Gilmore St. Between Kester and Tyrone


DSCF0021 DSCF0023 DSCF0030 DSCF0037 DSCF0040 DSCF0042

I walked along Gilmore this morning, a varied street one block north of Victory, and found old bungalows, church gardens, crappy apartments and neatly tended ones; along with a shoe repair shop, new Chinese food and a Mid-Century pharmacy.

Gilmore is an old street. A sidewalk was paved in 1929, but the road goes back further than that.

It was part of old Van Nuys, near town, school and church.

In the obliterating 1950s-70s, many old houses were torn down and replaced with rentable apartments, way before the revived fashion for “Mission.” If Gilmore had been preserved as only homes, it might look like today like a neighborhood of Pasadena.

 


DSCF0060 DSCF0064 DSCF0067 DSCF0074 DSCF0075

Guns, gangs, crime.

One might understand a small shopkeeper viewing the aforementioned with fear or suspicion.

A Photographer?

Yes it is the photographer, with a camera slung around his neck, who gets the nasty stares and the unwanted questions.

At the colorful Kovacs Pharmacy, a pharmacist came out, confronted me and wanted to know why I was shooting photos.

She asked for my card. I had none. I told her I was a photographer.

She went back inside.

Does one need to have an answer for taking a photo? Would you ever dream of walking up to a stranger- talking on the phone- and asking who they were calling? Would you walk up to a driver stopped at a light and ask, “Why are you driving?”


 

DSCF0077

DSCF0082 DSCF0084

At 14417, next door to Kovacs, time stands still as faded light illuminates a garage set way back in the yard, the kind of house and garden that once dotted this street.

At Sylmar Avenue, the Van Nuys Elementary School is still handsome and historic, roofed in red tiles and painted in warm tan.

The infamous spray marker of the Barrio Van Nuys (BVN) marks a fence outside of a bungalow court across from the school.

DSCF0093 DSCF0095 DSCF0098 DSCF0099 DSCF0101

The Central Lutheran Church, whose white and red brick façade on Victory at Tyrone seems sad and neglected, has a surprisingly vigorous and lush group of edible gardens spreading over at least a half acre or more of land. Very well-tended and green, the vegetables and plants propagate magnificently in fertile soil alongside wooden stakes and raised beds. It looks like a future bumper crop. Its gentle greenery stands in stark contrast to next door car repair and vacant parking lots.

When people talk about the revival of Van Nuys, of making the community better, they might start by visiting a street like Gilmore. Narrow and walkable, tree-shaded and neighborly, it has a variety of both individuals and institutions who are already contributing positive change to this district. They are feeding the homeless, educating the children, planting organic gardens and making Van Nuys come to life in the most unexpected and surprising places.

More of Old Van Nuys in Postcards


Courtesy of Valley Relics are some additional postcards of old Van Nuys:

First Baptist Front

First Baptist BackStaber's Front Staber's Back Adohr Front IMG_0003 IMG_0002

Memorial Day: Sawtelle Veterans Home


10021688036_ebd9e4227d_o

Soldiers’ Home, Views of Los Angeles, California, courtesy, California Historical Society, CHS2013.1297.

Courtesy: California Historical Society

1981: Burbank Boulevard at Fulton Ave – SP 2658


Terry Guy has an excellent collection of photos on his Flickr page chronicling North Hollywood and the old Southern Pacific line which ran along today’s Metro Orange Line Busway.

Photo above (near Valley College) is the intersection now converted into a landscaped bike/bus transit line.

Life has improved (sporadically and unevenly) in parts of Los Angeles, due in large part to investment in public transportation, which has lead to greater vitality and revitalization in formerly neglected parts of the city. One can see evidence of that in Mr. Guy’s historic North Hollywood images.

Engine Company No. 39


One of the great historic buildings of Los Angeles, Fire Station No. 39 (14415 Sylvan Street Van Nuys, California 91401) was built in 1939 by the WPA.

A few years ago, destructionists in Van Nuys, lead by Councilman Cardenas, proposed that the old fire station with its narrow garage, unsuited for modern wide equipment, be torn down. This blog wrote about the impending destruction, and the nihilists on the City Council reversed course, pulled a Romney, and said the station would and should be saved.

The Fire Station dates back to a time when architects actually blended and harmonized their designs to fit into existing neighborhoods. The Valley Municipal Building, just across the street, is what the fire station design salutes.

Now Van Nuys will sit idly by as the historic 1925 First Lutheran Church is bulldozed away.

An impoverished community is thus impoverished historically and aesthetically.

Demolition for Historic (1925) Van Nuys Lutheran Church?


Maria Scherzer sent me an email today saying that she believes that the historic 1925 First Lutheran Church of Van Nuys at Vesper/Kittridge may be scheduled for demolition.

Her emails:

“Historic Van Nuys Church Scheduled for Demolition
First Lutheran Church (1925), Van Nuys
Corner of Kitttridge Street & Vesper Avenue
Current owner, Little Brown Church of Studio City/Church of the Valley,
willfully neglected maintenance & repair of structure…
“ecclesiastical slumlords”?
also owner of 2 properties on Kittridge Street & 2 on Haynes Street…”

“Re: First Lutheran Church, 14602 Kittridge Street, Van Nuys, 91411
Per Building & Safety Property Activity Report:
Application/Permit Number 12019-10000-01656
Work Description: Demolition for House of Worship
Submitted: 08/13/2012”

Does anyone know if this can be verified?