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Esotouric Presents Saving South Los Angeles Landmarks: Googie, Gill & Governor Gage

About This Webinar

Los Angeles County is vast, with 88 cities contained within its nearly 5000' square mile sprawl. Too often, historic preservation efforts are focused on famous landmarks in dense neighborhoods popular with tourists: Hollywood, Downtown, Pasadena, Silver Lake.

But there is architectural beauty and rich history to be found in every corner of Los Angeles, and it's in the less traveled sections between the freeways where preservationists can both do the most good and be happily surprised by new discoveries.

This provocative Esotouric webinar works its way south down the Alameda Industrial Corridor into Bell Gardens, Santa Fe Springs and Downey, to explore off-the-beaten-path landmarks that have had enormous influence on the cultural life of Southern California and the world beyond.

Turning the predictable notion of a Los Angeles architecture webinar on its head, this virtual excursion goes into areas not traditionally associated with the important, beautiful or significant, raising issues of preservation, adaptive reuse and urban planning. The locations all speak to the power, mutability and reach of Southern California as a creative engine.

Featured sites include:

• The Clarke Estate, Santa Fe Springs (Irving Gill, 1919) - a modernist masterpiece set in 60 acres of bucolic citrus groves, the house was almost immediately rendered uninhabitable by the polluting effects of a nearby oil strike. Long forgotten, it was taken over by the city and transformed into a wedding venue, house museum and community garden, the Clarke Estate is the nearest thing we have to Gill's legendary Dodge House (1916, demolished 1970). Joining us for this segment is Margaret Bach, founding president of the Los Angeles Conservancy, to talk about her work restoring Gill's Horatio West Court Apartment complex (also 1919).

• Harvey’s Broiler, Downey (Paul B. Clayton, 1958) - Harvey’s was a glowing stop on the mid-century South L.A. teenage car cruising circuit, its international influence on fashion, design and pop culture immortalized by Tom Wolfe in his essay “The Hair Boys.” That would be enough to grant Harvey’s a spot in this webinar. But Harvey’s is also a landmark of historic preservation activism. After a section of the beloved drive-in was illegally demolished, the community demanded it be rebuilt exactly as it had been, and held their elected officials accountable to ensure that happened. Today, as Bob’s Big Boy, the rebuilt Harvey's Broiler remains a favorite stop for cruisers, families and preservation people who need a little boost in the throes of a tough campaign. If Harvey’s can come back, so can (fill in the blank).

• Casa de Rancho San Antonio - Henry Gage Mansion, Bell Gardens (c.1840 with additions) - One of the oldest adobes in Los Angeles County, this Bell Gardens landmark was a home for the Lugo family, whose land holdings spread into the city of South Gate, named for their rancho's southern border. Later clad in redwood by California's 20th Governor, Henry Gage, this fascinating courtyard home on the banks of the Rio Hondo River is now entirely surrounded by a mid-century trailer park. We'll share our years-long efforts to make the designated California landmark accessible to the public, and share its fascinating history of cultural and demographic changes, from Spanish land grants to the dust bowl to suburb subdivisions.

Join Esotouric, L.A.'s most eclectic sightseeing tour company, for a time travel trip through the South Los Angeles historic preservation trenches, to discover some fascinating and unexpected landmarks and the colorful characters who made history within them.

This webinar is an illustrated lecture packed with rare photos that will bring the landmarks of South Los Angeles County to life. And you'll find the look of an Esotouric webinar is a little different than your standard dry Zoom session, with lively interactive graphics courtesy of the mmhmm app.

After the presentation, Kim, Richard and Margaret Bach will answer your questions, so get ready to be a part of the show.

Can't join in when the webinar is happening? You'll have access to the full replay for one week. Please note: the 90 minute running time is just an estimate, and we often run long because the stories take on a life of their own. You can always come back and watch the last part of the webinar recording later.

So tune in and discover the incredible history of Los Angeles, with the couple whose passion for the city is infectious.

FYI: Immediately upon registering, you will receive a separate, automated email containing the link to join the webinar. The webinar is reliable on all devices, Mac, PC, iOS and Android.

About Esotouric: As undergraduates at UC Santa Cruz, Kim Cooper and Richard Schave inexplicably hated one other on sight. (Perhaps less inexplicably, their academic advisor believed they were soul mates). A chance meeting 18 years later proved much more agreeable. Richard wooed Kim with high-level library database access, with which she launched the 1947project true crime blog, highlighting a crime a day from the year of The Black Dahlia and Bugsy Siegel slayings. The popular blog’s readers demanded a tour, and then another. The tour was magical, a hothouse inspiring new ways for the by-then-newlyweds to tell the story of Los Angeles. Esotouric was born in 2007 with a calendar packed with true crime, literary, architecture and rock and roll tours. Ever since, it has provided a platform for promoting historic preservation issues (like the Save the 76 Ball campaign and the landmarking of Charles Bukowski’s bungalow), building a community of urban explorers (including dozens of free talks and tours under the umbrella of LAVA) and digging ever deeper into the secret heart of the city they love.

