“This is fire seaÂson in Los AngeÂles,” Joan DidÂion once wrote, relatÂing how every year “the SanÂta Ana winds start blowÂing down through the passÂes, and the relÂaÂtive humidÂiÂty drops to figÂures like sevÂen or six or three per cent, and the bougainvilÂlea starts ratÂtling in the driÂveÂway, and peoÂple start watchÂing the horiÂzon for smoke and tunÂing in to anothÂer of those extreme local posÂsiÂbilÂiÂties — in this instance, that of immiÂnent devÂasÂtaÂtion.” The New YorkÂer pubÂlished this piece in 1989, when Los AngeÂles’ fire seaÂson was “a parÂticÂuÂlarÂly earÂly and bad one,” but it’s one of many writÂings on the same pheÂnomÂeÂnon now cirÂcuÂlatÂing again, with the highÂly destrucÂtive PalÂisades Fire still burnÂing away.
Back in 1989, longÂtime AngeÂlenos would have citÂed the Bel Air Fire of 1961 as a parÂticÂuÂlarÂly vivid examÂple of what misÂforÂtune the SanÂta Ana winds could bring. WideÂly recÂogÂnized as a byword for affluÂence (not unlike the now virÂtuÂalÂly oblitÂerÂatÂed PacifÂic PalÂisades), Bel Air was home to the likes of DenÂnis HopÂper, Burt LanÂcastÂer, Joan Fontaine, Zsa Zsa Gabor and Aldous HuxÂley — all of whose housÂes countÂed among the 484 destroyed in the conÂflaÂgraÂtion (in which, miracÂuÂlousÂly, no lives were lost). You can see the Bel Air Fire and its afterÂmath in “Design for DisÂasÂter,” a short docÂuÂmenÂtary proÂduced by the Los AngeÂles Fire DepartÂment and narÂratÂed by William ConÂrad (whose voice would still have been instantÂly recÂogÂnizÂable as that of MarÂshal Matt DilÂlon from the goldÂen-age radio draÂma GunÂsmoke).
Los AngeÂles’ repeatÂed afflicÂtion by these blazes is perÂhaps overdeÂterÂmined. The facÂtors include not just the dreadÂed SanÂta Anas, but also the geogÂraÂphy of its canyons, the dryÂness of the vegÂeÂtaÂtion in its chapÂarÂral (not, pace DidÂion, desert) ecolÂoÂgy, and the inabilÂiÂty of its water-delivÂery sysÂtem to meet such a sudÂden and enorÂmous need (which also proved fateÂful in the PalÂisades Fire). It didÂn’t help that the typÂiÂcal house at the time was built with “a comÂbustible roof; wide, low eaves to catch sparks and fire; and a big picÂture winÂdow to let the fire inside,” nor that such dwellings were “closeÂly spaced in brush-covÂered canyons and ridges serÂviced by narÂrow roads.” The Bel Air Fire brought about a wood-shinÂgle roof ban and a more intenÂsive brush-clearÂance polÂiÂcy, but the six decades of fire seaÂsons since do make one wonÂder what kind of meaÂsures, if any, could ever subÂdue these parÂticÂuÂlar forces of nature.
via Boing Boing
RelatÂed conÂtent:
NASA CapÂtures the World on Fire
When Steve BusceÂmi Was a FireÂfightÂer — and Took It Up Again After 9/11
Aldous HuxÂley Explains How Man Became “the VicÂtim of His Own TechÂnolÂoÂgy” (1961)
Take a DriÂve Through 1940s, 50s & 60s Los AngeÂles with VinÂtage Through-the-Car-WinÂdow Films
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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