HomesofCalabasas.com

Calabasas Living

This master planned community is nestled in the foothills of the Santa Monica Mountains with many selections of houses and homes for sale. Many homes and condo's are snuggled around Lake Calabasas where .....
 

.....the association home owners can sail their small sailboats. Calabasas has plenty of opportunities for fun, amenities such as a 14 court tennis and swim club, a racquetball club, equestrian center, and a championship golf course.  A spectacular site in Calabasas is the Hindu Sanctuary at built by the Hindu Temple Society of Southern California; the temple complex represents 10,000 local Indian emigree. The nearby Santa Monica Mountains are easily.....

.....accessible and offer 7,000 acres of trails that can be used by people, bikes, and horses. If that is not enough, one can stroll the Old Town and check out the Calabasas Junction which was once Cooper's General Store with the El Camino Real bell under the Oak, visit Leonis Adobe and Calabasas Park and the many historic buildings which are still standing or wander the Farmer's Market in Old Town.

Calabasas schools are part of the Las Virgenes school district which are annually rated in the top levels of Southern California schools. Residents of Calabasas have among the highest per capita income in Southern California.

If you’re planning on buying or selling any real estate ranging from a modest home to luxury mansions with lake, coastal, mountain or city lights view, a Calabasas real estate agent can help with your needs.

Calabasas is a city in Los Angeles County, California, in the western United States. As of the 2005 census, the city population was 23,123. The city was formally incorporated in 1991. Many parts of Calabasas are mountains or hills, which have spectacular views of the San Fernando Valley. Many of the neighborhoods in Calabasas are gated communities.

The city is located at the southwestern edge of the San Fernando Valley and comprises a portion of the Santa Monica Mountains. It is bordered by the Woodland Hills area of Los Angeles to the northeast, Topanga to the southeast, Malibu to the south, Agoura Hills to the west, and Hidden Hills to the north. The historic El Camino Real runs east-west through Calabasas as U.S. Route 101.

Calabasas funds its own public transportation in the form of shuttle and trolley service, runs its own tennis and swimming center, has a protected and maintained historical district, has its own television channel called "The Calabasas Channel", and has four car dealerships along Calabasas Road.

While Calabasas is oftentimes considered similar to its neighboring two cities to the west (Agoura Hills and Westlake Village, which is a trio that can be compared to the Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena area) because of similar demographics, size (physically and population, save Westlake), geography, and low-density general plans, Calabasas is unique from these two for the above things as the two other cities have none of the above features.

Calabasas contains many different communities, many of which are defined by gates that only residents and guests can enter and others by the geographical differences

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