Marvelous magnitude

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A pedestrian strolls through the bamboo forest in the Japanese Garden on the grounds of the Huntington Library in San Marino, Calif. (MCT News Service)
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PASADENA, Calif. – It’s 1922, and nothing much is up in Pasadena. Not among the orange groves, not along the leafy streets. Just as the little old ladies like it.

But wait. Down in the Arroyo Seco, a crew has just started erecting some kind of stadium. On Pepper Street, Mallie Robinson’s 3-year-old son may already be showing signs of amazing athleticism. Over at Polytechnic School, a tall 10-year-old named Julia McWilliams is developing the taste and aplomb that will make her America’s best-known chef.

That’s right, the Rose Bowl, Jackie Robinson and Julia Child came up in supposedly sleepy Pasadena around the same time, and 90 years later, this remains a useful reminder: This western edge of the San Gabriel Valley and the area near it can fool you. Beyond the stillness at the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens, behind all those handsome old Craftsman facades, there’s no telling what the restless minds and bodies of this valley will come up with next. Earthquake measures. Exploding dumplings.

Begin your explorations with these 10 micro-itineraries for Pasadena and its environs.

This is the 11th installment in our yearlong series of Southern California Close-Ups (the others are at latimes.com/socalcloseups). We will wind up the year with a look at Hollywood.

Greene and greenery

To see why the Arroyo Seco is so central to the Pasadena state of mind, join the early-morning dog-walkers for some vigorous striding along South Arroyo Boulevard near Arbor Street, where grand, old trees tower above grand, old houses. On your way in and out, look up at the stylish old U.S. courthouse (125 S. Grand Ave.) and imagine when it was the Vista del Arroyo Hotel or, before that, Emma Bangs’ boardinghouse. You won’t be able to miss the 1912-13 Colorado Street Bridge, better known among locals as “Suicide Bridge” for reasons you can imagine. Now, for a closer look at Craftsman style – woodsy buildings, art glass, plenty of tile and bricks but no Victorian fussiness – step into the iconic Gamble House (4 Westmoreland Place), designed by Charles and Henry Greene in 1908. It opens for tours four days a week and has a great bookshop in the garage. From nearby sidewalks, you can also see the 1901 Charles Sumner Greene House (368 Arroyo Terrace); the 1906 Cole House (2 Westmoreland Place); the 1909 Hindry House (781 Prospect Blvd.); and Frank Lloyd Wright’s 1923 La Miniatura, which looks like a Mayan jungle temple (645 Prospect Crescent).

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