Valley Municipal Building in Van Nuys Valley Municipal Building in Van Nuys Boundaries of Van Nuys as drawn by the Los Angeles Times Boundaries of Van Nuys as drawn by the Los Angeles Times Van Nuys is positioned in San Fernando Valley Van Nuys - Van Nuys Van Nuys /v n na z/ is a neighborhood in the central San Fernando Valley region of the town/city of Los Angeles, California.

The town was established in 1911, and titled for Isaac Newton Van Nuys, one of its developers. It was took in by Los Angeles on May 22, 1915, after culmination of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, providing it with the water required for further growth. Van Nuys was the first new stop on the San Fernando Line of the Pacific Electric Railway red cars system, which boosted its early territory revenue and commercial success. Van Nuys became the Valley's satellite Los Angeles municipal civic center, with the 1932 Art Deco Valley Municipal Building (Van Nuys City Hall), a visual landmark and Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument starting the present day Government Center complex of government services buildings. In 1991 Marvin Braude, a member of the Los Angeles City Council, redesignated a 45-block region from being a part of Van Nuys to being a part of Sherman Oaks. This redesignated region included the improve of Magnolia Woods. Some region residents had presented a petition and a several original deeds that stated "Sherman Oaks" to Braude.

They argued that the region was originally a part of Sherman Oaks until the 1960s, when ZIP codes labeling the region as Van Nuys were established. In 2014, A "Great Streets" universal was introduced by Mayor Eric Garcetti with Van Nuys Blvd.

A new Los Angeles County services building is under assembly on the southwest corner of Van Nuys Blvd.

Van Nuys is bordered on the north by North Hills, on the northeast by Panorama City, on the east by Valley Glen, on the south by Sherman Oaks, on the southwest by the Sepulveda Basin, on the west by Lake Balboa and on the northwest by Northridge. Its street and other boundaries are Roscoe Boulevard on the north, Sepulveda Boulevard, the Tujunga Wash, Woodman Avenue and Hazeltine Avenue on the east, Oxnard Street on the south, the Sepulveda Basin on the southwest and Odessa and Hayvenhurst avenues and Balboa Boulevard on the west. census counted 103,770 inhabitants in the 8.99-square-mile Van Nuys neighborhood or 11,542 citizens per square mile, about an average populace density for the city.

Van Nuys Airport Van Nuys Boulevard Van Nuys Fly - Away Bus service Victory Boulevard (Eastbound toward The City of Burbank) at Sylmar Avenue, in Van Nuys.

Los Angeles Fire Department operates Station 39 (Van Nuys), Station 90 Van Nuys Airport Area, Station 100 West Van Nuys, and Station 102 East Van Nuys, serving the community.

The Los Angeles Police Department operates the close-by Van Nuys Community Police Station at 6420 Sylmar Avenue, 91401, serving the neighborhood.

The United States Postal Service operates the Civic Center Van Nuys Post Office at 6200 Van Nuys Boulevard in Van Nuys and the Van Nuys Post Office at 15701 Sherman Way in the Lake Balboa neighborhood in Los Angeles, west of Van Nuys. Enumeration Bureau operates the Los Angeles Regional Office in Van Nuys. The California Department of Developmental Services operates the North Los Angeles County Regional Center on Sherman Way west of Sepulveda Boulevard in which it serves the large fast-growing populace of developmentally disabled citizens in the San Fernando Valley being helped by the Government of California to home the developmentally disabled citizens in the region and help them meet special needs of normal life with special benefits.

The Social Security Administration operates a branch office on Van Nuys Boulevard north of Victory Boulevard in Van Nuys.

The Van Nuys Recreation Area is in Van Nuys.

Delano Park in Van Nuys has an auditorium, barbecue pits, a lighted baseball diamond, lighted outside basketball courts, a children's play area, a lighted football field, lighted handball courts, an indoor gymnasium with no weights, picnic tables, and a lighted soccer field. The Van Nuys adjoining Sepulveda Basin Recreation Area to the west is a large open space park behind Sepulveda Dam.

The Metro Orange Line bicycle path joins Van Nuys to it and other valley destinations.

The Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Park is in Sherman Oaks, near Van Nuys.

The park has an auditorium, two lighted baseball diamonds, six unlighted baseball diamonds, lighted indoor basketball courts, lighted outside basketball courts, a children's play area, a 60-person improve room, a lighted football field, an indoor gymnasium without weights, picnic tables, a lighted soccer field, and lighted tennis courts. Located in the same place as the park, the Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Pool is a cyclic outside heated swimming pool. The Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Senior Citizen Center (a.k.a.

