Torrance

United_States

Torrance is a city in the South Bay region of Los Angeles County, in Southern California.

  • Torrance Beach. Neither glamorous nor fancy, this clean, large, busy beach attracts thousands from the surrounding area. Parking is limited but nowhere near as poor as nearby Hermosa Beach or Venice Beach.
  • Torrance High School, 2200 W Carson St. A must for television fans. In Beverly Hills, 90210, it served as the fictional West Beverly High. In Buffy the Vampire Slayer, it was Sunnydale High. It also served as the backdrop for other movies such as Fast Times At Ridgemont High, The Wild Life, Not Another Teen Movie, Bring It On, Whatever It Takes, Cursed, Wild Things 3, Bruce Almighty, and Less Than Zero. The building can be viewed from the outside but is not open to visits by the general public because it is a functioning school.
  • Del Amo Mall (Del Amo Fashion Square), 3525 W Carson St (at Hawthorne Blvd (CA-107), +1 310 542-8525. M-F 10AM-9PM, Sa 10AM-8PM, Su 11AM-7PM. This mall has been used to film commercials, television shows and movies. Reno 911! regularly utilized the parking lots around the mall, and Jackie Brown was filmed in the International Food Court located in the mall.
  • Del Amo Financial Center, 21515 Hawthorne Blvd (at Del Amo Blvd, +1 310 540-9300. The Del Amo Financial Center is located adjacent to the Del Amo Mall on Hawthorne Blvd and has the tallest building in the beach cities located within it.

Torrance Beach. Neither glamorous nor fancy, this clean, large, busy beach attracts thousands from the surrounding area. Parking is limited but nowhere near as poor as nearby [[Hermosa Beach]] or [[Venice Beach]].

Torrance High School, 2200 W Carson St. A must for television fans. In Beverly Hills, 90210, it served as the fictional West Beverly High. In Buffy the Vampire Slayer, it was Sunnydale High. It also served as the backdrop for other movies such as Fast Times At Ridgemont High, The Wild Life, Not Another Teen Movie, Bring It On, Whatever It Takes, Cursed, Wild Things 3, Bruce Almighty, and Less Than Zero. The building can be viewed from the outside but is not open to visits by the general public because it is a functioning school.

Del Amo Mall (Del Amo Fashion Square), 3525 W Carson St (at Hawthorne Blvd (CA-107), +1 310 542-8525. M-F 10AM-9PM, Sa 10AM-8PM, Su 11AM-7PM. This mall has been used to film commercials, television shows and movies. Reno 911! regularly utilized the parking lots around the mall, and Jackie Brown was filmed in the International Food Court located in the mall.

Del Amo Financial Center, 21515 Hawthorne Blvd (at Del Amo Blvd, +1 310 540-9300. The Del Amo Financial Center is located adjacent to the Del Amo Mall on Hawthorne Blvd and has the tallest building in the beach cities located within it.

  • Alpine Village, 833 Torrance Blvd, +1 310 329-4748.

Alpine Village, 833 Torrance Blvd, +1 310 329-4748.

  • Del Amo Fashion Square (Del Amo Mall), 3525 W Carson St (at Hawthorne Blvd (CA-107), +1 310 542-8525. M-F 10AM-9PM, Sa 10AM-8PM, Su 11AM-7PM. Once billed as the largest mall in the world, the Del Amo Fashion Center had in recent years become a sort of a "D" grade shopping center due to old age. However, Del Amo has renovated the north section of the mall into a beautiful outdoor promenade, with a new AMC and a Lucky Strike Bowling Alley, great stores (such as Anthropologie and Urban Outfitters) and decent restaurants like PF Changs China Bistro.

Del Amo Fashion Square (Del Amo Mall), 3525 W Carson St (at Hawthorne Blvd (CA-107), +1 310 542-8525. M-F 10AM-9PM, Sa 10AM-8PM, Su 11AM-7PM. Once billed as the largest mall in the world, the Del Amo Fashion Center had in recent years become a sort of a "D" grade shopping center due to old age. However, Del Amo has renovated the north section of the mall into a beautiful outdoor promenade, with a new AMC and a Lucky Strike Bowling Alley, great stores (such as Anthropologie and Urban Outfitters) and decent restaurants like PF Changs China Bistro.

