Curating the City: Legacy Businesses

Curating the City

Legacy Businesses

Legacy businesses are long-standing neighborhood anchors where people connect, memories are made, and our sense of community is nourished. Legacy businesses are also a major source of employment and in some areas, an essential neighborhood amenity.

Overview

Keeping 鈥楳om and Pop鈥櫬

Longtime businesses found in neighborhoods across Los Angeles County add to our rich history and culture.

Whether it鈥檚 the family-owned bakery down the street, the dry cleaner聽locals swear by, or the restaurant where your partner proposed, these familiar and beloved places are our legacy businesses.

They鈥檙e a huge part of what makes each of our neighborhoods and communities unique, 补苍诲听it鈥檚 time to show them some love.

The Conservancy launched our Legacy Business Initiative in November 2019 to raise awareness of the importance of legacy businesses throughout Los Angeles County. We aim to broaden awareness of these places and share more about the County鈥檚 history by highlighting the unique places and stories associated with longtime commercial establishments. We will also identify some of the pressures that come with running a longtime business and highlight strategies that communities have created to help.

We hope this microsite brings a greater understanding of the important role legacy businesses play in our neighborhoods and the challenges they face.

About This Issue

What Is a Legacy Business?

Legacy鈥攐r longtime鈥攂usinesses are important to our region’s heritage and economy, yet many are not fully appreciated and acknowledged for what they provide to communities, with an increasing number at risk due to the pandemic. Soaring rents, development pressures, and lack of succession plans are some of the ongoing challenges faced by many legacy business owners.鈥

A legacy business is a聽longtime business that typically has been around for over twenty聽years and serves as a mainstay of a neighborhood.

What if a long-term business changes ownership鈥攊s it still a legacy business? Not always, especially if a new owner provides a completely new use, good, or service聽unrelated to the longstanding business that closed or moved elsewhere.

What defines a legacy business is not only its聽濒辞苍驳别惫颈迟测听but also its contribution to the neighborhood鈥檚聽identity and traditions, creating a聽sense of place, culture,聽补苍诲听产别濒辞苍驳颈苍驳听for customers and neighbors.

Policies & Programs

How policy and programs can protect legacy businesses

In 2013, San Francisco Heritage launched聽聽to encourage residents to experience the history of 100 of San Francisco鈥檚 most cherished longstanding restaurants and bars. By 2015, the Board of Supervisors approved the creation of the聽, which is now open to businesses and nonprofits thirty years or older that have made a significant impact on the history or culture of their neighborhood. San Francisco voters have now passed a measure creating the聽, which provides grants to legacy business owners and property owners who agree to favorable lease terms with legacy business tenants.

In 2016, the City of Seattle funded a聽聽to better understand issues affecting legacy businesses and consider recommendations to support them. Completed in 2017, the study found that programs in U.S. cities primarily assist small, local businesses as opposed to legacy businesses. In cities abroad, including Paris, London, and Buenos Aires, governments provide funds to promote and preserve cultural heritage assets such as legacy businesses. Seattle is currently developing a multilingual toolkit to help businesses with commercial leases and plans to support succession planning and to assist with the marketing and branding of legacy businesses.

San Francisco Heritage鈥檚 policy paper,聽, credits聽, an official designation program initiated in the 1990s for bars, cafes, and other legacy businesses as inspiration for their own Legacy Bars and Restaurants initiative.

Our Position

How can we help legacy businesses impacted by factors such as neighborhood change, economic difficulties, aging building stock, and aging founders?

Legacy businesses vary widely and there is no one-size-fits-all solution to meeting their needs. They may be housed in older buildings, both nondescript and those that are architecturally significant. Some buildings may have been altered over time to support new uses by the original owner, or by a new owner.

Legacy businesses housed in architecturally or culturally significant buildings, or are located in eligible historic districts, may consider landmark designation. In these cases, the building owner may take advantage of financial incentives like preservation tax credits and grants available to owners of landmarked buildings. Legacy businesses that are primarily culturally significant may have a harder time making a case for landmark designation.

While landmark designation may help with neighborhood stabilization and, in some cases, even help offset rent increases, it does not alleviate many of the day-to-day operational challenges facing a legacy business owner. To this point, landmark designation primarily benefits owners of buildings, and not necessarily the owner of the business or tenant.

Technical assistance and small business funding provided by municipalities or 91直播s may offer needed resources, but some business owners may find these difficult to access, or not specifically designed with a legacy business in mind. In these cases, legacy business owners would benefit from the creation of specific city- and county-wide tools.

