Family-Friendly Amenities and Parks in Northridge — A Complete Guide

by Roman & Liana Shersher

Family-Friendly Amenities and Parks in Northridge — A Complete Guide

Northridge 91324 and 91325 are built for families — and have been since the 1950s suburban expansion that created the neighborhood's residential grid. The parks, recreation facilities, youth sports infrastructure, library resources, and community programming that serve Northridge's family households represent one of the most complete and most accessible family amenity packages available in the central San Fernando Valley — not because any single facility is extraordinary in the way Woodland Hills's Topanga State Park adjacency is extraordinary, but because the combination of proximity, accessibility, and community investment produces a daily quality of life for families that the neighborhood's modest price-to-value ratio doesn't fully reflect.

At the center of the Northridge family amenity picture is a community asset that most residential neighborhoods at any price point don't have: California State University, Northridge (CSUN). The university's 356-acre campus — directly adjacent to the residential streets of 91324 — provides performing arts venues, sports facilities, recreational trails, botanical gardens, and educational programming that Northridge families access as a de facto community resource. The Soraya (CSUN's performing arts center), the CSUN Matadome, Jacaranda Hall botanical collections, and the campus trail system function as neighborhood amenities for Northridge residents in a way that is genuinely unusual and genuinely underappreciated in the market discussion of what Northridge delivers.

This guide maps every significant family amenity in Northridge 91324 and 91325 — parks, recreation centers, CSUN resources, youth sports infrastructure, libraries, and community programming — with the specific access, cost, age-appropriateness, and scheduling information that makes the difference between knowing these resources exist and actually building them into the family's weekly routine.

1. 🌳 Northridge Parks — The Neighborhood's Outdoor Family Infrastructure

Northridge 91324 and 91325 are served by a network of neighborhood parks ranging from the major community park complex to smaller neighborhood gathering spaces — all within short driving distance of virtually every Northridge residential address.

 Northridge Park 91324 — the neighborhood's primary community park, home to youth sports leagues, the Northridge Community Center, and the outdoor recreational infrastructure that serves as the weekly gathering point for Northridge's family households. On Saturday mornings during the soccer season, the park functions as the social center of the neighborhood's family community.

🌳 Northridge Park (91324) — The Central Community Park:

Northridge Park is the largest and most comprehensively equipped park in the Northridge 91324 service area — the destination park that families across both zip codes use for organized sports, informal recreation, and community events.

  • → 📐 Facilities: Multiple lighted sports fields (soccer, baseball/softball, football), full playground complex with age-appropriate equipment for toddlers through elementary age, basketball courts, picnic areas with shade structures, restrooms, and parking
  • → 🏢 Northridge Community Center: On-site community center providing classroom and meeting spaces for structured youth programming, organized recreation, and community events
  • → ⚽ Youth sports: Primary venue for multiple Northridge area youth sports leagues — Saturday morning soccer, Little League baseball, and youth football all use the park's field complex throughout the seasonal calendar
  • → 👨‍👩‍👧 Family use: The park's combination of lighted sports infrastructure, playground areas, picnic spaces, and on-site community center makes it the specific Northridge venue where family life intersects with community life at the highest frequency
  • → ⏰ Hours: Open daily — specific facility hours vary seasonally; lighted field use extends to 9–10 PM on scheduled league evenings
  • → 💰 Cost: Free park access; facility rentals and structured programming through LA Recreation and Parks fee schedule

🌳 Devonshire Downs (91324):

Adjacent to the CSUN campus boundary, Devonshire Downs provides open space and informal recreational use adjacent to the university's southern edge.

  • → 📐 Character: Open turf areas, walking paths, and informal recreational space — more casual in character than the structured sports infrastructure of Northridge Park
  • → ✅ Best for: Informal family outdoor use, dog walking, casual picnic, and as a connector to the CSUN campus walking circuits from southern 91324 residential streets

🌳 Lassen Park (91324):

Northridge neighborhood park serving the northeastern 91324 sub-neighborhoods.

