City Heights is a dense urban community in central San Diego, California, known for its ethnic diversity. The area was previously known as East San Diego. City Heights is located south of Mission Valley and northeast of Balboa Park.

City Heights is notable as a home to refugees and immigrants, with significant communities of Vietnamese, Somali, Cambodian, Laotian, and Latino residents. Many social and cultural resources, retail stores, and restaurants are operated by and/or serve the non-white population.

City Heights is densely populated and has mostly multi-family apartments and homes.

History

When Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1821, it claimed the land and secularized the mission system, distributing the lands to rancheros. When the United States annexed the land, the modern era of American settler colonialism began. Settlement and any later development was facilitated by the forced removal of Kumeyaay people to reservations begun by President Ulysses S. Grant in 1875.

American settlement

In the 1880s, American entrepreneurs Abraham Klauber and Samuel Steiner purchased over of unincorporated land northeast of Balboa Park, hoping to profit from the area. Together they named it "City Heights," though it was also known as the "Steiner, Klauber, Choate and Castle Addition" after the earlier developers of the property. The area was subdivided, and on November 2, 1912, eligible area voters voted to become an incorporated city known as East San Diego. Population boomed in the next few years from 400 in 1910 to 4,000 during the incorporation.

On December 31, 1923, the City of East San Diego voted, 1,344 to 1,109, for annexation into the City of San Diego, becoming once again a neighborhood known as City Heights. The East San Diego trustees did not immediately recognize the annexation in early 1924. Complete annexation occurred over the next few years with the City of San Diego taking over.

Emergence as an urban center

thumb|University and Winona Avenue

During most of the 1930s, 1940s, and the 1950s the area had some suburban housing and was a commercial center for middle-class white residents, while people of color were segregated in south and east San Diego through discriminatory housing practices.

In the late 1950s, Caltrans planned the I-15 freeway to cut directly through the area, accelerating white flight and disinvestment.

By the 1990s, the area was described in the local media as one of the "urban edges where the inner city bleeds into the suburbs" and was widely portrayed as a crime hotspot. This redevelopment format, which evolved from the Mid-City Communities Plan, became officially codified into the "City of Villages" plan adopted by the City of San Diego in the 2002 General Plan, which continues to guide the city's urban policy.

The late 1990s and early 2000s saw redevelopment in City Heights continue, as new public facilities — including schools, a library, and a community center — opened around the newly developed center, through public-private partnerships. The additional public services and new commercial center were well received by residents. The Price-backed housing developments have received criticism for mainly serving moderate-income people, however, and the general sense of experimentation led some to dub the area "Guinea Pig Heights."

Since the 1990s, the demographics of the neighborhood have been changing. More middle- and upper-class Hispanic and Asian residents have moved to City Heights, while the number of Black residents, particularly those who are low-income, has decreased sharply. Rents and property prices have increased, sometimes by double or triple. It remains home to many refugees and immigrants from Latin America, Africa, Southeast Asia, Western Asia and North Africa.

According to 2017 reports, City Heights has lower rates of violent crime and property crime than nearby North Park and Hillcrest, as well as Downtown Gaslamp, and East Village.

San Diego Magazine named City Heights as one of the best places to live in San Diego in 2015. That year, the San Diego Indiefest music festival took place in City Heights' Urban Village.

By 2019, the area had been designated as an "Economic Opportunity Zone," which qualifies investors for tax breaks and other forms of corporate welfare, a policy which may accelerate the displacement of low-income residents. Gentrification in North Park has been trickling up University Avenue towards City Heights, with new events and businesses drawing higher-income residents, many of whom are middle- and upper-class Hispanic professionals, to the area. with high rates of poverty, unemployment, child obesity, and asthma.

City Heights is home to significant Vietnamese, Somali, Cambodian, and Laotian communities.

File:Officer Jeremy Henwood Memorial Park sign.jpg|Officer Jeremy Henwood Memorial Park, 4455 Wightman St

File:Performance Annex - Officer Jeremy Henwood Memorial Park.jpg|City Heights Performance Annex, 3795 Fairmount Ave

File:Wesley United Methodist Church.jpg|Wesleyan United Methodist Church, 5380 El Cajon Blvd

File:Chinese Friendship Association (2).jpg|Chinese Friendship Association, Buddhist Temple, 3876 50th St

File:Masjid Al-Ansar Mosque, San Diego.jpg|Masjid Al-Ansar Mosque, 4014 Winona Ave

File:Church of Jesus Christ, Apostolic - San Diego (2).jpg|Church of Jesus Christ, Apostolic, 4101 48th St

File:Church of Jesus Christ, Apostolic - San Diego (1).jpg|Church of Jesus Christ, Apostolic

File:Faith Tabernacle and Nuevo Remanente.jpg|Faith Tabernacle and Nuevo Remanente, 4019 48th St

File:Indochinese Association of San Diego.jpg|Thien Hau Temple Chùa Bà Thiên Hậu (Buddhist), 4538 University Ave

File:Thien Hau Temple Chùa Bà Thiên Hậu.jpg|Thien Hau Temple

File:Fairmoujnt Community Church, San Diego.jpg|Fairmount Community Church, 4100 Fairmount Ave

File:St Mark's Episcopal Church, City Heights, San Diego (1).jpg|St. Marks Episcopal Church, 4227 Fairmount Ave

File:Mid City Church Of The Nazarene (2).jpg|Mid City Church of the Nazarene, 4101 University Ave

File:Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, City Heights (3).jpg|Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, 4177 Marlborough Ave

File:Southern Sudanese Community Center of San Diego.jpg|Southern Sudanese Community Center, 4077 Fairmount Ave

File:The Elderly Chinese Association.jpg|The Elderly Chinese Association of San Diego, 4027 Marlborough Ave.

