Thursday, February 10, 2011

irish rich promted this post...........Watts Towers




The property, where the towers are located, changed hands, Rodia's bungalow inside the enclosure was burned down, and the city of Los Angeles condemned the structure and ordered it razed. Actor Nicholas King and a film editor William Cartwright visited the site in 1959, saw the neglect, and purchased the property for $3,000 in order to preserve it. When the city found out about the transfer, it decided to perform the demolition before the transfer went through. The towers had already become famous and there was opposition from around the world. King, Cartwright, and a curator of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, along with area architects, artists, and community activists formed the Committee for Simon Rodia's Towers in Watts. The Committee negotiated with the city to allow for an engineering test to establish the safety of the structures.
For the test, steel cable was attached to each tower and a crane was used to exert lateral force. The crane was unable to topple or even shift the towers with the forces applied, and the test was concluded when the crane experienced mechanical failure. Bud Goldstone and Edward Farrell were the engineer and architect leading the team.
The committee preserved the towers independently until 1975, when it deeded the site to the City of Los Angeles, which in turn deeded it to the State of California in 1978. It is now designated the Watts Towers of Simon Rodia State Historic Park. It is operated by the City of Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department.
The towers are one of nine folk art sites listed in the National Register of Historic Places, and were designated a National Historic Landmark in 1990.
interesting note: while the towers were being built, some neighbors would have their children vandalize the property hoping Rodia would stop his art. the neighbors now-a-days have so much pride having this in their neighborhood. you need to remember, this is smack dab in the middle of a bunch of houses, not like a monument set up my a group of investors to make money. the area has had some concrete seating areas built in and the structure is fenced in but the site is still very original. these towers have survived every major earthquke california has had. bottom line: it is a pretty amazing site. visit the towers in all their glory.
the towers also survived the riots in the late 1960`s plus the riots in the early 1990`s. the towers were untouched, the locals have too much respect for their history...........maybe humanity isn`t that bad.............

5 comments:

Irish Rich said...

Nice follow-up, that was great. Hey, it's my turn to say thank you!

I hadn't thought of those Towers in years, and your post inspired me to hit Google to see what the status was on the Towers at present. Maybe next trip out to L.A. I'll revist them.

The coolest thing I found on Google was that guy's scale model of the towers,and the land they sit on. That blew me away.

mindpill said...

right on.......see you at born free. can`t wait to see what you`re building or for that matter what everyone will be building. this year will be amazing. mike and grant`s minds are spinning out of control........

Jahluv said...

Great post - have to confess, my dad and his brothers were some of the kids who used to give Rodia a hard time. People thought he was a nut, and he didn't have a reputation as being a nice guy.

My great aunt lived close to the towers & when I was a kid, there was to be a family of Black trapeze artists that lived around the corner from the towers and gave lessons... nice memory.

Flash forward to 2011 - The Tony Hawk Foundation is trying to build a skatepark there. Many of the neighbors are against it though. We'll see if it gets built.

mindpill said...

thanks jahluv...........i love that little mustard colored house with the giant lot on the deadend street next to the towers. alot of motorcycles could park in that yard for the bbq`s....

mindpill said...

jahluv! send your photo!