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The Provisional City: Los Angeles Stories of Architecture and Urbanism PDF

394 Pages·2001·22.59 MB·English
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The Provisional City This page intentionally left blank The Provisional City Los Angeles Stories of Architecture and Urbanism Dana Cuff The MIT Press Cambridge, Massachusetts London, England © 2000 Massachusetts Institute of Technology All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by any electronic or mechanical means (including photocopying, recording, or information storage and retrieval) without permission in writing from the publisher. This book was set in Sabon and Frutiger by Graphic Composition, Inc., Athens, Georgia, and was printed and bound in the United States of America. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Cuff, Dana, 1953– The provisional city : Los Angeles stories of architecture and urbanism / Dana Cuff. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-262-03276-7 (hc : alk. paper) 1. Architecture, Domestic—California—Los Angeles. 2. Architecture, Modern— 20th century—California—Los Angeles. 3. City planning—California—Los Angeles— History—20th century. 4. Public housing—California—Los Angeles—History—20th century. I. Title. NA7238.L6 C84 2000 307.76'09794'9409044—dc21 00-030379 to Amelia and Julian Contents Acknowledgments...viii I No Little Plans 1 Extra-Large...4 2 The Decline of Modernity...20 3 Emergenc(it)y...23 4 Los Angeles in the American Scene...28 5 Convulsive Urbanism, or Lurch City...37 6 A Steady Instability...42 7 The Nature of Housing...45 8 What Ought Not Survive...49 9 The LA Stories...52 II Siting Land: The Politics of Property 10 Introduction to the Politics of Property...62 11 Contention over Drastic Change...69 12 Ideologies of Land and Property in America...74 13 A Wilderness for Speculation...77 14 The Roots of Property Rights...81 15 Characteristics of Property Rights...89 16 Land Regulation and Eminent Domain...94 17 Finding Urban Slums...101 18 Policy and Property: The Federal Housing Administration...113 19 Conclusion...116 III Provisional Places with Fugitive Plans: Aliso Village 20 Introducing The Flats...120 21 The Fine-Grained City...126 22 Turning Neighborhoods into Slums...133 23 Appraising The Flats...139 24 Emergency in The Flats...142 25 Creating Aliso Village...147 26 Aliso Village: Modern Housing, Modern Community...152 27 The Aliso Village Architects...158 28 The Aliso Village Residents...161 29 Modern Housing’s Demise...164 30 Fugitive Places, Provisional City...167 IV Temporary Abode, Industrial Aesthetic: Rodger Young Village 31 A New Emergency Looms...172 32 From War to Peace: The Uncertain Social and Technological Future of Los Angeles...176 33 Rodger Young Village: “Quonset Hut Community”...184 34 Retaining the Provisional...198 35 Finding a Public, Calling Off an Emergency...203 V Whose Dream, America? 36 Whither the American Dream?...210 37 The Postwar National Housing Scene...214 38 Two Men in the Los Angeles Picture...223 39 Architects and the Postwar House in the Convulsive City...228 VI Convulsive Suburbia: Westchester 40 The Story of Westchester...240 41 Building Westchester...246 42 Sales Meets Manufacturing...253 43 The Airport at Westchester Today...264 VII Chavez Ravine and the End of Public Housing 44 And 10,000 More: Remaking Chavez Ravine...272 45 Utopian Plans...282 46 Political Enemies...290 47 A Dodger Victory...295 48 Next, Bunker Hill...301 49 Convulsive City, Urban Krill...306 VIII At the End, Playa Vista 50 Political Evolution of Property and Voice...312 51 The Playa Vista Saga...318 52 Implications for Architects and for the Architecture of the City...332 53 Constructive Contention for an Urban Architecture...335 54 The Los Angeles Sites Revisited, and Beyond...338 Notes...344 Bibliography...357 Illustration Credits...373 Index...374 Acknowledgments I remember hearing my parents describe living in Los Angeles during the Second World War. My father worked in an oil refinery, and my older sister had just been born. They told of darkened streets, submarine attacks, Tin Can Beach, victory gardens, and block wardens. Somehow it all seemed dangerous and ex- otic at the same time, though highly remote. Perhaps that’s how this study be- gan. Maybe it started when I watched our citrus grove, which had been my grandfather’s before us, plowed under to make way for tract housing. I was in the third grade, and I couldn’t believe we were going to move south to plant an- other grove rather than stay to soak up what seemed like the start of a bonafide city. Why leave a place about to get sidewalks? Before long, we returned to our rural-community-turned-suburb, and I learned that the limits of roller-skating were tied not only to surface but to destination. And the project is at least partly due to my friend Lenwood Johnson, who introduced me the hard way to public housing and community activism. The work has many origins, but they are all based in an intermingling