Shopping Center ADA Compliance in Los Feliz
77 shopping centers across 7 commercial corridors. With 93.5% of buildings constructed before 1990 and an average build year of 1972, Los Feliz shopping centers face significant ADA compliance challenges.
Los Feliz has 77 shopping centers, 93.5% built before 1990 (avg. year 1972), concentrated along Hillhurst Avenue (Franklin Avenue to Los Feliz Boulevard). Shopping Center ADA litigation risk is extreme in Los Feliz, with settlements reaching $500K — non-compliant parking spaces is the leading trigger. Los Feliz's 10.8% disability rate and 13.4% senior population create above-average demand for accessible shopping centers. Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS) oversees ADA compliance for Los Feliz's shopping centers, with 5 local programs supporting accessibility upgrades.
Shopping Center Building Stock in Los Feliz
Los Feliz's Hillhurst Avenue (Franklin Avenue to Los Feliz Boulevard) corridor has 93.5% pre-1990 shopping centers with an average build year of 1972, making non-compliant parking spaces especially common.
An analysis of shopping center properties in Los Feliz, including building age, square footage, and key commercial corridors.
77
Shopping Center Properties
1.71M
Total Sq Ft
93.5%
Built Before 1990
1972
Avg Year Built
Typical Era: 1970s-1990s
Key Corridors
Vermont Avenue (Hollywood Boulevard to Los Feliz Boulevard)
Second major north-south commercial corridor of Los Feliz Village, approximately 0.9 miles. Mix of legacy entertainment venues (Los Feliz Theatre, Dresden Restaurant), independent retail (Skylight Books), restaurants, and neighborhood-serving businesses. Buildings range from 1920s commercial vernacular to 1980s strip retail. Southern portion near Hollywood Blvd falls within the Vermont/Western SNAP specific plan area.
Showing corridors most relevant to Shopping Centers. 7 total corridors in Los Feliz.
ADA Litigation Risk for Shopping Center in Los Feliz
With a extreme litigation risk and settlements reaching $500K, shopping centers in Los Feliz face significant ADA exposure — Shopping centers—malls, strip malls, retail plazas, and outlet centers—represent one of the highest-risk property catego….
Litigation Risk Level
extreme
Shopping centers—malls, strip malls, retail plazas, and outlet centers—represent one of the highest-risk property categories for ADA litigation in California. Retail centers with public-facing tenants are "most at risk for ADA-related lawsuits". The multi-tenant structure of shopping centers creates compounded exposure: compliance must be coordinated across landlord-controlled common areas (parking, walkways, restrooms, directories) and individual tenant spaces simultaneously. When any single tenant triggers a remodel, the 20% path-of-travel upgrade rule can cascade obligations across the property. The landlord bears primary liability for common areas under *Botosan v. Paul McNally Realty* (9th Cir. 2000), yet both landlord and tenant are jointly and severally liable under 28 C.F.R. § 36.201—meaning a plaintiff can name the property owner, management company, and every tenant in one suit.
Typical Settlement Range
$10,000 – $500,000
Most Targeted Property Types
Plaintiff Firms Targeting Shopping Centers
| Firm | Focus | Volume |
|---|---|---|
| Manning Law, APC | 1,775 | |
| Law Office of Hakimi & Shahriari | 802 | |
| Law Office of Morse Mehrban | 418 | |
| So Cal Equal Access Group | 2,598 (federal) | |
| Potter Handy LLP / Center for Disability Access | Thousands historically | |
| Seabock Price APC | 299 | |
| The Reddy Law Firm | 279 |
ADA Violations & Risk Profile for Shopping Centers
Non-Compliant Parking Spaces
Multi-tenant parking lots frequently have excessive slopes/cross-slopes, improper dimensions, faded striping, and insufficient accessible spaces for the total lot capacity. Properties must calculate required accessible spaces based on each parking structure separately.
Inaccessible Exterior Path of Travel
Routes from parking to building entrances across large shopping center sites with uneven surfaces, excessive slope/cross-slope, missing detectable warnings, and paths unprotected from vehicular traffic. The ADA requires at least one accessible route from site arrival points to every accessible building entrance.
When a tenant makes alterations to a primary function area, both the ADA and California Building Code require that up to 20% of the adjusted construction cost be allocated to improving the accessible path of travel to that area—including the route from the public right-of-way, parking, and restrooms serving the altered space. For projects under the California valuation threshold of $186,172, the city requires the additional 20% allocation automatically. For example, a $100,000 tenant buildout in a shopping center could trigger $20,000 in path-of-travel upgrades to common area elements the landlord controls.
Missing or Non-Compliant Parking Signage
Parking identification signs lacking the International Symbol of Accessibility, missing "van accessible" designations, signs mounted below the required 60-inch minimum height, and missing directional signage to accessible spaces.
Non-Compliant Counter/Table Heights
Checkout counters, service desks, food court tables, and customer service kiosks exceeding the 36-inch maximum height requirement. At least one checkout counter must be no higher than 36 inches and at least 36 inches long.
Non-Compliant Ramps and Stairs
Curb ramps and entrance ramps with slopes exceeding 1:12 maximum, missing handrails, non-compliant landings, and absent wheel guards. Shopping centers with level changes between parking and entrances are particularly vulnerable.
Interior Path Obstructions
Merchandise racks, product displays, boxes, and seasonal displays projecting into accessible circulation paths within tenant spaces and common corridors. Aisles must maintain at least 36 inches clear width.
Van-Accessible and Loading Zones
Missing van-accessible spaces (required at 1 per every 6 accessible spaces), insufficient access aisle widths (8-foot minimum for van spaces), and non-existent passenger loading zones. Properties must provide van-accessible spaces at a one-in-six ratio.
