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Villa Park Real Estate and Relocation
Information
Villa Park is Orange County's smallest city,
but one of its friendliest and most welcoming places to
live. Here, you will find people with a wide range of
backgrounds, interests, and occupations; quiet neighborhoods
and attractive residential streets; the lowest crime rate
in the County; and four schools within walking distance.
The City of Villa Park is in the center
of Orange County. It has an area of 2.1 square miles,
a population of 6,500 and approximately 1,900 homes, and
is almost 99% built out. With the exception of one shopping
center, the City is zoned for single-family residences,
most of which are on half-acre lots. The shopping center
includes a grocery store, banks, a pharmacy with a postal
substation, a variety of specialty shops and offices,
the City Hall and community room, and a branch of the
Orange County Public Library.
The schools - Villa Park High, Cerro Villa
Middle, Villa Park Elementary and Serrano Elementary -
are a part of the Orange Unified School District. There
is no city newspaper, but the "Foothill Sentry,"
a local paper published in Orange Park Acres once a month,
includes the Villa Park news and events, and a periodic
newsletter from City Hall. Cable TV is available with
a public access channel, Channel 3. There are no churches
within the City limits but most denominations' facilities
can be found close by.
Due to Villa Park's central location and
proximity to the freeway system, the wealth of cultural,
social, recreational, business and philanthropic activities
that Orange County offers are all within easy access.
The City is governed by five council members,
each elected for four-year terms, who serve without pay
and meet on the fourth Tuesday of each month at 7:30 p.m.
Residents are encouraged to attend and participate in
these meetings and the political life of the City. Council
agendas are posted on the bulletin board outside of the
City Hall. There are also a full-time appointed City Managers,
a small office staff, and a maintenance crew. Police,
fire, legal, and engineering services are contracted for
outside of the City. The City offices are open Monday
through Friday, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.; the telephone number
is 998-1500.
Villa Park's tree is the Weeping Fig; the
City flower is the Orange Blossom; the City bird is the
Hummingbird; and the City motto is "Villa Park, the
Hidden Jewel."
The center and springboard of activities
in Villa Park is the Villa Park Women's League, founded
in 1969, with a current membership of 375. It is open
to any Villa Park resident of voting age. The membership
chairman's name and phone number can be obtained from
City Hall. The League's aims are to provide support, friendship
and a focus for the citizens of Villa Park and to promote
safety, education, beautification and cultural enrichment
within the City and its environs. It also sponsors a host
of social and recreational activities for its members:
bowling, bridge, gourmet, stitchery, golf, newcomers,
etc. There is no better way to make friends and become
a part of this community than to join the League.
Villa Park was not incorporated until 1962,
but the history of the area goes back to around 1860.
It was known in its early days as Mountain View. Villa
Park came into usage when a post office was located here
and there already was a city of Mountain View in northern
California.
Villa Park was, for many years, an agricultural
area producing, in turn, grapes, walnuts, apricots, and
finally, citrus, which was the major crop for about 60
years and is most closely associated with its development.
It was the citrus ranchers and their families who molded
Villa Park into a vital community and organized its incorporation
to save it from what they felt were unwelcome zoning practices
from the eastward-moving city of Orange.
These ranchers established the Serrano
Water District, which still provides Villa Park's water.
(The district office is located on Lincoln Street.) They
also founded the Villa Park Orchard's Association, still
a thriving business in Orange, although the packing house
that was the dominant Villa Park landmark for many years,
located west of the shopping center, was torn down in
1983. The citrus groves have yielded to the developers
but these pioneers have left an enduring legacy in our
half-acre zoning, which has been instrumental in shaping
the City's character, and in many of our street names;
such as, Brewer, Nichols, Squire, Collins, Morrow, Ragan,
Knuth, Workman, Adams, Wulff, Abbott, Durfee, Sterling,
as well as, Hazel, Mary and Florence.
The City of Villa Park has a citywide recycling
program with curbside pickup at each home, every week.
Many items that can be recycled, such as newspaper, cardboard,
all types of paper, aluminum cans and other metals, glass
and several types of plastic are being collected from
residents. These are placed in a large container provided
by the trash hauler. The residents place it at the curb
for recycling. At least 80% of the residents of Villa
Park set their recyclable material out for collection.
The city has reduced the amount of waste going to the
landfill by more than 25%, by weight. There are no landfills
in Villa Park.
Villa Park Links
Official
Website - http://www.villapark.org/
Villa Park Demographics
| Population: |
Median Income: |
Households w/Children median
income: |
Average age: |
Education: |
| 128,821 |
$107,567 |
$211,049 |
43.6 yrs |
97.9% HS Graduates, 59% College
Graduates |
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Orange County Relocation
Links
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