The Streets Are Named After Flowers. That's Your First Clue.
Myrtle, Flower, Fern, Heliotrope — the naming convention dates to the 1920s, when developers carved Floral Park out of citrus groves and marketed it as an upscale retreat from downtown Santa Ana's commercial energy. A hundred years later, it still feels like a retreat.
What Makes It IYKYK
Most people who've driven through Santa Ana have rarely been to Floral Park. It sits roughly a mile north of downtown Santa Ana — easy to miss, impossible to forget once you've found it. The neighborhood runs between Broadway (east), Flower Street (west), 17th Street (south), and Santiago Creek/Riverside Drive (north): over 600 vintage homes across a sprawling district of extraordinary residential architecture that Orange County largely doesn't know exists.
The homes are 1920s and 1930s craftsman bungalows, Spanish colonials, Tudor revivals, and Monterey colonials in near-original condition. Many have rarely been cosmetically flipped — which is precisely their power. Wide front porches, original wood windows, mature oak and magnolia trees that have spent a century growing into canopies over the streets.
The Street to Start On
Begin on Myrtle Drive and work north. The block between 17th and 20th streets is the sweet spot — dense with landmark homes, quiet enough on a weekend morning that you'll hear birds. The Floral Park Neighborhood Association runs an annual home tour each spring that lets you see inside several of the most significant properties; it sells out within days of opening.
After the Walk
Floral Park sits about 1.3 miles from Downtown Santa Ana's 4th Street arts corridor — one of the most genuinely creative retail and restaurant strips in OC. Stop into Hidden House Coffee, browse the independent shops, and make a full afternoon of it. (Chapter One nearby is a great cocktail stop for the evening — it's a gastropub, not a coffee house.) The contrast between the old residential quiet of Floral Park and the buzzy arts district energy on 4th is exactly what makes this pocket of Santa Ana worth the detour.
The Bottom Line
Floral Park is the kind of neighborhood that makes you wonder why you've been spending so much time in Newport Beach. It's beautiful, it's historic, and almost nobody outside Santa Ana has heard of it. That's the whole point.
Ethan Hauptli is a California-licensed REALTOR® (CA DRE #02191280) at Real Broker (CA DRE #02022092). This article is editorial content published by Venture: Orange County and is not a solicitation for the purchase or sale of any specific property. Information is general and does not constitute real estate, legal, financial, or tax advice. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions.
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