Boyle Heights: Fighting the Forces of Change | Artbound

In the decades after World War II, the Boyle Heights section of East Los Angeles, just across the river from the skyscrapers of downtown and once a center of Jewish culture in L.A., was forcibly cut off from the rest of the city by a tangle of freeways. In certain ways, that isolation proved to be a source of strength for Boyle Heights, which developed a fiercely independent identity by the 1970s as an enclave for Spanish-speaking immigrants and as a center of Mexican-American culture in particular. In recent years, the neighborhood has been a settled district, home to more second and third generation immigrant families than to newcomers — mirroring trends across a city that has moved squarely into a post-immigration and even post-growth phase of its development. Read more about the Third Los Angeles at https://bit.ly/3AWJzOa Watch the full episode "Third L.A. with Architecture Critic Christopher Hawthorne" at https://bit.ly/3yPFk49 Want to learn more? Watch more Artbound at https://bit.ly/3yRDaRI Learn more at https://bit.ly/3NNzJ4T ~~~~~~ Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://bit.ly/3wiFfZ2 Love PBS SoCal? Your support keeps the programs you love alive. Donate today: https://bit.ly/you-tube-donation Follow us: Instagram:   / pbssocal   TikTok:   / ucvbu5lnfv0jzrq1jy44ffnq   Facebook:   / pbssocal   Sign-up for our Newsletter: https://www.pbssocal.org/newsletter #Artbound #arts #culture #SouthernCalifornia #Third #LosAngeles #ChristopherHawthorne #urban #reinvention #architecture #BoyleHeights #river #immigration #development