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Los Angeles - Nearby Destinations

Tourist destinations to consider near Los Angeles are listed below. Click on any name for complete information.



Channel Islands National Park
  Channel Islands National Park protects five beautiful coastal islands, and is home to an astonishing variety of plant and animal life. The park consists of some quarter of a million acres, half of which are under the ocean, encompassing a wide variety of terrain from beaches and sea caves to forests and mountains. Over 2,000 species of plants and animals can be found within the park, more than a hundred of which are found nowhere else in the world.
     
Coastal Los Angeles
  West and south of central Los Angeles is a 60-mile stretch of coastline as varied as the city itself. Luxury homes, kids playing on the beach, Hollywood film shoots and commercial fishing piers can all be found as you travel along the Pacific Coast past over a dozen communities.
     
Orange County Population: 3 million
  Orange County is home to favorite attractions like Disneyland and the shores of Huntington Beach. But you’ll also find quieter pleasures like golf and theater here at the southeastern edge of the L.A. metro area.
     
Oxnard Population: 180,000
  Oxnard is a growing coastal town west of the San Fernando Valley, known for its uncrowded beaches, rambling coastal homes, collection of museums, and popular annual festivals celebrating food and history. Oxnard feels like a snapshot of an earlier, forgotten California.
     
Palm Springs Population: 41,000
  Palm Springs is southern California’s most famous resort destination. Cluttered with resorts, palm trees, and more golf courses and swimming pools than one can easily count, Palm Springs attracts a clientele that ranges from retirees to spring breakers, all seeking the perfect climate and luxurious accommodations the town has become famous for.
     
Riverside Population: 291,398
  When you hear the word “Riverside,” you may think of sedate blue water moving through a green landscape, a landscape green with high grass and trees with healthy, leafy canopies. You may think of a city more park than city. And your impression might not quite fit Riverside itself. Riverside is, after all, a major city in California, the largest city in the Inland Empire with a population of over 300,000. But although Riverside struggles with big city problems like smog, urban sprawl and traffic, it still fits its nickname: the city of trees.
     
San Bernardino Population: 200,000
  San Bernardino marks the eastern end of the Inland Empire, the 50 mile corridor of urban area between here and Los Angeles. The city has a diverse and largely working class community. Several annual events, including the Route 66 Rendezvous classic car festival, attract visitors from around the country.
     

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