  • → 📐 Facilities: Playground, basketball court, open turf, picnic areas
  • → ✅ Best for: Immediate neighborhood use — families with young children in adjacent residential streets who want accessible park infrastructure without the larger-event character of Northridge Park on youth sports weekends

🌳 Reseda Park (91335 — accessible from 91324/91325 border):

While technically in Reseda 91335, Reseda Park is within easy driving distance of eastern Northridge 91325 addresses and provides additional sports field and aquatic infrastructure that supplements Northridge's park network.

  • → 📐 Facilities: Sports fields, recreation center, aquatics (pool), and the specific regional park infrastructure that serves the entire central Valley family community
  • → ✅ Best for: Northridge families seeking additional pool access and sports facility variety beyond what the immediate 91324/91325 park network provides

2. 🏛️ CSUN Campus Resources — Northridge's Unexpected Community Amenity

California State University Northridge's 356-acre campus is the community resource that most consistently exceeds the expectations of families who move to Northridge from other SFV neighborhoods — and the one most consistently mentioned by long-term 91324 residents when describing what they value most about the neighborhood that a simple amenity count wouldn't reveal.

🎭 The Soraya (Valley Performing Arts Center):

The Soraya is the central San Fernando Valley's premier performing arts venue — a 1,700-seat concert hall on the CSUN campus that presents world-class performances in classical music, jazz, world music, dance, and theatrical productions at prices significantly below comparable Westside performing arts venues.

  • → 🎵 Programming: Full subscription season — Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra residency, international touring artists, family performance series, dance companies, and theatrical productions spanning every genre
  • → 👶 Family programming: The Soraya's family series specifically presents productions calibrated for children and families — age-appropriate concerts, interactive music education events, and performances designed to introduce young audiences to the performing arts
  • → 💰 Ticket prices: Significantly more accessible than comparable Westside venues — family series tickets frequently range from $15–$45, making live performing arts accessible to Northridge families at a price point that West Hollywood or Beverly Hills venues don't approach
  • → 📍 Proximity: On the CSUN campus, directly accessible from most 91324 residential streets in 5–12 minutes by car
  • → ✅ The Northridge family advantage: Access to a world-class performing arts venue within minutes of home at accessible prices is a community benefit that few residential neighborhoods at any SFV price point replicate

🌸 CSUN Botanical Gardens (Jacaranda Hall area):

The CSUN campus contains notable botanical collections — mature specimen trees, drought-tolerant native plantings, and the specific jacaranda canopy that produces the campus's signature spring bloom.

  • → 🌺 Spring bloom season (April–May): The CSUN jacaranda canopy produces one of the San Fernando Valley's most photographed seasonal displays — accessible to the Northridge community as a free, walkable spring destination
  • → 🌿 Year-round: The campus grounds provide a consistently beautiful walking environment — the mature trees, organized plantings, and well-maintained landscape of a 356-acre university campus accessible as a walking destination for adjacent 91324 residents
  • → ✅ Best family use: Weekend morning campus walks, the spring jacaranda display, and the specific campus landscape that gives the CSUN-adjacent sub-neighborhoods of 91324 a park-like character that the standard residential street grid doesn't produce

🏃 CSUN Campus Walking and Running Circuits:

The CSUN campus perimeter and interior pathways provide a multi-mile walking and running circuit that is accessible from the residential streets adjacent to the campus.

  • → 📐 Distance: A full campus perimeter circuit is approximately 2.5–3.5 miles — a complete morning run or family walk without requiring a car trip to a trailhead
  • → ✅ Best use: Daily walkers and runners from the adjacent 91324 residential sub-neighborhoods who use the campus as a safe, traffic-reduced, aesthetically pleasing running environment
  • → 💰 Cost: Free for campus perimeter use; campus interior access during regular university hours

🏀 CSUN Matadome and Athletic Events:

CSUN's Division I athletics program hosts basketball, volleyball, soccer, swimming, and other sporting events at the on-campus venues throughout the academic year.