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Environment

  • Chollas Creek Restoration Project 2020-2022: Chollas Creek will be renovated with a $3.5 million grant from the California Natural Resources Agency. The area will be made walkable, with the removal concrete from the creek and addition of walkways, bike paths and native plant life alongside a half-mile segment of Chollas Creek that runs beside Martin Luther King Freeway (state Route 94).
  • thumb|New Roots Community Farm, 5340 Chollas Pkwy NNew Roots Community Farm: operated by tenant farmers who are refugees from many countries. In 2010, Michelle Obama visited the farm to promote her Let's Move! campaign against childhood obesity. It has been managed by City Heights Community Development Corporation (CDC) since 2019. In 2023, facing eviction threats, the farmers filed paperwork to form a non-profit and operate it themselves. In January 2024, the CDC locked the gates on the farmers and, after a confrontation with a security, it was reported that the management company does not have a lease agreement with the city or a Letter of Agency on file with the police allowing them to arrest trespassers despite a sign posted on the gate.
  • The Azalea Park Arts District (APAD): The Manzanita Gathering Place was built to be a creative refuge awash in art at the opening at Manzanita Canyon, with canopies and columns incorporating mosaic tiles made by Azalea Park residents. At the Azalea Community Park, local artists have created the Water Conservation Garden, with a collection of succulent plants and sculpture.
  • The Revolutionary Grower’s Garden: As of 2023, the San Diego chapter of the Black Panther Party has been maintaining a community garden near the intersection of University Ave and 39th Street.
  • As of 2017, there were hiking trails in at least seven canyons in City Heights.

Little Saigon

The Little Saigon San Diego Foundation was established in November 2008 with a stated mission to "revitalize the densely populated Vietnamese business district of El Cajon Boulevard."

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On June 4, 2013, City Council approved Little Saigon Cultural and Commercial District in City Heights, which is a six-block section of El Cajon Boulevard from Euclid to Highland avenues. The district would be known as a center for Vietnamese food and culture. Since 2013, the Little Saigon San Diego Foundation has organized one of the Vietnamese New Year (Tết) events in the city with the annual Lunar New Year festival at SDCCU Stadium, where proceeds would go towards developing and promoting the district.

On February 1, 2019, the Little Saigon signs were revealed to be installed near El Cajon Boulevard exits on Interstate 15.

Transportation

thumb|Boulevard Transit Plaza

Residents resisted the construction of SR&nbsp;15&nbsp;Freeway for years, forcing freeway drivers to take detours or drive in city streets to get downtown, but in the 1990's Caltrans forcefully evicted families to build it.

Major commercial streets include University Avenue, El Cajon Boulevard, Fairmount Avenue, and Euclid Avenue.

The neighborhood is served by MTS 1, 7, 10, 13, 60, 852, 955 and 965 bus lines, as well as the 215 and 235 Rapid Transit lines.

In 2018, freeway level "Centerline" transit stations along the SR&nbsp;15&nbsp;Freeway were finished at El Cajon Boulevard and University Avenue to improve traffic congestion for the rapid 235 bus line.

Education

City Heights is home to twelve public elementary schools, three public middle schools, two public high schools, and two private grade schools, three charter schools and the Mid-City Campus of the San Diego College of Continuing Education.

All public schools are in San Diego Unified School District.

Public elementary schools

  • Central
  • Cherokee Point
  • Hamilton
  • Euclid
  • Marshall
  • Edison
  • Florence Griffith Joyner
  • Herbert Ibarra
  • Mary Lanyon Fay
  • Wilson
  • Rowan
  • Rosa Parks

Public middle schools

  • Clark (Monroe)
  • Wilson
  • Mann

Public high schools

  • Hoover High School
  • Crawford Educational Complex (former Will C. Crawford High School)
  • Community Health and Medical Practices School (CHAMPS)
  • Invention and Design Educational Academy (IDEA)
  • School of Law and Business (LAB)
  • Multimedia and Visual Arts School (MVAS)

Charter schools

  • Health Sciences High & Middle College (HSHMC)
  • Health Sciences Middle School
  • City Heights Prep Academy
  • Gompers Preparatory Academy
  • San Diego Global Vision Academy
  • Arroyo Paseo Charter High* School
  • Iftin Charter School

Private grade schools

  • Waldorf School of San Diego

Private high schools

Waldorf School of San Diego High School

<gallery heights="180" widths="220" mode="nolines">

File:Mid City Campus - San Diego Continuing Education.jpg|San Diego College of Continuing Education - Mid City Campus

File:City Heights-Weingart Branch Library entrance.jpg|City Heights-Weingart Branch of the San Diego Public Library

File:Hoover High School Security Gate.jpg|Hoover High School Security Gate

File:Horace Mann Middle School, City Heights, San Diego.jpg|Horace Mann Middle School

File:Ibarra Elementary School.jpg|Ibarra Elementary School

File:Hoover High School Digital Sign.jpg|Hoover High School

File:Herbert Hoover High School Entrance.jpg|Hoover High School

</gallery>As of June 2024, Central Elementary School's old campus has been closed and is due to be replaced by an affordable housing complex. Its new campus is located at 3878 Orange Avenue.

Government

The area is part of City Council District 9, represented by Sean Elo-Rivera as of 2025. City Heights is also part of California's 80th State Assembly district, represented by David Alvarez as of 2025. The City Heights Area Planning Committee and the City Heights Community Planning Group advise the city on land use and other issues. Volunteer organizations include the City Heights Town Council and the City Heights Business Association. The City Heights Community Recreation Group and the Colina Del Sol Recreation group have authority to advise the city on park district matters in different parts of City Heights.

References

  • City Heights at SanDiego.gov
  • City Heights Town Council