[1][circular reference] La Lucila borders the locality of Martínez to the north (Paraná Street, which is also the boundary of the partido), and the neighborhood of Olivos to the west (Avenida Maipú) and to the south (Roma Street), and the Río de la Plata to the east.
During the first English invasion, a military battery was set up at Punta de los Olivos to protect the coast, in what is now La Lucila.
One of the first residences was the luxurious mansion called "La Lucila," owned by Lieutenant Colonel Alfredo F. de Urquiza.
In 1931, the first bus line was inaugurated, and two years later, on November 10, 1933, the station was built on land donated by Alfredo F. de Urquiza.
After the economic crisis of the 1930s, the maintenance costs of the La Lucila residence became excessive, and the heirs could not reach an agreement to maintain it.
On March 1, 1934, a group of neighbors founded the La Lucila Improvement Society, and on February 28, 1943, they settled at Tucumán 3339, where it currently operates.