  • → 💰 Ticket prices: CSUN athletics tickets are significantly more accessible than professional sports — $5–$20 for most regular season events — providing live sports event experiences for Northridge families at family-budget prices
  • → 👶 Family experience: The CSUN sports event environment — energetic, community-oriented, and free of the commercial density of professional sports venues — provides a genuine live sports experience calibrated to the family audience
  • → ✅ Best for: Introducing children to live sports events, supporting the neighborhood's university athletic community, and accessing the specific energy of collegiate sports at accessible prices

3. 🏊 Recreation Centers and Structured Programming

Beyond the park network and CSUN resources, Northridge's family infrastructure includes City of Los Angeles-operated recreation centers providing structured youth programming, pool access, gymnasium facilities, and organized leagues throughout the year.

Northridge Recreation Center — the City of Los Angeles's primary structured family recreation facility in the Northridge 91324 service area, providing pool access, gymnasium, organized youth sports leagues, after-school programming, and the full spectrum of structured recreation that the park network's informal outdoor infrastructure complements.

🏊 Northridge Recreation Center:

  • → 📐 Facilities: Swimming pool (seasonal outdoor, year-round for structured programming), gymnasium, multi-purpose rooms for youth programming, outdoor courts
  • → 💧 Aquatics: The recreation center's pool provides learn-to-swim programming for toddlers through adults — the structured swimming instruction that Northridge families with young children specifically seek and that private lessons at comparable quality cost significantly more to access
  • → ⚽ Youth sports leagues: City of Los Angeles youth sports leagues administered through the recreation center — basketball, volleyball, and flag football leagues for various age groups throughout the annual calendar
  • → 📚 After-school programming: Youth enrichment programming available after school hours — the structured after-school environment that working parents in Northridge's dual-income household profile specifically value
  • → 💰 Cost: Los Angeles Recreation and Parks fee structure — significantly subsidized rates for City of Los Angeles residents; verify current programming and fees at laparks.org
  • → ⏰ Registration: Youth program registration typically opens at the beginning of each seasonal session — the specific registration timing that Northridge families learn to track to ensure access to popular programs

🏋️ CSUN Student Recreation Center (limited community access):

CSUN's Student Recreation Center — a full-service university fitness facility — offers limited community membership options for Northridge residents adjacent to the campus.

  • → 📐 Facilities: Full fitness center, group fitness studios, rock climbing wall, indoor aquatics, and the comprehensive university recreation facility infrastructure
  • → 💰 Community access: Verify current community membership availability and pricing through the CSUN Student Recreation Center — community access policies vary and should be confirmed directly
  • → ✅ Best for: Northridge adults who want university-quality fitness facility access at community membership rates as an alternative to commercial fitness club pricing

4. 📚 Libraries, Learning Resources, and Cultural Amenities

Northridge's family infrastructure extends beyond outdoor recreation into the specific educational and cultural amenities that define quality of life for families with school-age children.

📚 Northridge Branch Library (Los Angeles Public Library):

The Northridge Branch Library is among the most actively programmed branches in the LAPL San Fernando Valley cluster — serving the neighborhood's family and student population with a programming calendar that includes children's literacy, family story time, STEM workshops, summer reading challenge, and teen programming.

  • → 👶 Children's programs: Weekly story time for toddlers and preschoolers — the consistent drop-in programming that provides structured literacy engagement for pre-kindergarten children in a free, community-accessible setting
  • → 📖 Summer reading program: The LAPL Summer Reading Challenge — available at the Northridge branch — provides the structured summer reading engagement that families with elementary-age children specifically use to prevent summer learning loss
  • → 💻 Digital resources and STEM: Computer access, digital literacy programming, and STEM workshops that supplement the school curriculum and provide resource access for Northridge households
  • → 🎓 CSUN adjacency benefit: The Northridge library's proximity to CSUN creates a specific community-university resource relationship — CSUN's library resources and community research access supplement the LAPL branch's holdings for Northridge families engaged in educational projects
  • → 💰 Cost: Free with Los Angeles Public Library card
  • → ⏰ Hours: Verify current hours at lapl.org — branch hours are subject to the LAPL system's budget and staffing schedule

