Culver Boulevard is an east-west thoroughfare in the
Westside region of
Los Angeles County, California
Los Angeles County, officially the County of Los Angeles and sometimes abbreviated as LA County, is the List of United States counties and county equivalents, most populous county in the United States, with 9,663,345 residents estimated in 202 ...
, connecting
Venice Boulevard
Venice Boulevard is a major east–west thoroughfare in Los Angeles, running from the ocean in the Venice district into downtown Los Angeles. It was originally known as West 16th Street under the Los Angeles numbered street system. A segment o ...
(near the transit junction of downtown
Culver City
Culver City is a city in Los Angeles County, California, United States. As of the 2020 census, the population was 40,779. It is mostly surrounded by Los Angeles, but also shares a border with the unincorporated area of Ladera Heights to the ea ...
) to the coast roads.
Except for the downtown Culver City shopping district, the route is mostly residential with some "small markets and restaurants."
Name
Culver was laid out in 1904 as a parallel auto route for the
Playa Del Rey streetcar route established in 1902. The road had various names in its early years, including Speedway, the Ballona Road, the Playa Del Rey Road, the Redondo Road, the Hollywood-Redondo Boulevard, and Putnam Avenue. The name Culver Boulevard seems to have to been settled upon around 1925, following the annexation of Venice by the city of Los Angeles.
History

The development of what is now Culver Boulevard was a project of the
Automobile Club of Southern California
The Automobile Club of Southern California is the Southern California affiliate of the American Automobile Association (AAA) federation of motor clubs. The Auto Club was founded on December 13, 1900, in Los Angeles as one of the nation's first mo ...
, which was lobbying for roadways for private vehicles at a time when railways or even horses-and-carriages were the primary means of transportation around Los Angeles.
In fall 1903, rights-of-way were granted by landowner R.C. Gillis and the
Los Angeles Pacific Railway
The Los Angeles Pacific Railroad (1896−1911) (LAP) was an electric public transit and freight railway system in Los Angeles County, California. At its peak it had of track extending from Downtown Los Angeles to the Westside, Santa Monica, a ...
for the planned road, which was to be wide. By December, the ''Los Angeles Times'' was reporting "Greased Rushaway from Los Angeles to Playa Del Rey Fully Assured."
[ ] The plan was for a "seven-mile straightaway" from
Ivy Station (described as just beyond the junction of Adams and Washington streets) to the beach resort village of
Playa Del Rey
Playa del Rey (Spanish for "Beach of the King") is a seaside neighborhood on the westside of Los Angeles in the Santa Monica Bay region of Los Angeles County, California. It has a ZIP Code of 90293 and area codes of 310 and 424. As of 2018, ...
.
[ ]
Industrialist
Homer Laughlin
Homer Laughlin (March 23, 1843 – January 10, 1913) was an American businessman and potter. With his brother Shakespeare, he formed the Laughlin Pottery Company, now known as Fiesta Tableware Company, in 1871.''Press Reference Library : Portrai ...
weighed in, advocating firmly in favor of automobiles generally in February 1904.
Elsewhere in the paper that day, the plan for what would become Culver Boulevard was succinctly summarized: "The plan is to leave Ivy Station, just this side of
Palms, and parallel the Los Angeles-Pacific's electric road's
line to Playa Del Rey." Apparently this route's advantages included that the "friendly" railway was offering their rights-of-way and that its "gravel pits, cars and tracks" would help the Auto Club with the "big fill across the marsh from
Alla station
Alla is a former streetcar station and archaic place name located near Marina del Rey in the Westside region of Los Angeles County, California.
The former Glen Alla Park (now Bill Rosendahl Del Rey Park) is also derivative of this place name; ...
to the beach."
By May 1904, the road was being called Speedway, the first of its names. The road-building was started from the west, Beach to City; the rights-of-way closer to the city were proving more of a challenge.
As of August 1904, boosters were pitching the "nearly straight" railroad route from Ivy Station to the Playa Del Rey resort "paralleling" the "nearly complete" Auto Club speedway. Sometime in late August or early September, "graders at work on the automobile road found the remains of two persons."
By 1907, the ''Los Angeles Times'' reported that men who wanted to go duck hunting at the
Ballona, "have such good roads to go over that the automobile is as generally used for transportation as the electric cars…The road taken by the Ballona clubmen runs out either Washington or Adams streets to the junction near Ivy Station, and continues out on the Ballona road, branching off to go to clubs at various points near the beach."

