CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Palos Verdes Estates was planned around roads, trees, and open land

Palos Verdes Estates pairs Tongva history, Malaga Cove, Olmsted planning, early cityhood, and a large open-space promise on the peninsula.

Palos Verdes EstatesMalaga CoveLos Angeles County

Palos Verdes Estates has a polished coastal look, but the place starts with much older land history. The bluff above Malaga Cove is an important archaeological site, and Tongva communities used the Palos Verdes Peninsula for thousands of years.

The modern city grew from a planned community idea. Frank Vanderlip bought the land in 1913, and the Olmsted Brothers helped shape the layout and landscape. The curving roads, trees, paths, hillside views, and open land were part of the plan, not afterthoughts.

One number makes the city stand out: about 28 percent of the land area was dedicated as permanent open space. That choice still affects daily life, from the green hillsides to the way neighborhoods meet canyons and bluffs.

Palos Verdes Estates incorporated in 1939 and is the oldest of the four cities on the peninsula. If the city feels more like a garden landscape than a standard grid, that is because it was built with that idea from the beginning.

Where to see it

Malaga Cove, city parklands, and the winding roads of Palos Verdes Estates.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 2, 2026

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