🎭 Northridge Cultural Amenities:

  • → 🎵 The Soraya (CSUN) — described in Section 2 — the central Valley's premier performing arts venue
  • → 🏛️ CSUN Art Galleries: The CSUN campus hosts art galleries and exhibitions that are open to the community — providing Northridge families with accessible fine arts exposure without the Westside museum trip
  • → 🎬 CSUN Planetarium: The CSUN Planetarium offers public shows and educational programming for school-age children and families — verify current programming schedule through the CSUN Department of Physics and Astronomy

5. ⚽ Youth Sports and Community Programming — Northridge's Family Social Infrastructure

Youth sports are the primary vehicle through which Northridge's family community cohesion is built and maintained — and the neighborhood's organized youth sports infrastructure is more extensive and more accessible than most comparable-price SFV neighborhoods provide.

Northridge youth soccer — the organized youth sports community that most consistently generates the neighborhood connections and community belonging that long-term Northridge residents describe as the defining quality of the neighborhood. For families with children ages 5–14, the Saturday morning youth sports experience at Northridge Park is where the community's family social fabric is built and maintained.

⚽ AYSO Soccer (American Youth Soccer Organization):

AYSO Region 57 and adjacent regions serve Northridge's youth soccer community — one of the most actively enrolled programs in the central Valley youth sports ecosystem.

  • → 👶 Age range: VIP Soccer (4–5 year olds) through Under-19 — continuous program enrollment from preschool through high school age
  • → 📅 Seasons: Fall season (primary) and spring recreational season
  • → 💰 Registration fees: Typically $120–$180 per player for the full season — the accessible price point that makes organized youth soccer participation broadly accessible to Northridge's working-family household base
  • → 🏟️ Home fields: Northridge Park and adjacent fields throughout the 91324/91325 service area
  • → ✅ Community dimension: AYSO's all-play philosophy — every registered child plays in every game — ensures participation across skill levels and makes the program specifically appropriate for families introducing young children to organized sports for the first time

⚾ Northridge American Little League:

Northridge American Little League serves the 91324/91325 youth baseball and softball community with a full program from Tee Ball through Junior League.

  • → 👶 Age range: Tee Ball (4–6) through Junior League (13–14)
  • → 📅 Season: Spring season (primary) — practice beginning February, games March through June
  • → 🏟️ Home fields: Northridge Park's baseball complex
  • → 💰 Registration: Typically $150–$250 per player including uniform
  • → ✅ For families considering Northridge: The Little League community in 91324/91325 is one of the most established in the central Valley — the specific multi-generation community character that comes from a neighborhood's youth baseball program operating continuously for 40+ years

🏀 Youth Basketball:

  • → City of Los Angeles youth basketball leagues through the Northridge Recreation Center provide structured basketball programming for elementary and middle school age groups
  • → CSUN campus hosts youth basketball camps and clinics during university break periods — verify current programming through CSUN's youth education programs

🎓 Educational enrichment programs:

  • → CSUN's Saturday Academy and youth enrichment programs provide STEM, arts, and academic enrichment programming for Northridge-area children — verify current offerings through CSUN's outreach and continuing education department
  • → The LAPL Northridge Branch summer reading and STEM programming provides year-round educational enrichment access

🚫 What NOT to Overdo

Don't evaluate Northridge's family amenity picture solely by individual facility quality compared to premium western Valley alternatives. A single Northridge park doesn't match the scale of Calabasas's Las Virgenes Open Space or Woodland Hills's Topanga State Park adjacency. But the complete Northridge family amenity picture — the park network, the CSUN resources, the youth sports infrastructure, the library programming, and the specific community cohesion that the neighborhood's organized family activity produces — creates a daily quality of life that the facility-by-facility comparison undersells. Families who move to Northridge from premium western Valley markets consistently report that the community accessibility of everything they need — within 5–15 minutes, mostly free or low-cost — produces a daily quality of life that the premium amenities available at a longer drive and higher cost don't improve on in the ways that matter most.

