Category: Updates

  • City of Downey

    City of Downey

    We are home to where the Apollo Space Program began its journey to the stars. Downey is where you can find the world’s oldest McDonald’s restaurant and the site of the first Taco Bell eatery. This is the city where the pop recording artists “The Carpenters” were inspired with many hit records. Today, our city is admired for its strong retail base with quality housing.

    Downey is a unique community in the heart of Southern California that combines the best of both large and small. We are an active city of 110,000 with a small town atmosphere. This is a place of pride, history, involvement, and community. We are highly recognized for our centralized location, top medical facilities, quality residential neighborhoods and schools, excellent golf courses, and an unmatched family lifestyle. In fact, Downey has been rated in the top 25% of “100 Best Cities To Do Business in California” by California Business Magazine.

    Situated 12 miles southeast of the Los Angeles Civic Center, Downey is only five miles from Orange County, and about 10 miles from the beautiful Pacific coastline. Conveniently located near several major freeways (5, 710, 605, 105), the city is an ideal home base from which its residents can take advantage of the business resources and hundreds of cultural and recreational activities in Southern California.

    Currently the city council is adopting a new downtown specific plan to stimulate the redevelopment of downtown Downey into a revived community destination. The vision includes more options for retail, dining, entertainment and the arts, as well as multi-use buildings with ground level retail space with residential units on the floors above.

    However, the strengths of Downey as a place to call home has also brought about limitations in terms of an entertainment or arts destination.  Many people in the area take their evening plans elsewhere, simply due to a lack of available activities in the city.  Part of the push to revitalize downtown must include a plan to develop and encourage the arts, especially performing arts as an anchor for economic growth.

    Click Here for a Google street view of downtown Downey.

    Below you will find some statistics about the city, as well as a list of local business close to the Downtown area.

    DEMOGRAPHICS
    Source: 2008 Estimate, Demographics Now

    Population: 113,000
    Race
    White: 54,536 (49.8%)
    Black: 4,152 (3.8%)
    American Indian or Alaska Native: 487 (0.4%)
    Asian or Pacific Islander: 10,125 (9.2%)
    Some Other Race: 34,502 (31.5%)
    Two or More Races: 5,815 (5.3%)
    Ethnicity
    Hispanic: 66,759 (60.9%)
    Density / Downtown.
    Source Market Retail Analysis, Gibbs Planning Groups, 2008
    1 mile radius: 30,206
    3 mile radius: 271,861
    5 mile radius: 755,170

    EMPLOYMENT (3 mi radius)
    Source: Market Retail Analysis, Gibbs Planning Group, 2008
    Daytime employment base 148,557
    Service-oriented positions 39.5%
    Manufacturing 16.0%
    Retail 11.6%
    White-Collar Employed
    Downey (3 mi radius) 54.6%
    Los Angeles 57.5%
    California 60.8%
    Percent of households with incomes $75,000 or higher
    Downey (3 mi radius) 32.0%
    Los Angeles 28.7%

    (Photo: Pam Lane)

    LOCAL BUSINESSES

    Downtown
    Mimi’s Café
    Embassy Suites Hotel (219 guest rooms)
    Firestone Grill (inside Embassy Suites)
    Downey Civic Center (Library, City Hall, Police Department)
    First Baptist Church of Downey (800 seat worship center)
    Downey High School (3700 students)

    Krikorian Cinemas 10
    Porto’s Bakery (opening fall 2010)
    Granata’s Italian Villa, Peking China, Downtown Bar B Que
    Mambo Grill (Sports Bar addition opening fall 2010)
    Third Street Coffee, The Coffee Bean
    Hometown Buffet, San Sai Japanese Grill, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Panda Express

    Other Highlights
    Stonewood Shopping Mall
    Department Stores: Kohl’s, JC Penny, Macy’s, Sears
    B.J.’s Brewery (new in 2009, most successful opening night in company’s history)

    The Olive Garden, Acapulco
    The Downey Landing
    Major Retail: Best Buy, Old Navy, Pier One, Bed Bath & Beyond, Ross, Staples
    Restaurants: The Elephant Bar, Chili’s, Johnny Carino’s Italian Restaurant

    Bob’s Big Boy Broiler (formerly history Harvey’s/Johnnie’s Broiler)
    Oldest operating McDonald’s
    Largest Coca Cola Bottling Facility
    Kaiser Permanente Hospital
    Downey Regional Medical Center
    Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center
    Downey Studios (former Boeing/Rockwell Plant)

    What are your favorite parts of Downey?  What do you wish our city had?  Tell us in the comments below!

  • The Downey Civic Theater

    The Downey Civic Theater

    The Downey Civic Theatre opened 1970, the vision of then theatre director John Hume.  In 1955, Downey’s Parks and Recreation department sponsored Hume to launch of the Downey Children’s Theater, which began in an elementary school auditorium.  Its first play drew an incredible 200 children to audition and quickly grew to serve an annual audience of 75,000.  Other programs came alongside the children’s theatre, including the Civic Light Opera, adult theatre, experimental theatre, teen theatre, reader’s theatre and marionettes.  Hume lobbied for a decade for a permanent theatre, and it was to become the city’s first large building project, even before they built a new city hall.  Its first year was a success, with an audience of 105,000, though controversy always surrounded the city’s support for the theatre.  When 1978 brought Proposition 13, the city faced huge budget cuts, and the theatre was hit hard.  All the programs shut down, except for the profitable Civic Light Opera.  The Downey Theatre today survives off of a limited amount of rentals, three annual musicals from the Civic Light Opera, three concerts by the Downey Symphony, dance recitals, community and school events.

