If You Can’t Drive, Don’t Come To LA

Jun. 22, 2012
Ana is a Los Angeleno living in Paris. Interests include (over)eating, conceptual art, and finding deals.

Driving through the city is the thing I both hate and love most about Los Angeles. Traffic, road rage, terrible drivers: these are things Angelenos are initiated to at an age younger than most people find decent. Sometimes the thought of turning on my car and navigating those tortuous streets is more than I can bear. Sometimes I dream of Paris and Copenhagen and San Francisco and Portland: mythical lands of public transportation and bicycle-friendly streets. Then I think about the view from the 134 as it snakes across the mountains above Eagle Rock, and I know that I am married to LA and its car culture, for better or for worse.

I’ve yet to find a sweeter pleasure than catching all the green lights on La Brea, or driving from my house in Silver Lake to a friend’s in Santa Monica and coming around the bend where the 5 turns into the 110. I still get a little nervous maneuvering my car around the tight corner that is inevitably jam-packed, but once I do, there’s that irreplaceable reward of finding myself downtown, amidst LA’s skyscrapers and the Staple Center. You’re in the city, you’re in Los Angeles.

Driving west on Santa Monica Boulevard in the late afternoon is another satisfaction that I will never tire of. It’s a quintessential Los Angeles scene — the gorgeous ephemerality of driving toward the ocean and the setting sun as headlights begin to come on. The city changes; it puts on its neon and its cigarette smoke and prepares for yet another night of Hollywood types and hipsters and the inevitable drunk drivers.

And eventually, there’s having the freeway all to oneself — a gift only experienced after three in the morning. It’s a reward for a long day spent in the unforgiving streets. After hours of breathing in smog and listening to beeping horns, one can glide down the darkened expanses of concrete and get from one side of town to the other in an intoxicatingly short amount of time.

True intimacy with the city of Los Angeles comes from knowing which streets to take to get from Los Feliz to Century City for a breakfast meeting, from the memorized images of blurry landscape seen from the freeway, from the muscle memory of the drive to the beach. Los Angelenos, for better or for worse, experience the city from their cars. The junk on the sides of our freeways, the graffiti and murals that decorate dividing walls: these are not things ignored on the way to someplace better. It’s a patina, a reminder of who we are. We may complain about parking and gas prices and commutes, but really, we know our traffic culture is what sets us apart from the rest of the world.

We’re the only ones stupid and brave enough to live this lifestyle, and that is why we deserve Los Angeles. TC mark

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  • B

    thanks for this. I am, like you, so glad to call this place my home.

  • Jeannie

    As a born and raised New Englander, my Boston and New York friends can’t comprehend why I don’t just tolerate Los Angeles, I love it. You articulated it much better than I can. The traffic, the smog, the commutes… they’re hell. But when you get that moment when you’re coasting along the highway or blazing through Griffith Park with the windows down, music playing, and suddenly come across a bright pink sunset.. it’s heaven.

    • B

      not to mention, those summer nights when you’re sitting on the 101S and see the hollywood lights to your right, darkened mountains topped with the observatory to your left, and the brightest moon imaginable ahead of you.

  • eep@lol.com

    “Staple Center”

  • Chelsea

    I don’t even have a license and I go to LA a lot. I just bike everywhere or take public transit. It’s not a ‘bike friendly’ city because you’re all just lazy.

  • some dude

    Very well written. You’ve captured certain aspects I find myself day dreaming in love about my life here in Los Angeles. My car is my best friend at this point in my life.

  • le withit

    you obviously never rode a bike in Paris, for it is carnage.

  • Traffic Sucks No Matter What

    I will never get that sense of beauty from these ugly streets – the stress of having to be confined in your car longer than one should be overbears all. LA would be a much better place if the City Planners were smarter with the road situation.

  • LA Motorcyclist

    How you enjoy spending a majority of your day trapped in that four wheeled sheep cage is beyond me, but you certainly did a great job of making LA’s transportation problem sound appealing.

  • Anonymous

    *Staples

  • Lourdes

    While I agree with some of the romanticism you describe, what bothers me is the constant tension and stress that comes with sitting in traffic for hours each day. I know it’s not the WORST commute, but I’ve been driving from Granada Hills to Miracle Mile for work, and to get anywhere else from Mid-City is a pain in the ass. Too much surface street on that side of town.

  • Heather

    This totally brought back moments of my time in LA. I will add driving west on the stretch of Wilshire through Westwood; hit it at the right time, and for a brief moment, it kind of feels like you’re on an urban race track. LA will always hold a piece of my heart.

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