Don't overlook CSUN as a community resource rather than a student resource. The Soraya's performing arts programming, the campus botanical walk in jacaranda season, the CSUN athletic events at $5–$20 tickets, and the campus running circuit are all accessible to Northridge residents without any university affiliation. Families who move to Northridge and discover the CSUN community resource consistently describe it as the most pleasant surprise of the neighborhood — the resource that doesn't appear in the standard neighborhood amenity checklist but that they use more frequently than any single park or facility.

Don't assume AYSO and Little League registration is automatically available. Popular youth sports programs in Northridge — particularly AYSO soccer and Little League — have registration windows that open and close on specific dates and that reach capacity in the most popular age divisions. Families who plan their Northridge purchase with youth sports enrollment as a priority should research registration timing for their children's age divisions and plan accordingly — the registration window for fall AYSO soccer typically opens in spring.

Don't underestimate the impact of the Northridge community's working-family character on family quality of life. Northridge's family community is not the entertainment-industry social fabric of Studio City, the affluent-professional community of Encino, or the aspirational premium community of Calabasas. It is a working-family community of teachers, healthcare professionals, CSUN faculty and staff, and the central Valley professional base — a specific community character that produces the neighborhood connections, the youth sports community, and the school-and-park social fabric that many families find more genuinely welcoming and more practically supportive than premium market alternatives.

🏠 Real-World Scenario — Northridge 91324

A couple — a CSUN faculty member in the Engineering department and a registered nurse at Northridge Hospital Medical Center 91325 — purchased their first home in Northridge 91324 with two children ages 4 and 7. They had specifically evaluated the neighborhood for the CSUN proximity (eliminating the faculty member's commute) and the Northridge Hospital proximity (reducing the nurse's commute from 35 minutes in their prior Reseda 91335 rental to 8 minutes).

Their family amenity discovery process over the first year was a systematic expansion of what they realized was available within their neighborhood:

Month 1: Enrolled the 4-year-old in AYSO VIP Soccer at Northridge Park — the Saturdays immediately producing the parent community connection that first-home purchases in new neighborhoods often lack. "We knew four families within three Saturdays of soccer."

Month 3: Discovered The Soraya's family performance series — attended a family jazz concert at $18/ticket per person for their first performing arts event as a family. "The 7-year-old was captivated. We've been to four shows in the first year. We couldn't have afforded this frequency at Westside prices."

Month 5: The 7-year-old enrolled in Northridge American Little League for the spring season — the first baseball experience, connecting the family to a second organized sports community at Northridge Park.

Month 7: Began using the CSUN campus walking circuit for the family's weekend morning walk — the faculty member's campus familiarity translating into the family's discovery of the jacaranda walk and the botanical collections.

Month 12 assessment: "We thought we were making a practical choice — close commutes, affordable neighborhood. We didn't expect to feel like we belonged here so quickly. Everything we do as a family happens within 10 minutes of our front door."

🏠 Real-World Scenario — Northridge 91325

A single mother — a high school teacher at a LAUSD school in the central Valley, purchasing her first home in Northridge 91325 — had a specific priority beyond the standard first-time buyer concerns: she wanted a neighborhood where her 9-year-old daughter could have a full, active family life despite their household's single-income budget constraint.

Her primary amenity concerns before purchase: youth sports access, library programs, and summer programming — the specific family infrastructure that determines whether a single-parent working-family household can provide structured enrichment without prohibitive cost.