  • Cho Dang Tofu, 22549 Hawthorne Blvd, +1 310 373-7055. The main item on the menu are the tofu soups - which come your choice of a variety of vegetables, meats, or seafood in a broiling hot soup and served with a small, hot stone pot full of rice and six side dishes of seaweed, kimchi, and other pickled dishes. The kalbi beef is also a great option, if you don't like tofu. $8-10.
  • Curry House, 21215 Hawthorne Blvd, +1 310 540-8980. Su-Th 11:30AM-9:30PM, F-Sa 11:30AM-10PM. As opposed to Indian curry, Japanese curry is brown and thick. Owned by international food distributor, House Foods, this restaurant has several locations throughout Greater Los Angeles. Order the curry with vegetables or meat mixed in with the curry and pour it on top of rice or spaghetti. Try the corn soup as an appetizer. $8-16.
  • King's Hawaiian Bakery and Restaurant, 2808 Sepulveda Blvd, +1 310 530-0050. Famous for their sweet Hawaiian Bread - this restaurant is owned by the same company. Open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Make sure to take home some fresh breads and cookies from the bakery. $10-15.
  • Moo's Chinese Restaurant, 4817 Torrance Blvd, +1 310 371-9282. This Mandarin Chinese restaurant offers large dinner portions - one order is more than enough to feed two people. The lunch specials include eggrolls, soup, and an entree for $4-$7 per dish. $10-12.
  • Iccho, 25310 Crenshaw Blvd (in the Rolling Hills Plaza, +1 310 325-7273. A Japanese restaurant that is open late serving decent food at reasonable prices to a bustling crowd. The sushi is uninspiring although not bad, the sake is good and reasonably priced ($6.25 for a large bottle), and the Japanese dishes are relatively good at prices between $4 and $10 per item.
  • Taco Sinaloa #3, 1647 W Carson St, +1 310 328-4208. 24 hours daily. A cheap and cheerful authentic Mexican taco restaurant, that serves one of the best tacos and burritos in Los Angeles. The atmosphere is a bit grungy, but most items are under $5 and they serve cervezas till 2AM. One of the perks is that they are open 24 hours a day. Beware of the hot sauce, most people think they can handle it- but usually they're wrong.
  • Umenoya Ramen, 24222 Crenshaw Blvd, Torrance, CA 90505. Torrance is known for many Japanese restaurants, there is numerous ramen restaurants scattered around the city. However this place stands out amongst the bunch, big bowls of delicious soup and noodles are fairly priced and ALWAYS consistently delicious. $.

Cho Dang Tofu, 22549 Hawthorne Blvd, +1 310 373-7055. The main item on the menu are the tofu soups - which come your choice of a variety of vegetables, meats, or seafood in a broiling hot soup and served with a small, hot stone pot full of rice and six side dishes of seaweed, kimchi, and other pickled dishes. The kalbi beef is also a great option, if you don't like tofu. $8-10.

Curry House, 21215 Hawthorne Blvd, +1 310 540-8980. Su-Th 11:30AM-9:30PM, F-Sa 11:30AM-10PM. As opposed to Indian curry, Japanese curry is brown and thick. Owned by international food distributor, House Foods, this restaurant has several locations throughout Greater Los Angeles. Order the curry with vegetables or meat mixed in with the curry and pour it on top of rice or spaghetti. Try the corn soup as an appetizer. $8-16.

King's Hawaiian Bakery and Restaurant, 2808 Sepulveda Blvd, +1 310 530-0050. Famous for their sweet Hawaiian Bread - this restaurant is owned by the same company. Open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Make sure to take home some fresh breads and cookies from the bakery. $10-15.

Moo's Chinese Restaurant, 4817 Torrance Blvd, +1 310 371-9282. This Mandarin Chinese restaurant offers large dinner portions - one order is more than enough to feed two people. The lunch specials include eggrolls, soup, and an entree for $4-$7 per dish. $10-12.

Iccho, 25310 Crenshaw Blvd (in the Rolling Hills Plaza, +1 310 325-7273. A Japanese restaurant that is open late serving decent food at reasonable prices to a bustling crowd. The sushi is uninspiring although not bad, the sake is good and reasonably priced ($6.25 for a large bottle), and the Japanese dishes are relatively good at prices between $4 and $10 per item.

Taco Sinaloa #3, 1647 W Carson St, +1 310 328-4208. 24 hours daily. A cheap and cheerful authentic Mexican taco restaurant, that serves one of the best tacos and burritos in Los Angeles. The atmosphere is a bit grungy, but most items are under $5 and they serve cervezas till 2AM. One of the perks is that they are open 24 hours a day. Beware of the hot sauce, most people think they can handle it- but usually they're wrong.

Umenoya Ramen, 24222 Crenshaw Blvd, Torrance, CA 90505. Torrance is known for many Japanese restaurants, there is numerous ramen restaurants scattered around the city. However this place stands out amongst the bunch, big bowls of delicious soup and noodles are fairly priced and ALWAYS consistently delicious. $.

Torrance is a safe city with a low crime rate. Del Amo Mall has experienced some violent crime in the recent years, but you are unlikely to be assaulted, as long as you don't make anyone mad. Eastern Torrance is not as safe as the rest of Torrance, but again, you are unlikely to fall victim to any crime. Be careful on the Anza Ave. and Halison St. intersection. Accidents involving students from nearby middle school happen once or twice a year. Accidents are also fairly frequent on Hawthorne Boulevard, but are usually collisions with cars, and pedestrians are rarely if not never hit.

[[San Pedro]]

[[Palos Verdes]]

[[Long Beach]]