of intellectual contradictions, everyday life, and polit- ical biases that coalesce in the architecture of the city. The ways cities change and the way land is manipulated in that process seem to me more significant to urban form than most urban observers admit. I wanted to catch something of the interchange between real estate as a cultural and economic practice and the designers and planners who work their optimism into episodic utopias. Big schemes began to seem brutally clear just by the scale they assumed, and thus scale seeped into all my thinking: from the size of the chapters that follow to the size of the projects they cover. The irony of our predicament was inescapable: the grander the plan, the more it seemed to un- dermine its own pretenses. This reflects my dual inclination toward cultural study as pure observation and uncompromised architectural propositions. Good design seems to require both but permit neither. The moment when this book began can be pinpointed, however, to one day in 1996 when I went to the Los Angeles Public Library to look at photo archives of public housing. Getting there had been a typical LA experience—a twenty- minute trip extruded into an hour of unbearable traffic and impossible parking. When I arrived, Carolyn Cozo Cole haltingly informed me that she was unable to locate the requested files. To soothe me she dropped off a foot-tall stack of folders called “LA—Slums.” There, as you will see in the pages beyond, was a startling Los Angeles that had existed alongside the victory gardens and blacked-out city, all gone by now. It became so much rubble beneath the public housing I was trying to track down. The struggle to make a home, with almost no means, was viscerally evident in these images. The places depicted were vul- nerable and temporary in every aspect. It occurred to me that early low-rent housing advocates faced that same struggle, until they successfully comman- deered federal funds to make what they believed would be permanent. Over sub- sequent decades, the public housing they built had deteriorated in turn to such an extent that land sharks were now swarming for the real estate. The appraisal photographs in the succeeding chapters reinforced these observations. In my studies of contemporary urban debates between homeowners and developers, with designers skewered in the middle, I saw how people came to de- fend their small stakes with such vehemence. The faces in some of the appraisal photographs registered that same posture, as the origins of modern-day con- tentiousness took shape. Thus a story began to emerge about urban change and architecture’s role therein, about homeplaces and their provisional status, and about the ways our conceptions of property filter into every spatial act. Many individuals and institutions lent support to this project: the USC School of Planning, Adele Santos and my colleagues at the short-lived UCSD School of Architecture, and Sylvia Lavin and colleagues at my present home in UCLA’s Department of Architecture and Urban Design. The staff there has been helpful beyond words. In 1992, Tridib Banerjee and I received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to write “Form in Contention,” together with Ken Beck and Achva Stein. That is when the Playa Vista study began, though it seems it will never end. Along the way, I have received inspiration and assistance from able stu- dents. Sylvia Darr, José Gámez, and Ken Gutierrez deserve special mention. Their help with the research and images was essential over the past four years. Wendy Bone provided powerful illustrations of the fundamental ideas of the book based on her own research; Sasha Ortenberg created the fine maps of the city; Tulay Atak and Therese Kelly conquered the bibliography; Duane Jackson drew early Playa Vista graphics; and Patricia Solis, Chuck Saltzman, Mark Fredrickson, and Karen Adhikari helped in the initial phases. The students in my “Provisional City” course at UCLA in the winter of 1999 gave me a needed in- tellectual boost with their creative energy for the subject. It was my year as a Scholar at the Getty Research Institute that defined this work. There I was afforded not only the luxury of time, but the insight of others contemplating Los Angeles in its myriad forms Michael Roth, Roger Friedland, and Harold Zellman offered valued friendship and critique. The thoughtful weekly seminar and a number of its members were particularly help- ful: Robert Davidoff, Brenda Bright, Phil Ethington, Bill Deverell, Susan Phillips, Becky Nicolaides, Mike Davis, David James, Robert Carringer, Doug Flam- Acknowledgments ix

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The provisional city is one of constant erasure and eruption. Through what Dana Cuff calls a ''convulsive urban act,'' developers both public and private demolish an urban site and disband its inhabitants, replacing it with some vision of a better life that leaves no trace of the former structure. A
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