Valley Plaza Declared a Nuisance.


Anyone driving past the ugliness and waste that is Valley Plaza has never failed to notice how forlorn it is.  Or maybe it is so bad that nobody notices. Perhaps that explains why only now are the people in power proclaiming it’s time to demolish it.

A classic of mid-20th-century convenience, the one-story buildings, centered around an interior parking lot, once held a variety of affordable places to shop, eat and see movies. You went here to buy sneakers, donuts, corned beef or get your shoes repaired. It was humble and tidy, probably until the 1980s.

The quaint idea of entering a place of business by placing it on the sidewalk, along Laurel Canyon Boulevard, with a storefront and parking in back, was utilized by architects.

Photograph caption dated April 3, 1957 reads, “At strategic points in the Valley Plaza shopping area are these attractive new signs. Viewing the completed project are, left to right, Norman Caldwell, manager of May Co., Valley; Bob Symonds, realtor; John Hawkins, manager of Sears Valley store; Miss Anita Gordon, honorary mayor of Valley Plaza, and Verne Tullberg, manager Alexander’s Market.” (LAPL/Valley Times)


Photograph caption dated June 14, 1955 reads “Serving first customers at newly opened Schaber’s Cafeteria, 12141 Victory Blvd., Valley Plaza, is E. A. Schaber, owner. In line, from left, are George Thatcher of Occidental Bank; Bob Marsch, vice chairman of Valley Plaza Retail Merchants Association; Pearl Winter, association secetary (sic), and North Hollywood Chamber of Commerce Vice President John Hawkins, manager of Sears. Schaber’s cost $500,000 to build, will seat $350 (sic).” (LAPL)

Then the 1994 earthquake struck and it was downhill for the next 31 years. 

Of course nobody shops in person anymore, nobody enters a store to pay for something, they just walk out with it. And then there was Covid which made it normal to destroy commerce in the name of safety. And then there is safety which doesn’t exist when 100,000 vagrants sleep on the streets and camp out in public to make mockery of anything resembling human dignity, civic pride or law and order. 

Now the powers that be, the esteemed “Board of Building and Safety Commissioners voted to declare Valley Plaza, a once-popular mall, a public nuisance,” wrote the LA Times on August 19, 2025, nearly 16 years after the photographs at the end of this page were taken.

When it comes to cynicism about how poorly Los Angeles functions, so many big, egregious problems come to mind: Drag racing takeovers, mass shoplifting parties, red light running, speeding, vandalism, arson, burglaries, fires, trash camping, influencer parties in mansions up in the hills, the nightly car chases, the daily shootings, the dumped furniture in the streets, the fuck you every teacher hears in their classroom. 

Valley Plaza, a 17-acre site of wasteful nothingness besides the 170 freeway, is yet another example of an LA non-use of land that might otherwise be a pleasant community of housing, shops, parks, and nature. 

Nobody would come here during the day, nor would they come at night, and why nobody in power, for more than 3 decades, cared for the residents who live nearby is beyond contempt. 

“The empty structures of Valley Plaza are a burden on the city’s police and fire departments, which continually respond to calls, said City Councilmember Adrin Nazarian at a Building and Safety Department Commission hearing Tuesday,” was another quote from the LA Times.

It’s also a burden aesthetically, and functionally, to have dozens of boarded up stores and an empty high rise right next to a freeway. 

Today it’s 102 degrees in North Hollywood and wouldn’t it be nice to go to the Valley Plaza Community Swimming Pool or sit and sip an iced tea at Starbucks Valley Plaza, or go up to your spanking new apartment overlooking the village green at Valley Plaza? And those beautiful, landscaped grounds with so many lovely flowers and noble oak trees, alongside brick walking paths and wooden benches. It’s 2025. Maybe we can look at 18th Century Savannah, Georgia for some futuristic ideas of city planning.

What might it be to have civilization on site for the residents of North Hollywood who live near Laurel Canyon and Victory? We can never know the answer because we live in a syndicate of corruption, filth and double dealing, a malicious playland of bribery, lawsuits, zoning, political espionage and wanton inhumanity.

I went there as a curious wanderer on December 23, 2009 to photograph the boarded-up buildings as they closed out another day, unaware that this urban cemetery would still be alive a decade and a half into the future.

Gina.


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Lights Face, originally uploaded by Here in Van Nuys.

This is a friend of mine who is an actor, living in Studio City. Like so many, she is looking for work, any work, right now, to pay the bills. Smart, witty, pretty, articulate, funny.

Dressed up, she looks like she should be in the world of “Mad Men”.

Today There Was Some Kind of Election.


I cannot verify if this is true, but apparently, today in the state of California, there was an election.

I read about it in the Daily News. This is part of what they said:

“At the core of the governor’s reform effort is Proposition 1A, which extends a sales tax hike for a year; increases the state income and motor vehicle taxes for two years; and increases the state’s “rainy day” fund from 5 to 12.5 percent of the General Fund. It also gives the governor the power to make midyear spending cuts when revenues fall short of projections.

My comment: why not just raise the tax on gasoline by 50 cents?

Proposition 1B, which would take effect only if 1A passes, would restore $9.3 billion to public schools and community colleges, beginning in 2011.

My comment: so the second proposition can only take effect if the first one takes effect. Makes sense to me.

Proposition 1C allows the state to borrow $5 billion against future earnings on the state lottery.

My comment: the state of California is in the gambling business and encourages its citizens and others visiting here to gamble to support the state spending habit.

Proposition 1D would temporarily divert revenue from children’s health programs, while Proposition 1E would funnel funds from mental health services to reduce the deficit.

My comment: when times are tough, that’s when you have to get tough on children and the mentally ill.

Finally, Proposition 1F – the only measure currently leading in public opinion polls – would prohibit the governor, lawmakers and other elected state officials from receiving pay raises in years when the state is running a deficit.

My comment: only this one makes any sense

Even if the measures are approved by voters, the state will still be facing a $15 billion deficit. If the package fails, the shortfall jumps to $21 billion.

My comment: I didn’t vote today and I am not ashamed.

Don’t Knock Van Nuys, Cardenas Says.


Don’t knock Van Nuys, Cardenas says

By Rick Orlov, Columnist
Updated: 03/29/2009 10:25:11 PM PDT

The group seeking to separate from Van Nuys and adopt Sherman Oaks as its name is picking up some City Council opposition because of the tone of its campaign.

Councilman Tony Cardenas, whose district abuts the area, said he is concerned with what he sees as the campaign’s derogatory tone toward Van Nuys.

“One of my constituents came to me about it and I said I would keep an open mind,” Cardenas said. “But then I went to their Web site and saw they had pictures of Van Nuys, showing it run down, and then pictures of Sherman Oaks, showing how nice everything is.

“I didn’t like that. I don’t think they have to be derogatory to Van Nuys.”

The area that wants to separate from Van Nuys is bounded by Hazeltine Avenue, Sepulveda Boulevard, Burbank Boulevard and Oxnard Street.

Councilwoman Wendy Greuel, who represents the area, has not yet taken a position, nor has the matter been considered by the council’s Education and Neighborhoods Committee.

Both the Van Nuys and Sherman Oaks neighborhood councils have come out against the name change.

Residents say they are more closely associated with Sherman Oaks than Van Nuys because it is where they shop and where their children go to school.