Draft story

Power of The Arts Unlimited

On Parthenia Street in North Hills, Power of The Arts Unlimited is a family‑owned martial arts school that the public record says opened in 1998 and aims to build confidence, fitness, and leadership for students of all ages.

The Story So Far

On Parthenia Street in North Hills, the address 16201 Parthenia St points toward a community spot that many parents, teens, and adults might pass on the way to errands or school pickup. The public record and the school's own website describe Power of The Arts Unlimited as a family‑owned martial arts training center serving the San Fernando Valley / North Hills community — a place that appears to welcome children and adults across skill levels and abilities.

The website credits Mrs. Sherre Sharma as founder and owner, working with her sons, Oj Prakash Sharma and Jagadev “JD” Prakash Sharma, as instructors. The site frames the school around a mission of developing a "champion spirit" on and off the mat, and it points toward disciplines like taekwondo, hapkido, and grappling as the practical tools for building fitness, focus, and confidence. The public listing also shows a healthy local reputation: the Pang Local profile records a 4.7 rating from 14 reviews, suggesting regulars and neighbors often leave positive impressions.

What This Place Seems To Offer The Neighborhood

Mornings and afternoons here likely belong to families — younger students arriving after school and parents juggling schedules — while evenings may host adults training for fitness or competition. The school's language about leadership, life skills, and setting personal goals suggests a rhythm of structured classes, belt progression, and events where students measure progress against both personal and group standards.

The instructors’ backgrounds, as described on the site, give texture without overreach: Mrs. Sharma brings decades of experience in dance, gymnastics, and martial arts training and carries certifications through Kukkiwon and the International HKD Federation. Her sons are presented as competitive, credentialed coaches with wrestling and grappling experience and higher‑education degrees. Together, the public record suggests a program that balances technique, discipline, and competitive readiness, and the site even mentions a free class for new families as a low‑commitment way to try the training.

A visit could reveal more about the classroom culture, how instructors balance competition and community, and what regulars look for in a local martial arts home. The website points to class schedules and programs but leaves many neighborhood details to be told by people who come through the doors.

Practical Details

Follow-Up Questions

  • How did Mrs. Sharma decide to transition from dance and gymnastics into opening this school, and what was the neighborhood like in 1998 when the site says it opened?
  • Who are the regulars here — kids, teens, working adults — and what keeps them coming back week after week?
  • How do the instructors divide teaching responsibilities, and what does a typical beginner’s path look like from first free class to the next milestone?
  • What community events, competitions, or partnerships in North Hills and the San Fernando Valley matter most to the school?
  • Are there accessibility, pricing, or scholarship options that local families should know about?

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