Larchmont Chronicle
vol. 54, no. 9
• delivered to 76,439 readers in hancock park • windsor square • fremont place • miracle mile • park la Brea • larchmont •
IN tHIS ISSUe
Los Angeles High centennial gala planned
Vacant homes on Wilton Pl. plague block
Football, post-game party October 20
Permit issues blamed
BACK TO SCHOOL. 9-24
HISTORY of Taste of Larchmont. 4
LADIES who lunch... at Pink's. 29
By Billy Taylor With 11 properties now sitting vacant on Wilton Pl., stretching two blocks from Melrose to Rosewood, local residents and business owners alike are complaining that the neighborhood is quickly deteriorating. “We have been battling the situation for months now,” says Mercedes Simonian, coowner of the Hollywood Historic Hotel, located on the corner of Melrose and Wilton. “It has been a nightmare.” According to Simonian, the vacant properties, which are slated for use in two projects to total 122 residential units, have become a breeding ground for crime. “These properties have become crack houses,” she says. “The problem is now rampant See Wilton, p 5
Music, art, food and creativity at Sept. 16 TarFest Chamber lunch Sept. 6
AT EBELL, Sissinghurst.
2-14
For Information on Advertising Rates, Please Call Pam Rudy 323-462-2241, x 11 Mailing permit:
Music, art and gourmet food trucks will be featured at TarFest at La Brea Tar Pits Park Sat., Sept. 16 from 2 to 10 p.m. Open to all ages and free, the 15th annual event celebrates local artists, musicians and culture. The event is curated by Launch LA and Kevin Bronson of Buzzbands. la, and will also feature DJ sets, dance performances and live painting. Kids’ art-making activities will be offered with the Japan Foundation, Los Angeles, Korean Cultural Center, Orchard Supply Hardware, METRO and See TarFest, p 29
Senior Outlook
Our annual section spotlighting seniors in our neighborhood will be in the October issue. Advertising deadline is Thurs., Sept. 11. Contact Pam Rudy, 323462-2241, ext. 11.
September 2017
FIRE DRILL participants enjoy their rides (this ride on Olivet) a couple of weekends prior to the Railway’s Aug. 31 reopening.
All aboard, Angels Flight Historic railway set to start Aug. 31 at $1 a ride For people downtown (DTLA!) during the waning days of summer and thereafter, the hike up and down Bunker Hill — to and from Grand Central Market and other parts of the city’s Historic Core — should now be easier. No hiking! Ride Angels Flight! Mayor Eric Garcetti was scheduled to be among the first riders on the just-refurbished Railway — on August 31, the dis- MAYOR likes AnSee Angels Flight, p 29 gels Flight Railway.
By Billy Taylor This October, Los Angeles High School will celebrate 100 years at its location at Olympic and Rimpau with “A Roman Renaissance.” The school, originally founded downtown in 1873, moved to its current, and third, location — 4650 W. Olympic Blvd. — in 1917. The weekend of events, planned for Oct. 20-21, includes a Homecoming football game with a Roman tailgate party and a celebrity gala fundraiser hailing the achievements of alumni. Kicking off the centennial celebrations, the Romans football team — 2016 Defending Division 2 City Champions — will take to Housch Field to lead the school with hope of another century of victories. Organizers say that a “spectacular” all-alumni half-time See Los Angeles High, p 2
LARCHMONT FAMILY FAIR!
Larchmont's Got Talent, children’s costume contest, rides, food trucks Reserve booths now for October 29 fair
By Suzan Filipek While the Larchmont Family Fair is Sun., Oct. 29, participants in the talent, costume
and pie-baking contests may want to start readying their game plans now. Can you sing, dance, tell jokes? Magicians, musicians and more are also welcome to audition for the “Larchmont
Has Talent” contest Sun., Oct. 22 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Coldwell Banker South, 119 N. Larchmont Blvd. Selected contestants will perform on stage at the Oct. See Larchmont Fair, p 4
Bungalow closes after eight years; city enforcement action commenced in 2009 By Suzan Filipek In 2009, the City of Los Angeles had expected the then-new Larchmont Bungalow to open and operate as an establishment that primarily sells “food to be consumed off-premises” in accordance with its permit. It did not. Now, after years of legal battles, during which the owners sought a liquor license and a delivery service and explored a franchise, the city finally forced the supposed takeout establishment that actually opened as a sit-down restaurant to shut down. “Nobody ever thought we’d have to battle this long and this hard over this,” deputy city attorney Serena Christion said last month, as the criminal case came closer to a resolution. On Aug. 7, Los Angeles Superior Court
SHUTTERED. The Larchmont Bungalow closed its doors Aug. 1, after an eight-year-long battle with the city for operating as a restaurant without a permit.
Commissioner H. Elizabeth Harris placed the Bungalow on diversion and set the next court date for Feb. 7, 2018. “It’s an earned dismissal,” said Christion. If the BunSee Bungalow, p 30
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