Inaccessible Restroom Doors/Routes
Common area and tenant restroom entry doors with non-compliant thresholds, knob-style hardware (instead of levers), insufficient maneuvering clearance, and doors requiring more than 5 pounds of force. CCDA noted a strong upward trend in restroom violations, with 4 of positions 11–15 in the restroom category.
3,252 cases — #1 state nationally, ~37% of all U.S. filings
Federal ADA Title III filings in California (2025)
8,667 cases — 3x the 2,722 filed in 2013
National federal ADA Title III filings (2025)
88% of all CA ADA complaints filed in state court, up from 27% in 2022
State vs. federal ADA filing shift in California (2024)
1,775 submissions — 41.1% of all CCDA-reported filings
Top law firm filing volume (Manning Law, APC — 2024)
2,598 federal ADA Title III cases in California — single most prolific ADA filing entity nationally
Top plaintiff firm volume (So Cal Equal Access Group — 2024)
Only 42 requested CASp inspection; 34 requested early evaluation — 99% did not use available protections
CASp protections used by defendants (2024)
A CASp inspection provides Qualified Defendant status under Cal. Civ. Code §55.51, reducing minimum statutory damages by 75% from $4,000 to $1,000 per occasion under the Unruh Act, granting an automatic 90-day court stay upon application, and triggering a mandatory early evaluation conference before a Superior Court judge. Small businesses with 50 or fewer employees receive an additional 120-day grace period with complete statutory damage protection if actively remediating identified violations. In 2024, only 42 defendants out of thousands of cases requested CASp inspection protections — meaning 99% of sued businesses failed to use this available defense.
Who Needs Accessible Shopping Centers in Los Feliz
Los Feliz's 10.8% disability rate and 13.4% senior population create high demand for accessible shopping centers.
10.8%
Residents with Disabilities
13.4%
Residents 65+
73,065
Veterans
These populations rely on accessible commercial properties in their community.
Building Department & Permit Requirements
Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS) in Los Feliz oversees ADA compliance for 77 shopping centers — 2025 California Building Standards Code (effective January 1, 2026).
Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety (LADBS)
City of Los Angeles jurisdiction — Los Feliz is a neighborhood within the City of LA, not a separate incorporated city. All building, planning, and code enforcement falls under LADBS.
| Current building code | 2025 California Building Standards Code (effective January 1, 2026) |
| Path-of-travel valuation threshold (2026) | $209,208 — CBC Section 11B-202.4; alterations at or below this trigger 20% cost cap; alterations exceeding it require full path-of-travel compliance |
Local Programs & Resources
5 local programs
Willits v. City of Los Angeles Sidewalk Settlement
Largest disability access class action settlement in U.S. history — $1.37 billion over 30 years (approved August 2016) for curb ramp installation, sidewalk repair, cross-slope corrections, and obstruction removal citywide. Current obligation: minimum $35.7 million/year. Los Feliz residents and visitors can file access requests for sidewalk and curb ramp repairs through the Bureau of Engineering.
Safe Sidewalks LA / Access Request Program
A 30-year, $1.4 billion program to repair sidewalks and improve pedestrian accessibility across Los Angeles. The Access Request Program allows persons with mobility disabilities to request barrier removal in the public right-of-way via MyLA311. Completes approximately 300 of 1,000 annual requests.
License #991
State-Certified Accessibility Specialist
Built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center
MS Structural Engineering · Tutor Perini
Qualified Defendant Status
Reduces statutory damages 75% with 90-day litigation stay
What a CASp Inspector Evaluates: Shopping Center
Key CBC 11B and ADA Standards requirements checked during a CASp inspection
ADA Compliance Costs: Shopping Center in Los Feliz
Understanding remediation investment and litigation risk
Remediation Investment
Cost of Inaction
6–10 hours on-site
Based on Los Feliz data
Factors That Affect Your Remediation Cost
- •Total leasable square footage
- •Number of tenant spaces
- •Common area extent (food court, restrooms)
- •Parking structure size and levels
- •Age and renovation history
Estimates based on industry data and typical remediation projects in California. Actual costs vary based on property condition, scope of barriers identified, and local contractor rates. A CASp inspection report will identify specific barriers and prioritize remediation.
Los Feliz Shopping Center Compliance Landscape
Local enforcement data combined with shopping center ADA requirements
Los Feliz shopping center properties face a extreme litigation risk environment, with 22.0 ADA filings per 1,000 commercial properties. Typical settlements for shopping center violations in this market range from $10K to $500K. Of the 77 shopping center properties in Los Feliz, 93.5% were built before 1990 and are subject to heightened compliance scrutiny. Shopping centers—malls, strip malls, retail plazas, and outlet centers—represent one of the highest-risk property categories for ADA litigation in California. Retail centers with public-facing tenants are "most at risk for ADA-related lawsuits". The multi-tenant structure of shopping centers creates compounded exposure: compliance must be coordinated across landlord-controlled common areas (parking, walkways, restrooms, directories) and individual tenant spaces simultaneously. When any single tenant triggers a remodel, the 20% path-of-travel upgrade rule can cascade obligations across the property. The landlord bears primary liability for common areas under *Botosan v. Paul McNally Realty* (9th Cir. 2000), yet both landlord and tenant are jointly and severally liable under 28 C.F.R. § 36.201—meaning a plaintiff can name the property owner, management company, and every tenant in one suit.
Jose Rubio
Certified Access Specialist
CASp #991Jose Rubio brings over 15 years of structural engineering and construction experience to every CASp inspection. He built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center with Tutor Perini and holds an MS in Structural Engineering.
View full credentials →Frequently Asked Questions
Protect Your Los Feliz Shopping Center
Schedule a CASp inspection and activate Qualified Defendant status under California Civil Code §55.56.