

While looking through the USC Digital Archives, I came across this aerial photograph of Van Nuys in 1945. I have attempted to look at it and hypothesize about what I see.
It is looking North, with the Valley Municipal Building clearly evident in the middle left.
Two wide streets cut a vertical path through the photo. I am guessing that one on the far right is Hazeltine. To the east (right) of Hazeltine, the land is mostly agricultural. To the west, it is dotted with houses that were built around the center of downtown Van Nuys.
There is a large horizontal strip of land that I believe belongs to the Southern Pacific freight railroad that once ran through here. Fruit packing buildings and ice plants were alongside this area.
To the south of the rail, is the still rural Oxnard Street which seems to stop at Tyrone in the second to the last horizontal road at the very bottom left of the photo.
Just north of the Valley Municipal Building, Victory Boulevard is planted with rows of trees. It was not a wide road as it is today, but narrower and more residential.
Today’s Panorama City is undeveloped at the top of the photo. There is still a separation between various towns in the San Fernando Valley in 1945.
Does anyone prefer today’s Van Nuys to the one that existed 62 years ago?