Looking East For Ideas.


 

Bessemer St. Van Nuys, CA near the Orange Line.

On these torrid July days, when the temperature is 105 degrees, and a walk down Van Nuys Boulevard near the Orange Line Metro stop brings you face-to-face with people sprawled out on the sidewalk, living in tents, sleeping on dirt, it is instructive and bracing to think of other civilizations, such as Japan, where human beings live under more benevolent and intelligent rulers.

Instead of parking lots furnished with the shopping baskets of homeless people, instead of garbage piles on the sidewalk, instead of empty streets filled with only the cries of mentally ill men and women, Japan offers low-rise, modern houses where children are cared for, and people work together to make contributions to society.

Every day we live amongst a remarkable level of filth, violence and rampant barbarity in Los Angeles; thinking it normal that a Trader Joes manager is shot dead walking to her store entrance to see what the commotion is; or that a camping father with his family is murdered, randomly, in Malibu State Park; or accepting as “normal” the idea that 100,000 people sleep on sidewalks, and RVs and cars, and live in tents in the city of the Kardashians, the Cruises, the Broads, the Carusos and the Spielbergs.

How can so much money, so much power, so much fame do so little for their city? How obscene it all is.

Near Cedros and Calvert, Van Nuys, CA.
Empty Buildings on Delano near VNB.
Slum Housing on Cedros.   Owners: Shraga Agam, Shulamit Agam 

 

 

 


There are places where guns don’t kill people every single day, and children live in clean, well-cared for apartments and houses next to spotless streets, where the trains run on time and people stand in line to wait for the next one to arrive.

We can’t completely transform what Los Angeles is, but we ought to engage our imagination to other places where they do a far better job of taking care of people and emulate those finer qualities of faraway lands.

 

Architects: HIBINOSEKKEI

Location: Sagamihara, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan Project Year: 2017

Photographs: Studio Bauhaus / Kenjiro Yoshimi

Source: ArchDaily

Van Nuys.

Small House in Japan (Why Not Van Nuys?)


The architectural blog Dezeen has a cornucopia of outstanding designs from around the world.

They have many projects from Japan, including small homes, which the Japanese have constructed all around the densely populated country.

The Gap House, by MUU Store Design Studio, (shown above) only covers a total area of 200 square feet, yet it embodies an inventive, imaginative and practical way to live, with its light-filled interior and clean, modern layout.

It is sandwiched between two other buildings, yet it does not feel claustrophobic. The house is located in a residential area near Sagami Bay in Kanagawa Prefecture,Japan.

Alleys are where these small homes are constructed. In Japan, most alleys are  fastidiously neat. Nobody desecrates their environment in Japan.


 

Here in Van Nuys our alleys tell our stories of how we value ourselves, our city and our nation:

Van Nuys

Van Nuys

Around Van Nuys there are numerous places where this type of housing could be erected, and the benefits of building this type are many.

They are more affordable, they could provide walkable, new, community oriented housing near Van Nuys Boulevard, and they would help in the revitalization of our community.

Right now, Van Nuys is zoned to deny imaginative solutions to our housing crisis. We need to free up zoning to allow, encourage and incentivize developers, architects, investors and small-home builders to build more with less restrictions.

The alternative is the bleak, expensive, dirty, dilapidated slum of current day downtown and vicinity Van Nuys. It is appalling but it must not be our future. We must step up and change it for the better.

14547 Gilmore St. Van Nuys, CA 91405