The year was 1966. The Palm Springs Aerial Tramway, which carries passengers from Palm Springs up to the San Jacinto Mountains nearly 6,000 feet above, had opened a few years prior to great fanfare.
Rancho Palos Verdes, about 30 miles south of downtown Los Angeles, faces damage from landslides as the region moves toward the ocean.
The Los Angeles City Attorney's Office filed a lawsuit this week against Blueground, a short-term rental company that ...
The devastation of the Altadena and Palisades neighbourhoods this January revealed stark inequalities in the city ...
As New Orleans prepares for Super Bowl LIX, even if you can't be there in person, you can still get to know every approach, ...
The large group, calling for a National Day of Action, could be seen through aerial footage walking in the middle of Spring ...
As demonstrations in the “Day Without Immigrants” protests in downtown Los Angeles continued into the evening, tensions ...
Analysis of data from NASA radar aboard an airplane shows that the decades-old active landslide area on the Palos Verdes ...
Nearly a month after the devastating Palisades Fire broke out, Pacific Coast Highway has been reopened, but traffic won’t be ...