The senior improve hall also has two community/meeting rooms, two kitchens, a play area, a shuffle board area, a stage, and two storage rooms. The Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Tennis Courts facility in the Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Park has eight courts. Van Nuys High School Fifteen percent of Van Nuys inhabitants aged 25 and older had earned a four-year degree by 2000, an average figure for both the town/city and the county, but the percentage of the same-age inhabitants who had less than a high school diploma (43.1%) was high for Los Angeles. Schools inside the Van Nuys boundaries are: Van Nuys Senior High School, 6535 Cedros Avenue Van Nuys Elementary School, 6464 Sylmar Avenue Van Nuys Adult School, 6535 Cedros Avenue Charter High School of Arts Multimedia and Performing, 6952 Van Nuys Boulevard Van Nuys Middle School was in the Van Nuys improve until 1991 when its region was moved into Sherman Oaks.

The school continued to use the name "Van Nuys" despite the move. Lycee International de Los Angeles previously directed a ground in Van Nuys. The Van Nuys Branch Library of the Los Angeles Public Library serves the community.

Van Nuys Airport, the busiest general aviation airport in the world, the 25th busiest airport in the United States, and among the 20 busiest airports in the world by airplane movements, is positioned in Van Nuys.

The improve includes a terminal for the Van Nuys Fly - Away Bus service, which travels from Van Nuys to Los Angeles International Airport. Van Nuys has two Metro Orange Line stations, the Van Nuys (Los Angeles Metro station), and the Sepulveda (Los Angeles Metro station).

The Orange Line joins to the Metro Red Line subway at the North Hollywood (Los Angeles Metro station), for access to Hollywood, Downtown Los Angeles, and other Los Angeles Metro lines.

The Metro Liner also uses the Van Nuys station.

Van Nuys is directly served by the 405 (San Diego Freeway) passing through it.

Van Nuys Boulevard has a long and diverse commercial precinct along it, as do other primary streets crossing through Van Nuys.

From 1947 until 1992, GM directed an automobile factory called Van Nuys Assembly at the locale of Van Nuys Boulevard and Arminta Street to augment their manufacturing efforts at their South Gate, California factory called South Gate Assembly which opened in 1936.

The Van Nuys locale produced the Chevrolet Impala, the Chevrolet Corvair, and later was the major locale for the Chevrolet Nova and the Chevrolet Camaro.

Sound City Studios was a very well-respected recording studio positioned in Van Nuys.

Grupo TACA operates a Van Nuys-area TACA Center at 6710 Van Nuys Boulevard. Some former Van Nuys neighborhoods have won approval by the Los Angeles City Council to break off from Van Nuys and join the neighboring communities of Lake Balboa, Valley Glen and Sherman Oaks in an accomplishment to raise their property values.

Government Center, Van Nuys Boulevard and Erwin Street Van Nuys State Office Building at Government Center Los Angeles Superior Court, Van Nuys Division, at Government Center New Van Nuys Branch, Los Angeles Public Library, Sylmar Avenue Mall.

Van Nuys Community Police Station, 6240 Sylmar Avenue Mall Van Nuys Civic Child Development Center Van Nuys Boulevard and Delano St.

"Identity Crisis : Community: The decision to change the name of a 45-block region of Van Nuys to Sherman Oaks leaves junior high in an odd position." a b c d e "Van Nuys," Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times "Van Nuys Recreation Area." "Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Park." "Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Pool." "Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Senior Citizen Center." "Van Nuys Sherman Oaks Tennis Courts." "Van Nuys: Schools," Mapping L.A., Los Angeles Times "Le Lycee International de Los Angeles, or French-American School, 14255 Erwin Street, Van Nuys" "45-Block Area Exits Van Nuys : Neighborhoods: Area around junior high school joins Sherman Oaks, the fifth such change in the Valley since 1986.".

"Goodbye Van Nuys, hello Sherman Oaks: L.A.

Richard Simon, "Bernardi's Iconoclasm Brings Acclaim, Enmity," Los Angeles Times, San Fernando Valley edition, April 3 , 1989 "Lacity.org: Van Nuys Neighborhood Council Map".

Getty.edu: Van Nuys (neighborhood) Lake Balboa, Interstate 405 & Van Nuys Airport Valley Glen Van Nuys, Los Angeles Los Angeles town/city areas inside the San Fernando and Crescenta Valleys

Categories:
Van Nuys, Los Angeles - Communities in the San Fernando Valley - Neighborhoods in Los Angeles - 1911 establishments in California - Populated places established in 1911