Pre-purchase research on Northridge's family amenity ecosystem:

  • AYSO registration cost ($140/season) and field location (Northridge Park, 8 minutes from the specific home she was evaluating):
  • LAPL Northridge Branch summer reading program: Free ✓
  • Northridge Recreation Center after-school programming: Available for working parents ✓
  • The Soraya family series ticket prices: $15–$22 for family series events ✓
  • CSUN campus walking trail: Free ✓

Her assessment: "On a teacher's salary with one income, I can give my daughter organized soccer, regular library time, occasional live performances, and a safe walking environment — all within 10 minutes of home and almost entirely free or very low cost. That's not a given in most SFV neighborhoods at any price."

She purchased in Northridge 91325. Her daughter is in her second AYSO season, has completed two LAPL summer reading challenges, and has attended three Soraya family performances in the first two years. The family's annual cost for the full amenity access she specifically researched: approximately $400 in organized sports fees, $80 in library-adjacent costs, and $180 in Soraya tickets — $660/year for a family activity calendar that would cost $3,500–$5,000 in comparable but higher-priced alternatives.

❓ FAQ

What family amenities does Northridge have? Northridge 91324 and 91325 provide a comprehensive family amenity ecosystem: ✓ Parks — Northridge Park (primary community park with sports fields, playground, and community center), Lassen Park, Devonshire Downs, and the CSUN campus open space. ✓ Recreation — Northridge Recreation Center (pool, gymnasium, structured programming) and Reseda Park 91335 nearby. ✓ CSUN resources — The Soraya performing arts center, campus botanical walks, CSUN athletic events, and the campus running circuit. ✓ Youth sports — AYSO soccer, Northridge American Little League, and City of Los Angeles youth leagues. ✓ Library — LAPL Northridge Branch with children's story time, summer reading, and educational programming. ✓ Cultural — The Soraya family performance series and CSUN gallery programming.

Are there good parks in Northridge for kids? Northridge Park in 91324 is the neighborhood's primary family park — multiple sports fields, a full playground complex with age-appropriate equipment for toddlers through elementary age, picnic areas with shade, and the on-site Northridge Community Center. For families specifically seeking playground and young-children-focused facilities, Lassen Park provides a smaller-scale neighborhood gathering space. The CSUN campus grounds provide a beautiful walking environment for families with younger children. For aquatics, the Northridge Recreation Center pool and Reseda Park's pool provide accessible learn-to-swim and family swim programming.

What youth sports leagues are available in Northridge? Northridge 91324/91325 has active youth sports leagues for most major sports: ✓ AYSO Soccer (Region 57 and adjacent) — VIP Soccer through Under-19, fall and spring seasons, home fields at Northridge Park and area fields. ✓ Northridge American Little League — Tee Ball through Junior League, spring season, Northridge Park baseball complex. ✓ City of Los Angeles youth basketball through the Northridge Recreation Center. ✓ Youth flag football and volleyball through City of LA programs. Registration timing varies by program and season — research registration windows before your move if youth sports enrollment is a priority.

What is The Soraya and is it good for families? The Soraya (Valley Performing Arts Center) on the CSUN campus in Northridge is the central San Fernando Valley's premier performing arts venue — a 1,700-seat concert hall presenting classical music, jazz, world music, dance, and theater from international-caliber artists throughout the academic year. The Soraya's family performance series presents programming specifically designed for children and family audiences — interactive concerts, educational performances, and productions that introduce young audiences to the performing arts. Ticket prices for family series events typically range from $15–$22, making live performing arts accessible to Northridge families at prices significantly below comparable Westside venues. The Soraya is one of the most underappreciated community benefits of living in Northridge 91324.

How good is the Northridge library for families? The LAPL Northridge Branch is among the more actively programmed branches in the San Fernando Valley library system — providing weekly story time for toddlers and preschoolers, the LAPL Summer Reading Challenge for elementary-age children, STEM and digital literacy programming, and teen services for middle and high school students. The library is free with any LA Public Library card, and LAPL cards are available at no cost to Los Angeles County residents. The library's proximity to CSUN creates a specific community-university resource relationship that supplements the branch's programming and holdings.

