Van Nuys flood area, 1952


From the great USC Digital Archives Collection comes this January 18, 1952 photo of flooding on Van Nuys Blvd at Hatteras Street.

Pure lard and sausages are advertised in a community and time when obesity was rare.

IMAGERY – The Celery Merchants of Venice – Hidden Los Angeles


Celery fields in Venice, CA, 1927, which was once known as “The Celery Capital of America”.

IMAGERY – The Celery Merchants of Venice – Hidden Los Angeles.

Van Nuys Bl. Circa 1940


Van Nuys Blvd. Circa 1940 (courtesy Valley Relics)

Valley Relics posted this circa 1940 color photograph of Van Nuys Blvd. facing south (towards Sherman Oaks) near Victory Blvd.

Two things in the photo stand out that are different from today: the streetcar running up the center of the street and the diagonally parked cars.

For many years, people have spoken about the loss of the streetcar as a viable way of transportation around the Southland.  Many think that the sprawl of this city makes streetcars irrelevant and automobiles the only solution.

But streetcars traversed the sprawl of Los Angeles from the beginning, going across hundreds of miles, even when much of the land was undeveloped. They brought the Pasadenan to Venice and transported the Hollywoodian to Chatsworth.  They were above ground and had open windows.   No city of millions of people can be without a viable public transport. And cars–polluting, crowding, noisy, inefficient, expensive, deathly–are the most self-centered and self-destructive machines ever put inside a city. Los Angeles has been demonstrably more dysfunctional since the Red Car tracks were torn up.

Diagonal parking is a way of making shopping more convenient and serves to slow down traffic and discourage speeding. While current day Councilman Cardenas proposes raising metered parking rates in the midst of the Great Recession, the old photo above shows a thriving and much more appealing Van Nuys, with free diagonal parking,  than exists today.

Vintage Van Nuys: Floods and Freeways.


Burbank and Sepulveda 7 3 1958
Flood at VNB & Aetna 111852 ( one block n. of Oxnard)

A New Day.


Photo by Mark Tucker.
Photo by Mark Tucker.
A beautiful new day for America.

Photo by Mark Tucker

Near the Beach: Venice, CA.


There is just something simple and direct about this old house that I find appealing. It probably is close to 100 years old. Just steps away from the beach, it has seen a lot of changes in this neighborhood through the years.

There was a time when Californians built homes that communicated with the pedestrian. A facade was not a garage door, nor was it modernist with all the activity oriented behind gates, gardens and doors. The old houses reached out to the street and beckoned the passerby to come visit.

And these houses were “green” in the sense that they used energy sparingly. No air-conditioning, open windows, sparingly lit with just enough electricity and no excess of exterior lighting.

This is not the most beautiful house on the block, but its proportions are better than almost anything built today in mass quantity. There is balance and self-assurance, modesty and directness.

These are Americans qualities as well.