Tuesday, March 26, 2013

History Meets Future on Main Street, HB


Main Street, Huntington Beach

Main Street in Huntington Beach has, like the city itself as a whole and with its many parts, has reinvented itself multiple times while still retaining the innate personality originating from the residents who began flocking to the city in the oil boom of the 1920’s.  Today, Main Street is equal parts vibrant local scene and tourist mecca, culinary center and beach pub crawl; a quasi-urban night life within a surf community.  There is something for just about everyone almost all hours of the day, all one needs to do is pull in to town from Pacific Coast Highway as you near the world famous Huntington Beach Pier, which serves as a kind of ‘extension’ of Main Street directly into the Pacific Ocean.  From the less picturesque 405 freeway, one merely exits the equally famous and historic Beach Boulevard heading toward the beach, hanging a right on Ellis Street, and within the span of a short series of lights you will find yourself engulfed in the Main Street vibe. 

One of the most rewarding aspects of living in Huntington Beach is the direct and immediate access to this incredibly rich and diverse center of activity one finds along Main Street.  There are about a solid dozen places with a similar level of active culture and night life in Orange County, but none with the unique personality for which Huntington Beach is known.  While many generations have come and gone, each one building on the last, the rugged entrepreneurial spirit of the oil boomers still echoes in the year round crowds between the stores, restaurants and overlooking offices on historic Main Street.  Put another way, there is no excuse for being bored in Huntington Beach.

At the turn of the last century, the area now known as Huntington Beach was called Shell Beach, but in 1901 the name changed to Pacific City when P.A. Stanton formed a local syndicate and purchased 40 acres along the beach; 20 acres on each side of Main Street.   As a testimony to Huntington Beach strong awareness if its own history, Pacific City is literally resurrecting itself along the Huntington Beach coast, which is the topic of my previous blog.  Stanton’s turn-of-the-last century motive was to create an “Atlantic City” on the west coast, and with the absence of casinos, this vision may yet be fulfilled.  When one makes their home in Huntington Beach, one inherits a piece of history as well as an exciting present and promising future.  Contact me, and together we can find your part of the Huntington Beach legacy.



Ann Stefanucci
DRE #00635764
First Team Real Estate
562-244-8021

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