Bixby Terrace is a small, quiet residential neighborhood in north Long Beach, bordered by Carson Street to the south, Bixby Road to the north, Cherry Avenue to the west, and Orange Avenue to the east. It sits within the larger constellation of Bixby-named neighborhoods — Bixby Knolls, Bixby Highlands, and California Heights — that together form one of Long Beach's most architecturally consistent and well-regarded inland areas.
Bixby Terrace doesn't have a commercial corridor of its own — its identity comes from what surrounds it. Atlantic Avenue, the dining and shopping spine of Bixby Knolls, is immediately adjacent, giving residents walkable or short-drive access to restaurants, shops, and the neighborhood's monthly First Fridays art walk without the traffic of living directly on the corridor.
Bixby Terrace's housing stock is similar in character to its neighbors — single-family homes from the early-to-mid 20th century on traditional residential lots. Pricing tends to track closely with Bixby Knolls and Bixby Highlands, positioning it as a solid mid-range option within the broader Bixby area.
Atlantic Avenue's Bixby Knolls corridor is the social and commercial center for Bixby Terrace residents, with restaurants, coffee shops, and First Fridays events drawing people from across the surrounding neighborhoods. The area's tree-lined residential streets are otherwise quiet, with most activity concentrated along the commercial edges.
Bixby Terrace is served by Long Beach Unified School District, with elementary and middle schools shared with the broader Bixby Knolls/California Heights area, feeding into nearby comprehensive high schools.
Bixby Terrace's location near Atlantic Avenue and the 91/710 freeway connections makes for an easy commute, with downtown Long Beach, the 405, and Signal Hill all close by.
Bixby Terrace is a good fit for buyers who want the lifestyle benefits of Bixby Knolls — walkable dining, a strong neighborhood identity, community events — in a quieter residential setting just off the main corridor. The tradeoff is that the neighborhood has limited identity of its own; its value is largely a function of its neighbors. For buyers who see that as a feature rather than a bug, it's a solid, centrally located choice.
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