LOS ANGELES (CNS) — The long-awaited Historic Filipinotown Eastern Gateway will be officially unveiled Saturday, giving Los Angeles a new landmark to celebrate during the May observance of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.


What You Need To Know

  • The gateway spans 82 feet across and 30 feet high over Beverly Boulevard at Belmont Avenue, the eastern entrance into the neighborhood

  • Councilman Mitch O’Farrell will host a celebration for the gateway at 4 p.m. Saturday

  • The unveiling comes a little more than a month after the structure was installed, on April 1

  • The project is part of a larger plan to improve the First Street Bridge with seismic retrofitting and lane enhancements

The new gateway, which is officially called “Talang Gabay - Our Guiding Star,” spans 82 feet across and 30 feet high over Beverly Boulevard at Belmont Avenue, the eastern entrance into the neighborhood.

Councilman Mitch O’Farrell will host a celebration for the gateway at 4 p.m. Saturday, with music, dance performances and remarks from California Attorney General Rob Bonta, Councilman Gil Cedillo, Building and Safety Commissioner Joselyn Geaga-Rosenthal and former Public Works Commissioner Jessica Caloza.

The unveiling comes a little more than a month after the structure was installed, on April 1.

“After many years, countless meetings and a lot of blood, sweat and tears, I’m proud to share that the Historic Filipinotown Eastern Gateway will be installed and unveiled this spring,” O’Farrell said in February when he announced that a date had been set for the installation.

“This project has been a labor of love by so many people in Historic Filipinotown. This beautiful, historic landmark will be a source of pride for the Filipino community and will rightfully celebrate this vibrant neighborhood and the incredible contributions Filipino Americans make to the city of Los Angeles.”

The gateway was designed by Filipino American artists Eliseo Art Silva and Celestino Geronimo Jr. They incorporated Filipino cultural symbols, including a parol, a Filipino ornamental lantern, the Gumamela flower also known as hibiscus to pay tribute to frontline workers, and the Sarimanok, a legendary bird originating on the Filipino island Mindanao.

“It’s a fitting tribute to the many courageous men and women on the frontlines, brave warriors such as our numerous Filipino healthcare workers,” Silva said in June 2020, when the gateway’s design was unveiled. “The gateway not only signals that Filipino Americans have finally arrived, it also symbolizes the valor of the frontliners in our city.”

Silva also created the Philippine mural at Unidad Park, near the Eastern Gateway.

“Pilipino Workers Center is excited and proud of being a part of the collective process to make this HiFi gateway project a reality!” said Aquilina Soriano Versoza, executive director of Pilipino Workers Center.

“It really took a robust collaboration of community and city officials to accomplish the completion of the eastern HiFi gateway project. The gateway is a great project for creating visibility for the Filipino American community in HiFi and Los Angeles. That visibility gives organizations like PWC more power to lift up the issues our community is facing.”

The Los Angeles area is home to more than half a million Filipinos. The project to install the gateway has been in the works for nearly 20 years, according to O’Farrell. It first was underway when Mayor Eric Garcetti represented the 13th District, now represented by O’Farrell.

“Our community finally had a ‘win’ in 2002, when the City Council, under the leadership of then-Councilmember Eric Garcetti, officially designated a 2.5-square-mile area just west of downtown Los Angeles as Historic Filipinotown,” said Geaga-Rosenthal.

“Twenty years later, we have another win: a majestic Eastern Gateway to Historic Filipinotown will rise on Beverly Boulevard. This was hard won — the result of 40 years of community advocacy getting key champions along the way, including this chapter today, from the city of Los Angeles and Councilmember Mitch O’Farrell.”

In 2018, O’Farrell initially committed $152,000 in city funds for the Eastern Gateway Project, but additional funding through cost savings on another project enabled O’Farrell to provide an additional $452,000 in city funds for the landmark.

The project is part of a larger plan, in collaboration with the Board of Public Works, to improve the First Street Bridge with seismic retrofitting and lane enhancements.