You’ve seen it in car chases, drag races and apocalyptic movie scenes, but the Los Angeles River isn’t a movie set. It’s one of the city’s most important pieces of infrastructure — and one of its biggest environmental questions.

The 51-mile river cuts across Los Angeles in a form that feels uniquely LA: half urban, half natural, part ecosystem, part flood-control machine.

Before the concrete, before the city, this river sustained life for thousands of years. Contrary to popular belief, LA isn’t a desert — it was once a lush basin dotted with wetlands.

Indigenous communities lived alongside the water for at least 10,000 years, careful to settle near its resources but out of reach of its floods.

The Spanish and Mexicans did the same. As the city grew, that wisdom was forgotten. People built right up to the water’s edge, and the river made them pay.

Then came the catastrophic flood of 1938. Streets became rivers, bridges collapsed and communities were swept away. Afterward, the Army Corps of Engineers was brought in to make sure it never happened again.

Over roughly two decades, about 80% of the river was encased in concrete. The goal was simple: Move water out of the city as fast as possible. It worked.

The river may not be pretty in many places, but it was designed to prevent catastrophe — and during major storms, it still does.

But solving one problem created others. Concrete keeps stormwater from soaking into the ground, even as Los Angeles depends on imported water. Instead of capturing more rain locally, the system sends it rushing out to the Pacific Ocean.

Still, the river is not dead. In places like the Glendale Narrows, birds nest, trees grow, cyclists ride and wildlife returns. It remains a living ecosystem inside a man-made channel.

That is why restoring the LA River is so complicated. The challenge is finding a balance: More habitat, more public access and more stormwater capture, without sacrificing flood protection.


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