One of my Son in laws was getting a law degree there at the time and parents involved especially came from all over the world for this graduation. So, I'm familiar (at least a few years ago) with the campus there.
Las Virgenes Canyon Road runs from Highway 101 (Ventura Freeway) directly into Malibu and sections of this road are on fire and I noticed on one of the fire maps regarding the Franklin Fire that the fire did burn in one section it looked like already across Pacific Coast Highway all the way to the ocean. However, just in one small section (at least so far). Here is more about Las Virgenes Canyon Road which goes right now right through the middle of the fire on it's way to Malibu.
One of the places when I was 16 to 18 and bought my first Car a 1956 Ford Station wagon in 1964 that I called my "surf wagon" that I liked to go surfing with my friends was in Malibu too. I also Scuba dived there. It is a really beautiful beach and area and you feel there sort of removed from the Los Angeles Area because it is somewhat remote from the big city vibes and it's a very wealthy area with many movie stars living there also.
begin quote from:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Las_Virgenes_Road/Malibu_Canyon_Road
Las Virgenes Road/Malibu Canyon Road
The road from the Valley to the Sea | |
Namesake | Rancho Las Vírgenes Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit |
---|---|
Maintained by | Los Angeles County Department of Public Works |
Length | 11 mi (18 km) |
North end | Los Virgenes Canyon Trail in the Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space Preserve |
Major junctions | US 101 in Calabasas |
South end | SR 1 in Malibu |
Las Virgenes Road / Malibu Canyon Road is a north–south road that runs for 11 miles (18 km) and traverses the Santa Monica Mountains, connecting the San Fernando Valley and U.S. Route 101 with California State Route 1 and Malibu, all in Los Angeles County. The portion of the road between Route 101 and Route 1 is designated County Route N1 and nicknamed "the road from the Valley to the Sea."[1]
Name
Las Virgenes Road is the truncated version of El Rancho de Nuestra la Reina de Las Virgenes (transl. the ranch of our Lady of the Virgins), also known as Rancho Las Vírgenes.[2] Malibu Canyon Road was named after Rancho Topanga Malibu Sequit, in which Malibu, a poor Anglicisation of Humaliwo (transl. place of the wild surf), was the name of a local Tongva or Chumash village.[3]
Route
From the north, Las Virgenes Road begins as a dirt road at the Los Virgenes Canyon Trail in the Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space Preserve. The dirt road extends for 0.3 miles (0.48 km), at which point it becomes paved as it exits the preserve and enters Calabasas. The road continues south, over U.S. Route 101, into the Santa Monica Mountains, and across Mulholland Highway. 1.7 miles (2.7 km) south of Mulholland, Las Virgenes Road becomes Malibu Canyon Road, where it continues through the Santa Monica Mountains alongside Malibu Creek until it reaches its southern terminus at California State Route 1 in Malibu.[4]
The 8.5 miles (13.7 km) of Las Virgenes and Malibu Canyon Road between U.S. Route 101 and California State Route 1 is designated County Route N1.[1]
History
Malibu Canyon Road was constructed in 1951. One year later, the road was extended to Las Virgenes Road, which at the time terminated at the crest of the Santa Monica Mountains. Once connected, the combination of these roads was nicknamed "the road from the Valley to the Sea."[1]
The portion of this road between Route 101 and Route 1 was designated County Route N1 in 1963. This road was also considered for the north–south alignment of the never built California State Route 64, which was proposed in 1963 based on a previous proposal from 1959. Plans for the Malibu portion of Route 64, which would have been named the Malibu Canyon Freeway, were abandoned in 1970 and the rest of the route was abandoned in 1975.[1][5]
Notable landmarks
Notable landmarks on Las Virgenes and Malibu Canyon Road include (from south to north): Malibu Bluffs Park, Pepperdine University, Backbone Trail, Tapia Park and Water Reclamation Facility, Malibu Hindu Temple, and Malibu Creek State Park.[4]
References
- Daniel P. Faigin. "Post 1964 Legislative Route 64". cahighways.org. Retrieved October 4, 2024.
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