础听聽found the future of its legacy businesses will come into question when baby boomer owners retire in the next five to fifteen years. This is the reality of Jorge Tello, owner of聽聽in Boyle Heights. While his sister promises to keep the shop going when he retires, who will local mariachi musicians turn to for custom suits after her?

In September 2019, the Los Angeles City Council adopted a聽 by Councilmember Curren Price, Jr., instructing the Economic and Workforce Development Department to study legacy business programs created in other cities and to provide recommendations for implementing a similar program in Los Angeles. The City Council’s Economic Development and Jobs (EDJ) Committee began consideration of a new citywide legacy business program in March 2022, which the City Council adopted later that year. The Conservancy joined over 20 community-based organizations in support of the program. More information about the program’s approval can be found in .

In 2020, the City of Pasadena created its own . In the same year, the City of West Hollywood directed staff to explore the establishment of a legacy business registry, preservation fund, and other incentives for legacy businesses in their jurisdiction.

Join our聽 to stay informed about important updates and resources in support longtime businesses.

How You Can Help

Support Legacy Businesses

Help show your support of legacy businesses by patronizing them today. We invite you to share tips, ideas, and resources in support of聽legacy business聽on social, using the聽.

To stay informed about additional supports available for longtime businesses, join our .

Resources & Support for Legacy Businesses

The Conservancy’s Legacy Business Grant program is available to longtime small businesses within Los Angeles County.

Eligibility criteria:

  • Business must be operating and located within the boundaries of the County of Los Angeles
  • Business has operated and contributed to its community鈥檚 history and/or identity for 20 or more years
  • Business is not franchised or affiliated with a national, corporate chain
  • For-profit business
  • Less than 25 full-time employees.

This grant program has been made possible thanks to funding from Wells Fargo.

To date, we have awarded $50,000 in grants over two funding rounds. We are not currently accepting applications. Should funds become available this year, we will notify the public on our website, social media, and direct emails to legacy business owners who sign up for our 聽email list.

For more information about this grant program, click here.

The City of Los Angeles launched its citywide Legacy Business Program in February 2024. Businesses in operation for 20+ years in the City of Los Angeles may be eligible to apply for this free program, which offers:

  • Access to Capital, including Grants
  • Technical Assistance
  • Operational Support
  • Promotion for Your Business

91直播 more and apply at

Registered City of Los Angeles legacy businesses may apply for up to $20,000 as part of Round 1 of the City of Los Angeles’ . Deadline to apply is聽Sunday, September 15!

The City of Pasadena’s Legacy Business Program was established by the City to recognize long-standing businesses which are independently owned, and have proven to be a vital part of our community. Legacy Businesses across the city are identified with a Legacy Business Marker and highlighted on the City’s website. Businesses must have been operating for at least 50 years. To learn more about the eligibility criteria and to apply, click

 

Help show your support of legacy businesses by patronizing them today. We invite you to share tips, ideas, and resources in support of legacy businesses on social media, using the .

Let us know about your favorite longtime business in 91直播County! Email rsagara@laconservancy.org

An elderly man and young women holding a baby smiling.

VIDEO

Keeping L.A.'s Legacy Businesses

In this episode of 鈥淧eople + Places: Keeping L.A.'s Legacy Businesses,鈥 we talk about the 91直播Conservancy's partnership with Wells Fargo to create a Legacy Business Grant Program in Los Angeles County!

2023 GRANTEE VIDEO

Candelas Guitars in Boyle Heights: "Time and Tradition"

For 70 years, Candelas Guitars has been creating hand-crafted guitars and violins, each their own work of art. Family-owned and operated by third-generation luthier, T贸mas Delgado, Candelas also offers music lessons, vintage repairs, and more.

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Sika in Leimert Park: "Building Community"

Affectionately known as 鈥渢he mayor of Leimert Park,鈥 SikavDwimfo is an 91直播icon. And so is his family-owned legacy business, located in the heart of historic Leimert Park Village. Sika brought his art to Los Angeles five decades ago, and it鈥檚 hard to imagine South 91直播without him or his work.

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Lenchita's in Pacoima: "Feeding the Future"

A San Fernando Valley institution since 1977, this family-owned business was founded by Angelita Alvarez Renter铆a and is famous for its handmade tortillas, fresh ingredients, and friendly service. Angelita's daughter, Alvina Renteria, and grandson, Art Luna, are among the second and third-generation family members who are running Lenchita's with pride

Los Angeles, California/Canva

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