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Dear DnA friends,
I hope you are doing okay, despite the loss of our favorite, bat-biting ‘Prince of Darkness’ and family man Ozzy Osbourne.
Indeed, there is so much about the world these days that feels off-kilter; it is nice to witness something that feels like the stars have aligned — such as connecting people who lost their homes to fire to craftsman houses pending demolition in other parts of town.
A few weeks after the Eaton and Palisades fires, I got a call from Morgan Sykes Jaybush, Creative Director at Omgivning, an architecture firm that has retrofitted hundreds of historic highrises. He is also a board member at Santa Monica Conservancy, which tracks demolition permits.
On seeing the list earlier this year, he had a Eureka moment. Why not save residential treasures due for the landfill and give them to homeowners as replacement homes in Altadena and the Palisades? He was calling around to test the idea on people.
Jacques Laramie, Gwen Sukeena, and Morgan Sykes Jaybush at the house on St. George Street. Photo by Gary Leonard
My immediate reaction was, "That's brilliant, Morgan." It's so glaringly obvious, simple, and kills several birds with one stone.
Besides, LA has a history of house-relocations, especially during massive upheavals like the construction of the freeways and demolition of Bunker Hill. Back then, Angelenos would transport an entire home on a truck and, like turtles plodding around with their homes on their backs, go park themselves and their house on a new site in another neighborhood.
However, Morgan's concept also raised plenty of logistical questions. Would such houses meet today's building codes? Could old wood structures replace homes in high fire risk zones? How would they be moved when roads today are jammed with utility lines, overpasses, and other encumbrances? What would the process cost homeowners, and would it wind up more affordable than new build options? How would he find the existing homeowners anxious to demolish their properties, and persuade them to agree to participate, etc., etc.?
It turned out Morgan was on the case, researching all of this. Plus, he was networking with a slew of preservation-minded individuals, and organizations that were thinking along the same lines or wound up being collaborators in the process — including Los Angeles Conservancy, Before the 101, Esotouric, preservationist Brad Chambers, interior designer Gwen Sukeena and hobbyist carpenter Jacques Laramee, artist Evan Chambers and educator Caitlin Chambers, Dinuba House Movers, Nous Engineering, City of Los Angeles Council District 13, and the County of Los Angeles.
Photo by Gwen Sukeena.
Now Morgan's stroke of inspiration has become reality. Earlier this month, I got to meet up with him, Brad Chambers, and Gwen Sukeena and Jacques Laramee, a couple who lost their home in the Eaton Fire, at the site of a craftsman house on St. George Street in Los Feliz that is being transported — in sections — to their property in Altadena. After their huge loss, they were hopeful, having found, said Gwen, "a match made in heaven."
“Reduce, reuse, recycle," she added, pointing to a tattoo of the recycling symbol on Jacques' wrist. "We know that this house is not going to be stuck in some landfill, and we're actually creating a new life for this house, and a new home.”
Read or listen to the full story on KCRW, here.
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