Oaks for the area’s many oaks, and the city officially formed that October as the first city in the Conejo Valley. It grew quickly in the decades that followed, annexing most of Newbury Park and much of the Westlake area through the late 1960s and 1970s, and its population climbed from under 20,000 at incorporation to more than 100,000 by 1990. The planned town became the regional city it is today.
What a Thousand Oaks Move Really Involves
Thousand Oaks is large and spread out, so most moves here turn on the neighborhood and the terrain rather than a tight street grid. The first thing we settle is the access. Many homes sit on hillsides or curving streets, set back behind long driveways and mature oaks, and some are behind HOA gates. We work out where the truck can park, how far the carry runs, and what clearance the neighborhood needs before the day.
Next is the home itself. A hillside view home may sit well above or below the street with a long, curving drive. A large tract home holds a lot of furniture across two stories. A home behind a gate needs the association cleared in advance. We check the grade, the driveway, the gate, and the carry distance ahead of time, and bring the crew size, the equipment, and the protection the home calls for.
The third factor is the spread of the city. Because Thousand Oaks is large, even a local move can cover several miles between neighborhoods, and the route and timing matter more than in a compact city. We plan the drive, the parking at both ends, and the sequence so the day runs smoothly. Door, railing, and floor protection are standard, and the handling for fragile and valuable pieces is planned ahead. With the access, the home, and the route settled before move day, the crew keeps moving once it arrives.