    The theatre seats 738 (516 orchestra, 222 balcony).  Its main stage is 50 feet wide, 56 feet deep and 23 feet high.  Two smaller “wing” stages on either side have about 305 square feet of space each.  It is a fully equipped facility with professional sound and lighting, orchestra pit, loading dock, staging area, green room, dressing rooms, and an outside patio for concessions and receptions. It is located in the center of the city of Downey (population 113,000) near the civic center, library, and Embassy Suites hotel, with ample free parking.

    Click Here for theater technical specs.

    Have any favorite shows or stories about the Downey Theatre?  Tell us in the comments below!

  • A Vision for Intimate Theater

    A Vision for Intimate Theater

    A missing piece in the artistic and cultural life of the city of Downey is a company for producing repertory theatre.  While the Downey Civic Light Opera seeks to produce popular musicals with large casts of singers and dancers, nobody is producing contemporary or classic plays for adult audiences.  As a community we should work toward professional theatre productions that are innovative, culturally relevant, intellectually stimulating, and thought provoking.

    The Downey Civic Theatre is a beautiful, professional space and is excellent for certain productions, especially musicals.  However, at 738 seats, it is uncomfortably large for new company to take a risk with productions that aren’t instantly recognizable to a broad audience.  The pressure to fill those seats causes a company to rely on shows that have been hits in the past, creating theatre that is safe and stays within genres that are known to be popular, such as classic musicals and comedies.

    A great way to build up a company is to start in a smaller space, with less than 99 seats.  A small house can be filled much easier, the costs for production are greatly reduced, and the experience is much more intimate and immediate.  The 99 seat count is the maximum number of seats allowed to produce theatre under a waiver from Actors Equity Association, the union under which all theatre professionals work.  It allows professional actors and stage managers to work for small stipends rather than their normal contract rates, which can be prohibitive to a new theatre company.  This union waiver is unique to LA County, and is not available to the rest of the country.  Downey is uniquely positioned to take advantage of this, and in an under-served area outside of the usual radius that Los Angeles theatre is produced.

    Theatre @ Boston Court's 99-seat

    Many plays work wonderfully in a small space with minimal set design.  In fact, many were even written with this intention.  There is a kinetic energy to having the audience close and able to see every emotion on an actors face.  Artifice is stripped down, and the production must rely on story and performance rather than production elements.  As an example, take the Pulitzer prize winning drama “Wit.”  This piece about a college professor’s emotional journey through terminal cancer has only five roles, and can be performed with a small hospital room set.  This powerful play began at South Coast Repertory, went on to Broadway, and an HBO movie adaptation starring Emma Thompson.  Many classics can be performed this way as well, including favorites such as Neil Simon’s “The Odd Couple” and Ionesco’s “Waiting for Godot.”

    A Noise Within's 150 seat house

    Small theatres such as this are popular throughout the city of Los Angeles, some are 99 seat but many are smaller.  To list a small fraction: The Fountain Theatre in Hollywood, The Odyssey theatre in West Los Angeles, The Hudson Theatre, Knightsbridge Theatre, The Antaeus Company, Theatre at Boston Court, The Matrix Company.  Regionally, South Coast Repertory has a 95 seat space they occasionally use, as does the Long Beach Playhouse.  The Pasadena Playhouse has a small stage as well, and they’ve housed the Furious Theatre company rent free for the past few years.  While there are a plethora of options for theatre-goers to see plays in Los Angeles, there are virtually no options for residents of Downey and the surrounding neighborhoods who wish to stay local.

    Building out a small theatre in Downey has its challenges– namely, finding the resources to build it.  There might be an option within the Downey Civic Theatre complex.  There is a fairly large space on the second story that was designed as a rehearsal room.  It would be big enough for a small stage and audience of about 80 people.  It would take some work, like figuring out a lobby entrance and a passenger elevator.  Also, research with a fire marshal would also need to be conducted in order to meet the safety requirements for this new occupancy.  It has been suggested that a new stairway to the outside would need to be built as a fire escape route.  Then there’s a restroom question, not to mention logistics of staging, seating platforms, and a lighting system.

    Another option, also a good one (but further off), would be to construct a theater on Downey Avenue, right in the prime neighborhood where the city council wants to redevelop.  The city owns the Avenue Theatre building, which is also a large auditorium.  They want to construct a housing development here with commercial space below it.  They’ve also talked about including some community space.  This could be the perfect time to lobby the city to build a 99-seat theater on the base floor of this complex.

    In addition to plays, the small stage could be made available for other uses, including musical performances, stand-up or improvised comedy shows, staged readings, or meetings.

    Furthermore, as the audiences builds for a smaller theater, it could bring bigger productions to the Downey Theatre.  The two could feed off each other’s artistic strengths.  Both the smaller theatre and the bigger theatre can benefit from each other both in audience numbers and in artistic quality.  The surrounding area also benefits from drawing in more people to spend an evening in downtown.

    Examples of great contemporary plays that work in small spaces:

    Walworth Farce
    Wit
    Dinner with Friends
    Doubt
    How I Learned to Drive
    Blood Knot
    Translations
    Antigone Furiosa
    Indian Wants the Bronx
    Rabbit Hole
    Top Dog / Underdog

    and many more…


    Do you see plays or theatre, or would you go if they were being produced in Downey?  Tell us in the comments below!