I am looking up at the Google Maps aerial photo of modern day Northridge, which is basically a gigantic sprawl of mediocrity consisting of asphalt, shopping malls, and homely houses. The one speck of green is the surviving Oakie estate.
I haven’t any lawful argument to make against the “legal” wishes of those members of the Oakie family who endowed USC with this beautiful property, which is now likely to be paved over with those horrendous stucco boxes that disfigure most of the post-1976 Golden State.
The only human, civic and civilized gesture that would matter here is to preserve both the house and the grounds around it as some sort of a public park. It is not to pave over the land, build 60 crackerjack houses, cheek and jowl against each other, and fill it up with Hummers and electric gates.
Northridge, and most of Los Angeles is starved for parks. We don’t have enough of them. Part of the ills of this city are traceable to the lack of nature that we urbanites endure. A historic home and lovely tree shaded park would be a great gift to the Valley.
There is sometimes the legal reason why something is allowable, but that doesn’t always make it morally or ethically right. If the Oakie property is bulldozed so that some already wealthy developer can devalue and destroy a historic home and gardens, and we don’t protest it, then we forfeit our own rights as Americans and Angelenos.

Northridge still has many beautiful large lots, filled with mature trees and old farmhouses, that are being destroyed by developer plans. Another developer is trying to subdivide a lot zoned for 4 homes in Old Northridge/Sherwood Forest into a tangle of 36 homes, as well as expanding a quiet country-like beautiful street into a noisy thoroughfare. They are doing this to the last historic, beautiful, peaceful, residential, single family neighborhood in the North SFV, and probably plying City Hall with millions in order to make $$ in what is already a money losing real estate down market. Check out: http://www.northridgeeast.com/WhiteOak.html
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Van Nuys and the rest of the SFV has become completely uninhabitable. How hard would it have been to leave a narrow corridor for pedestrian/bicycle use, with small shops along the sides? Some areas of natural land? Now it’s a jungle of big box retailers and panaderias. There’s nothing to be done but pack up and leave.
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Help to maintain it’s park atmosphere.
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It looks to be a land of peaceful cul de sacson windy roads, nestled amidst freeways and shopping malls. Lovely!
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