Rights and permissions: By attending an Esotouric webinar, you acknowledge that the entirety of the presentation is copyrighted, and no portion of the video or text may be reproduced in any fashion.

Categories:
ARTS & CULTURE
Who can view: Everyone
Webinar Price: $10.00
Featured Presenters
Webinar hosting presenter Kim Cooper

After his undergraduate studies in art history at UC Santa Cruz, Richard Schave set out to explore the American interior as an itinerant brick mason. His return to his native Los Angeles coincided with a renewed acquaintance with Kim Cooper, a once-detested academic colleague who would become his bride. Together, fusing scholarly research with new digital tools, they launched the 1947project time travel blog, along with In SRO Land, and On Bunker Hill, as well as the Esotouric tour company. With the success of Kim’s True Crime tours, Richard developed a series of Literary and California Culture excursions. Richard is a dedicated preservationist, and the host of the LAVA Sunday Salon and the LAVA Literary Salon series, named Best L.A. Literary Salon by Los Angeles Magazine. He also curates an ongoing series of forensic science programs at Cal State Los Angeles. Richard is also a reader at the Huntington Library.

Webinar hosting presenter

Kim Cooper (“one of L.A.’s brightest torchbearers” – Electric Literature) is the creator of 1947project, the crime-a-day time travel blog that spawned Esotouric’s popular crime bus tours, including Pasadena Confidential, the Real Black Dahlia and Weird West Adams. She is the author of The Kept Girl, the acclaimed historical mystery starring the young Raymond Chandler and the real-life Philip Marlowe, and of The Raymond Chandler Map of Los Angeles. Her collaborative L.A. history blogs include On Bunker Hill and In SRO Land. With husband Richard Schave, Kim curates the Salons of LAVA – The Los Angeles Visionaries Association. When the third generation Angeleno isn’t combing old newspapers for forgotten scandals, she is a passionate advocate for historic preservation of signage, vernacular architecture and writer’s homes. Kim was for many years the editrix of Scram, a journal of unpopular culture. Her books include Fall in Love For Life, Bubblegum Music is the Naked Truth, Lost in the Grooves and an oral history of Neutral Milk Hotel.

Webinar hosting presenter
Founding Director of the Los Angeles Conservancy
Documentary filmmaker, historic preservationist, writer, interior designer: Margaret Bach wove her interest in film, history, architecture, and the built environment into the pattern of her life work. In the 1970’s she worked on the restoration and historic designation of the Horatio West Court, made the documentary film, Landscape With Angels, received her MFA from UCLA, worked at KCET on the LA History Film Series, and worked at LACMA producing a film series showing how movies have portrayed Los Angeles.

When the City of Los Angeles planned to sell the Bertram Goodhue- designed Los Angeles Central Library, Margaret worked on the LA AIA report, “The Light of Learning,” a history and defense of the Library. Out of the effort to save the Library, the Los Angeles Conservancy was founded. Margaret was both a founding member and, in 1978, its first president.
Webinar hosting presenter
Born in Hollywood, Steve Luftman gained a lifelong appreciation for art and architecture in the mid-century cultural institutions of Los Angeles: at five he opened a savings account at Lytton Savings on the Sunset Strip, he took art classes at the then brand-new William Pereira-designed L.A. County Art Museum, took in movies at the Cinerama Dome, and with his mother and sister experienced L.A. Philharmonic rehearsals at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. After graduating from the Craig Ellwood/James Tyler-designed campus of Art Center College of Design, he moved to New York City to work in advertising.

Returning to Los Angeles in 1997, Steve used the seminal Gebhard & Winter's "An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles" in his search to find the perfect apartment. With some luck, Steve and his partner Karen found themselves in what would become the Mendel and Mabel Meyer Courtyard Apartments---LA Historical-Cultural Monument 1096. While always a preservationist and a social activist at heart, it wasn't until his beloved home of eighteen years was threatened with demolition in 2015 that he wrote his first Historic-Cultural Monument application. To date, Steve has written or co-written ten HCM applications, and has been an active participant in trying to save fifteen historically significant buildings. He also campaigns for affordable housing and is active in the tenant rights movement, and can regularly be found in at City Hall supporting the preservation efforts of others. Steve longs for the day when greedy developers take a break from trying to destroy the historic buildings and neighborhoods of Los Angeles so he can take enough time off to enjoy his other passion, racing his 1978 Crossle Formula Ford.

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