Torry Pines
Designed in a remarkably authentic Arts and Crafts style, and patterned
after some of Greene and Greene’s historic Pasadena houses, the Lodge at
Torrey Pines shows a respect for history that’s rare on the
prefabricated Southern California coastline. And all the more impressive
is the fact that despite the century-old look, it’s brand new; this
hotel was completed in 2002, and hewed strictly to traditional tongue
and groove methods of craftsmanship, as well as modern building
regulations.Long before Europeans arrived, the Torrey Pines area was home to the
Kumeyaay. Their lands extended from the Pacific Ocean south to what is
now Ensenada, Mexico, east to the sand dunes of the Colorado River in
the Imperial Valley, and north through the Warner Springs Valley, to
what is now Oceanside and Highway 78. These lands were linked together
by vast trading networks.
Living in bands of extended families, the Kumeyaay traveled the coast, mountains, and desert foothills. They spoke several dialects - the "Ipai" here in the north, and the "Tipai" in the south.
Living in bands of extended families, the Kumeyaay traveled the coast, mountains, and desert foothills. They spoke several dialects - the "Ipai" here in the north, and the "Tipai" in the south.
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