Circa 1911, "Down to Ivy Station, the road is bad, then it is ordinary as far as Palms, fairly good as far as Clarkdale, and beyond that it is pretty good in the middle, but along the edges are ruts…to the intersection with the
Motordrome road the going is ordinarily good, but beyond that for half a mile it is bad."
In 1912 real estate developer
Harry Culver
Harry Hazel Culver (January 22, 1880 – August 17, 1946) was a real estate developer and promoter. He was born in Milford, Nebraska, the middle child of five of Jacob H. and Ada L. (Davison) Culver, who lived on a farm. At age 18, he enlisted i ...
worked to refine the segment of the Playa Del Rey route that passed through his forthcoming "Culver City" real estate project. He called it "Putnam Boulevard" and the ''Los Angeles Evening Herald'' reported, "According to present plans, Putnam boulevard will follow the line of the Pacific Electric Playa del Rey line through Washington Park to a point west of Inglewood
venue
A venue is the location at which an event takes place. It may refer to:
Locations
* Venue (law), the place a case is heard
* Financial trading venue, a place or system where financial transactions can occur
* Music venue, place used for a conce ...
..It will form an automobile outlet for thousands of acres of land lying between the Washington boulevard and Redondo boulevard that heretofore has been inaccessible by automobile…It will be fully 100 feet in width the entire distance and lined by artistic
electroliers, forming a great white way from Los Angeles to Redondo."
The Culver Boulevard nomenclature was decided in 1925-26, and for a period of months in 1926 the designation referred to the entirety of what is now
Robertson Boulevard
Robertson Boulevard is a street in Los Angeles, in the U.S. state of California, that also passes through the incorporated cities of West Hollywood, Beverly Hills, and Culver City.
Location
Robertson Boulevard is a major north–south thorough ...
, beginning in West Hollywood all the way down Vista Del Mar to Manhattan Beach and beyond.
However, Harry Culver apparently objected and the old so-called Hollywood-Redondo Road was not unified, but separated, into Culver and Robertson, with the division lying at Venice Boulevard.
Putman Avenue is still labeled on the 1928 Pacific Electric route map, but in small print, whereas Culver Boulevard is marked in bright green capital letters.

It was in 1928 that the developers of the planned
Palisades Del Rey residential subdivision announced the "widening and permanent paving of the two-mile stretch of Culver Boulevard between
Centinela Avenue
Centinela Avenue is a 10.2 mile (16.4 km) major street in the Westside (Los Angeles County), Westside region of Los Angeles County, California.
Geography
Centinela Avenue is a major thoroughfare in Culver City, California, Culver City, In ...
and
Jefferson Boulevard
Jefferson Boulevard is a street in Los Angeles and Culver City, California. Its eastern terminus is at Central Avenue east of Exposition Park. At its entrance to Culver City, it splits with National Boulevard. North of Sawtelle Boulevard, ...
…this will complete the paving on Culver Boulevard, which stretches from Culver City to the ocean."
Photos taken of Culver in 1929 show elaborate street lights installed along the route at that time.
On the occasion of the
1932 Summer Olympics
The 1932 Summer Olympics (officially the Games of the X Olympiad and also known as Los Angeles 1932) were an international multi-sport event held from July 30 to August 14, 1932, in Los Angeles, California, United States. The Games were held du ...
in Los Angeles, the ''L.A. Times'' published a guide to Los Angeles' farms for visitors. The guide mentioned that "Venice-Playa Del Rey-Cienega" was a key district for market gardening, especially of summer celery, and mentioned intensive cultivation practices that were getting three or four crops out of the same field in one year. Tourists interested in such a thing were advised to navigate to Culver City, then "turn south and west on Culver Boulevard…a few miles beyond Culver City on this boulevard will bring one to the center of the vegetable district."
Culver Boulevard made occasional brief appearances in
Laurel & Hardy
Laurel and Hardy were a British-American comedy duo during the early Classical Hollywood era of American cinema, consisting of Englishman Stan Laurel (1890–1965) and American Oliver Hardy (1892–1957). Starting their career as a duo in the ...
and
Our Gang
''Our Gang'' (also known as ''The Little Rascals'' or ''Hal Roach's Rascals'') is an American series of comedy short films chronicling a group of poor neighborhood children and their adventures. Created by film producer Hal Roach, who also pr ...
shorts produced by the nearby studios.
The streetcar line shut down during the Great Depression and the track was thereafter used for freight until the 1980s. The cities of Los Angeles and Culver City redeveloped the abandoned railroad right-of-way into the
Culver Boulevard Median Bike Path
The Culver Boulevard Median Bike Path is California bikeway classifications, Class I rail trail Cycling infrastructure, bicycle path, walk route and linear park on Culver Boulevard in western Los Angeles County, California.
Route
The path is ...
in the 1990s.
Landmarks

*
Culver Hotel
The Culver Hotel is a national historical landmark in downtown Culver City, California. It was built by Harry Culver, the founder of Culver City, and opened on September 4, 1924, with local headlines announcing: "City packed with visitors for ...
*
Sony Pictures Studios
Sony Pictures Studios is an American television and film studio complex located in Culver City, California, at 10202 West Washington Boulevard and bounded by Culver Boulevard (south), Washington Boulevard (north), Overland Avenue (west) and ...
*
Citizen Public Market in the
Citizens Publishing Company Building
*
Dickinson & Gillespie building in Playa Del Rey
*
New Deal-era post office mural inside
PWA Moderne
The Art Deco style, which originated in France just before World War I, had an important impact on architecture and design in the United States in the 1920s and 1930s. The most notable examples are the skyscrapers of New York City, including the ...
Culver City post office
References
External links
Culver City Historic Images Gallery
{{commons category, Culver Boulevard
Streets in Los Angeles
Playa del Rey, Los Angeles
Del Rey, Los Angeles
Transportation in Culver City, California
Westside (Los Angeles County)