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Paradise Cove Beach Cafe
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RestaurantsEvent VenuesTakeout & DeliveryWedding Venues
About Us
So the saying goes…”what comes around goes around”. Some thirty odd years ago our family owned Paradise Cove. My dad, Papa Joe, assembled about seventy acres, paying from $3,500 to $25,000 an acre. He first bought 30 acres adjoining the Cove from Fred Roberts and subsequently bought the adjoining 40 acres from Bill Swanson assembling the Cove in the configuration that it is today.
During our time here through the late 50’s and early 60’s, Malibu was a kickback beach community. A time for Beach Blanket Bingo, Gidget and the television shows Sea Hunt and Malibu Run all of which were filmed at the Cove. In those days the Cove was a truly fishy place, we had hundreds of fishermen here every day; launching or renting boats, fishing from one of the live bait boats or from the barge moored out in front. My brother and I really had “fun in the sun” in those days and then Papa Joe did a dirty trick and sold Paradise Cove to the Kissel family. Our hearts broken, this forced my brother and I to go out and get real jobs. My brother, Bryant, went on to build destination waterfront villages: Fisherman’s Village in Marina del Rey, Shoreline Village in Long Beach and Seaport Village in San Diego. I went on to build a number of restaurants in the area – Gladstone’s Malibu, The Jetty, RJ’s the Rib Joint, Malibu Sea Lion, Gladstone’s Universal Citywalk and a few others, some of which I’d rather not remember their names.
In October 1996 a wonderful thing happened to us when our son, Timothy, was born. It was then that I decided it was time to raise him in the type of environment that I was rVideo Media
Highlights
- Beach Hours are from 10A.M. to Sunset Daily Terrace 1 is located closest to the Cafe, Terrace 2 next to that and Terrac
- Terraces include: A Sofa, Double Beach Bed, Chairs, a Cooler with 40 pounds of Ice, and a table with linens. Additional
Images
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BUSINESS OWNERS: STATE REQUIRES EMPLOYERS TO PROVIDE EMPLOYEES WITH MEDICAL GRADE MASKS, AND YOU CAN ACQUIRE THEM AT NO OR LOW COST
The LA County Department of Public Health (LADPH) updated its Health Officer Order on March 22, 2022 to lift mask requirements in most venues outside of health facilities. Employers still need to follow OSHA guidelines and offer well fitting medical grade N95, or KN95, KF94 or respirators to employees who work indoors and have contact with other workers, customers or members of the public.
FREE PPE packages, including N95 masks, are available through PPE Unite at http://www.ppeunite.org or by calling (747)224-7742. The City of Los Angeles also has low-cost N95 masks available for purchase at http://www.lovla.org.
Also, employers are required to report any cluster of worksite COVID-19 cases. A cluster is when three (3) or more laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 are known or reported at the worksite within a 14-day period. Reports to LAC DPH should be made as soon as possible and no later than 48 hours after reports or knowledge of at least three cases. Report to LAC DPH online or by phone: 1-888-397-3993.
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