Lakewood Village is a residential neighborhood in east Long Beach, bordered roughly by Carson Street, Lakewood Boulevard, Del Amo Boulevard, and Bellflower Boulevard. Home to about 7,600 residents, it's known for single-level ranch-style homes built mostly in the 1940s and 1950s, with tree-lined streets and mature landscaping that give it strong curb appeal.
At the intersection of Bellflower Boulevard and Carson Street sits "Parkview Village" — locally known as The Triangle — a collection of shops, restaurants, and services along Viking Way and Village Road that has anchored the neighborhood since the 1950s. It sits adjacent to Heartwell Park, with its walking trails and public golf course, and the Long Beach City College Liberal Arts Campus.
Lakewood Village has seen significant appreciation, with recent median prices ranging from roughly $1.05 million to $1.24 million depending on the data source and time period — among the higher price points for a non-coastal Long Beach neighborhood. Homes are typically two to three bedrooms, generally under 2,000 square feet, though larger remodeled and custom homes do appear on the market.
Heartwell Park and Pan American Park provide walking trails, athletic fields, and a public golf course, while El Dorado Regional Park is a short drive away for hiking and biking. The neighborhood is close to major grocery stores, the Lakewood Center mall, Costco, and Nordstrom Rack, plus a strong lineup of restaurants in the surrounding area.
Lakewood Village is served by Long Beach Unified School District, with several well-regarded elementary and middle schools in the surrounding area feeding into nearby comprehensive high schools.
Lakewood Village sits about 10 miles from Downtown Long Beach, 15 miles from Anaheim, and 20 miles from Downtown LA, with the 405 and 605 freeways both accessible. Long Beach Airport is just minutes away.
Lakewood Village suits buyers who want a quiet, established residential neighborhood with strong amenities — parks, shopping, golf — and don't need to be near the coast. The tradeoff is that pricing here has climbed to levels that rival some coastal-adjacent neighborhoods, despite the inland location. For buyers prioritizing lifestyle and convenience over beach proximity, it's one of the most consistently desirable inland neighborhoods in Long Beach.
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