Is Northridge a family-friendly neighborhood? Yes — genuinely so, and in the specific way that matters most for families with children: the combination of affordable home prices that allow single-income and dual-income working families to achieve homeownership, accessible parks and youth sports at low-to-no cost, organized community programming through the CSUN-adjacent resources, and the specific community character of a neighborhood built by and for working families over 70+ years. Northridge's family-friendliness is not the resort-amenity version of family-friendliness that Calabasas or Porter Ranch market as community features — it is the genuine working-family version built from parks, youth sports, libraries, and the CSUN community resource that the neighborhood's specific geography provides.

🎯 Bottom Line

Northridge's family amenity picture is more complete than most buyers and sellers expect — and specifically more complete than the neighborhood's modest price point would suggest. The combination of Northridge Park's sports and playground infrastructure, the Northridge Recreation Center's structured programming, the CSUN campus resources (The Soraya, campus walking, CSUN athletics), the organized youth sports community anchored at Northridge Park, and the LAPL Northridge Branch's family programming creates a daily family quality of life that the facility-by-facility comparison with premium western Valley alternatives consistently undersells.

What Northridge delivers is accessibility — everything the family needs within 5–15 minutes, mostly free or low-cost, embedded in a community of working families who are using the same parks, the same leagues, and the same spaces. The family that moves to Northridge and builds the neighborhood into their weekly routine — Saturday soccer at Northridge Park, Tuesday story time at the library, spring Little League at Northridge Park, occasional evenings at The Soraya — finds a complete family life that most SFV neighborhoods at significantly higher prices don't improve on in the ways that matter to daily lived experience.

At Parkway Estate Properties, Liana's buyer work across Northridge 91324/91325, Sherman Oaks 91403/91423, Granada Hills 91344, Tarzana 91356, and Encino 91316/91436 means every Northridge buyer conversation includes the honest family amenity picture alongside the financial qualification and the home search — because the neighborhood that serves a family's daily life is as important as the home that houses it.

📩 Want to Know How Northridge's Family Amenities Match Your Household's Specific Needs?

Tell us your children's ages, your activity priorities, and your lifestyle requirements — and we'll map the specific Northridge parks, programs, and resources that serve your family before you've scheduled a single showing.

Contact Liana Shersher at Parkway Estate Properties: 📧 liana@parkwayestate.com · 📞 (818) 208-5881 · 🌐 parkwayestate.com 15021 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 510, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403

About the Authors

Liana Shersher is a licensed real estate agent with Parkway Estate Properties Inc. and an Accredited Buyer's Representative (ABR) serving the San Fernando Valley — with a focus on Sherman Oaks, Encino, Tarzana, Woodland Hills, and Northridge (DRE# 02164224). Liana guides first-time homebuyers through every step of the purchase, from the first showing to the keys in hand, and represents move-up and repeat buyers across the Valley. For sellers, she builds the pricing and marketing strategy that positions a home to sell for top dollar, fast. Buyers and sellers work with Liana for clear communication, sharp local knowledge, and an agent who treats their goals like her own.

Roman Shersher is the broker-owner of Parkway Estate Properties Inc. and a real estate investor with 18 years of experience in the San Fernando Valley (DRE# 01855095). Roman has personally led or co-led renovations on dozens of properties across the Valley, including recent projects in Northridge (91324) and Woodland Hills (91364). That hands-on renovation and investment experience shapes every pricing conversation and days-on-market strategy at Parkway — sellers get a realistic read on what improvements actually return at resale, and buyers get an expert eye on a home's true condition and upside.

Parkway Estate Properties, Inc. · 15021 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 510, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403 · (818) 208-5881 · parkwayestate.com · Broker License #: 01873092 Equal Housing Opportunity. Information herein is general and not legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult qualified professionals for your specific situation.

 

Roman & Liana Shersher
Roman & Liana Shersher

Broker | Realtor ® | License ID: 01873092

+1(818) 208-5881 | info@parkwayestate.com

GET MORE INFORMATION

Name
Phone*
Message
};