Rose Park is one of Long Beach's officially designated historic districts, set a few blocks inland from the coast in the city's central-east area. Developed in the early 20th century, it's known for beautifully preserved Craftsman bungalows and Spanish Revival homes built between the 1920s and 1940s — deep porches, mature shade trees, and a street grid that has barely changed in a century. The neighborhood sits between Zaferia to the east and Bluff Heights to the west, putting residents within easy reach of two very different commercial corridors.
Rose Park takes its name from the roughly 200-acre municipal park at its center — one of the largest green spaces in Long Beach. It includes a public golf course, sports fields, a playground, a dog park, and a community center, giving residents resort-scale recreation within walking distance of home. For a historic, walkable neighborhood at this price point, that kind of green space is rare in coastal Los Angeles County, and it's one of the most-cited reasons longtime residents stay put.
Rose Park's housing stock is dominated by single-family Craftsman and Spanish-style homes on traditional city lots, with a smaller share of duplexes and small multi-unit buildings. Recent sales have generally landed in the $650,000 to $900,000 range for updated single-family homes, with smaller bungalows and fixer-uppers trading lower. Homes here tend to move quickly, reflecting steady demand from buyers drawn to the historic-district designation and the walkability to both Zaferia and Retro Row.
Daily life in Rose Park leans on its neighbors as much as its own amenities. East Anaheim Street's restaurants, bars, and coffee shops are a short walk east into Zaferia, while Retro Row's vintage shops, the historic Art Theatre, and 4th Street's dining corridor are minutes west in Bluff Heights. Inside the neighborhood, the historic homes and mature tree canopy make for some of the most pleasant walking and cycling streets in central Long Beach, and Rose Park itself hosts community events throughout the year.
Rose Park falls within Long Beach Unified School District. Wilson High School (rated A by Niche) serves the area, with several well-regarded elementary and middle school options nearby.
Rose Park's central location makes it one of the easiest neighborhoods in Long Beach to get around from. Anaheim Street, 7th Street, and Redondo Avenue provide quick access to the 405 and PCH, and the beach, downtown, and CSULB are all within a 10–15 minute drive. The flat street grid and proximity to Rose Park itself make walking and biking the neighborhood's strongest everyday option.
Rose Park suits buyers who want genuine historic character, a real neighborhood park, and a central location — without the price tag of the coastal districts. The tradeoffs are the tradeoffs of any central, urban Long Beach neighborhood: busier streets, varying lot conditions, and a commercial scene that depends on its neighbors rather than standing entirely on its own. In exchange, buyers get architecturally significant homes, 200 acres of green space at the center of the neighborhood, and easy access to everything Long Beach has to offer.
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