69 users online
 
12.08.
Show us your room! 16:36
and win a prize!
Bones 15:55
Season 1
Amber Benson 15:47
on MySpace
Musicvid 15:34
Angel and Spike
The 10 best Marvel Comics 10:38
Astonishing X-Men is on the list
FanArt Special 00:12
Buffy's Surprise Party
Another guest at BE Blow... 00:03
Guess who it is...
11.08.
New Michelle pics 21:29
She was on a party yesterday
Musicvid Special! 20:02
Today about "Cruel Intentions"
Michelle Trachtenberg 19:01
Small Mention on Access Hollywood
Bunnies! 18:45
BUNNIES!
Michelle Candids 18:07
"New Old Pictures"
Eliza Dushku 17:44
in HQ!
The Rock 16:28
And his film career
Cordy & Xander figures 11:13
From The Wish and Chosen
Summer in Australia 06:13
Summer for Supanova Again!
10.08.
Michelle Candids 20:16
New Michelle Trachtenberg Pics
Sarah Candids 20:07
Older SMG Candids
Nathan Fillion Is ... 18:43
.. The Next Bruce Campbell?
Musicvid Special! 18:17
Faith out of control
 


 

Buffy filming location in danger!

Frank Lloyd Wright's landmark Ennis-Brown House was the Angel Mansion in "Buffy". There is mudslide danger!
Warning: Hills Can Slide, Even on the Sunniest Days
A Wright landmark and other homes are red-tagged. Key route is closed. More trouble is likely.

By Amanda Covarrubias, Times Staff Writer

A hill collapse closed Laurel Canyon Boulevard and ground instability prompted the city to red-tag Frank Lloyd Wright's landmark Ennis-Brown House as mudslides continued to trigger evacuations Monday despite five days of dry weather.

Geologists said the mudslide danger could last for several months, even if little more rain falls. Water that has saturated hillsides this winter is sinking deeper into the ground, creating the potential for soil shifts that could trigger more collapses.

They pointed out that the 1995 mudslide in the La Conchita community in Ventura County that destroyed several homes occurred two months after the rains had stopped.

"The sun is shining, but the rain is busily percolating downward," said Randy Jibson, a geological consultant for the U.S. Geological Survey.

"You can't see it, but it's busy. I expect that in the next few months, we will see a spectrum of landslides — deeper, slow-moving landslides — throughout the region. They don't kill people, but they cause enormous property damage. You can sit there and listen to a house creaking and groaning, and you're helpless," he said.

Southern California has been battered by a series of heavy rainstorms that dumped more than 33.8 inches of rain so far this season, making it one of the wettest on record. Some meteorologists expect the 2004-05 season to eventually top the wettest on record, 1883-84, when 38.18 inches fell.

Officials on Monday were trying to determine the extent of the damage to the Wright creation, a massive concrete compound perched in the hills of Los Feliz just below the Griffith Observatory.

The house has had structural problems in the past, and there were signs Monday that portions of the massive Maya-inspired retaining wall were weakened by the rains. Several other homes in the area also have been red-tagged.

Los Angeles building inspectors determined the Ennis-Brown House was uninhabitable Saturday when they discovered that part of the wall behind the house was crumbling, said Bob Steinbach, a spokesman for the city's Department of Building and Safety.

Inspectors estimated that rain and mud have caused at least $500,000 damage to the house so far, he said.

The problems come as the Trust for Preservation of Cultural Heritage, a nonprofit, was embarking on a major effort to restore the compound, which has been deteriorating because of age as well as several nature diasters, including the 1994 Northridge earthquake.

The nearly 10,000-square-foot home is made of more than 24,000 patterned, perforated and smooth concrete blocks that contain decomposed granite extracted from the site.

A few miles to the west, a hill gave way at the entrance to Laurel Canyon Boulevard near Mount Olympus Drive, causing the city to close a key route between the San Fernando Valley and the Westside and to evacuate several houses along Laurel Canyon Boulevard. Commuters had to find other routes through the Hollywood Hills.

Officials said three houses were red-tagged, meaning no one was allowed in, and three were yellowed-tagged, meaning residents had only limited access.

As of Monday, more than 80 residences had been red-tagged in Los Angeles alone. Several other hillside communities have also reported severe damage to residences, including Culver City, Pasadena, Glendale, Anaheim and Laguna Beach.

Four houses in the Phillips Ranch section of Pomona were red-tagged last week after the slope below them began to give way and the structures started crumbling.

In Diamond Bar, a hillside slid a quarter-mile, carrying trees and debris into the backyards of neighboring houses. City officials said many of them were built before the city incorporated in 1989, before more stringent standards were in place.

Mudslides are caused by oversaturated ground that is absorbing water deeper and deeper, creating a powerful force beneath the surface that can carry cars, houses and people away.

Geologists expect to see this pattern continue at least through May.

"Failures can happen months after rains because of the permeability and the slope and other related things," said Doug Morton, a retired geologist for the U.S. Geological Survey.

The passage of time after a rainstorm reduces the chances that a slide will occur, Jibson said, but if one does happen, it is likely to be relatively large.

"The deeper the water has infiltrated the ground, the deeper the slides," he said. "But it's been longer, so it's less likely it will happen."

Generally, 10 inches of rain marks the point at which mudslides start occurring in Southern California, Jibson said. Because rain started to fall earlier than usual this season — October instead of November — water absorption was accelerated.

"We're not out of the woods yet in La Conchita and similar places," Jibson said, referring to the community where a massive mudslide in January killed 10 people. "We could very well in the next few weeks or months see deeper landslides in other parts of the neighborhood."



[by roadi (LA Times) ] [0 comments]

Show us your room!
The superfan with the coolest "whedonroom" wins a cool prize!
FanArt Special
This week's FanArt Special is about episode 13 of Season 2
New Michelle pics
Michelle Trachtenberg was at the Lucky Magazine Party to Celebrate LA Shopping Guide at Milk Boutique. Enjoy!

Summer in Australia
Supanova is set to hit Sydney this year. And Summer Glau will attending this again. We have the details for everyone
Slayerverse Banner Voting!!
Thanks to all participants!!! All banners are great!!!
New David & Emily Pics
David Boreanaz & Emily Deschanel recently held a press conference for the upcoming 2nd season of Bones we have the images for everyone!
Latest Bios:
Anthony Stewart Head
Seth Green
Juliet Landau
Mercedes Ncnab
Summer Glau
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Vincent Kartheiser
Latest Episodes:
(buffy) Season 3 Episode 22
(buffy) Season 6 Episode 9
(buffy) Season 1 Episode 1
(buffy) Season 4 Episode 1
(buffy) Season 3 Episode 4
(buffy) Season 3 Episode 3
(buffy) Season 3 Episode 1
 
 

LOGIN

User:    

Pass:    

   

Login Problems?
Signup (Member)

COMMUNITY

  [GER] Board
  [ENG] Board
  [ESP] Board
  Add News
  News Archive

  Imprint

AD


  
Buffy the Vampire Slayer, its characters, and the Buffy logo are the property of Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, the WB Television Network, and Twentieth Century Fox. Angel-The Series, its characters, and the Buffy logo are the property of Joss Whedon, Mutant Enemy, the WB Television Network, and Twentieth Century Fox.Other Series, their characters and logos are property of the proper right owners.
(c)Slayerverse 2006 [Imprint]