With Los Angeles’ wildfires wrecking counter-culture suburb, creatives’ pain ramps up

By South China Morning Post | Created at 2025-01-17 21:51:32 | Updated at 2025-01-18 01:06:17 3 hours ago
Truth

A decade ago, if you were a writer, artist or musician based in Los Angeles County who had finally saved enough of a nest egg to consider buying a home, one appealing area that might have still seemed affordable would have been Altadena.

In 2015 the median price for a detached single-family home in Altadena’s 91001 zip code was about US$500,000.

In the increasingly elite Silver Lake, around 13km (eight miles) southwest, similar digs would have cost about US$1.4 million. Continuing on that line, in West Hollywood the number was more like US$1.9 million, and you could forget about Santa Monica and neighbouring Pacific Palisades nearer the coast.

But Altadena had a magnetic draw. There was something about the untamed, inventive spirit of the place, and the generous creative community.

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Homes in Altadena in 2019, with the buildings of downtown Los Angeles visible in the distance. Photo: Shutterstock

An intangible energy drifted in the air, like it does in places that become counter-culture touchstones.

No highway ran through its foothill neighbourhoods, and in freeway-dependent LA that made the place feel like a bit of a secret.

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