South L.A. 2015

South Vermont Corridor

The South Vermont Avenue corridor experienced widespread devastation in 1965 with the Watts Riots, and again in 1992 with the Rodney King uprising. Despite decades of attempted rehabilitation, vacant lots and failed businesses remain.

Vermont and 81st

S. Vermont Ave.

Meat & Fries, Adu Burger

“After the civil unrest of 1992, almost every constituency claimed that the riot was somehow theirs, to be appropriated for their own political ends. Similarly, in the years that followed, almost everyone laid claim to the recovery, with the power and money flowing toward it appropriated for whatever political purpose they happened to be pursuing. Nowhere in Los Angeles was the recovery-belongs-to-me phenomenon more apparent than along Vermont Avenue, and especially on a rundown, mostly vacant acre-and-a-half lot at the corner of Vermont and 81st Street, adjacent to one of the area’s nicer residential neighborhoods” (William Fulton, The Reluctant Metropolis, Chap. 11: “Whose Riot Was This, Anyway?,” Johns Hopkins, 2001, p. 286).

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Credit or Debit, Hot Relish

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Unmaintained commercial building, new chiropractic sign

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Former Bear Brakes sign, now silhouette

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Ambassadors C.O.G.I.C. (Church Of God In Christ)

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1936 house, now New Beginnings Full Gospel Church, Pastor M. Lovely

 

 


Crenshaw Christian Center

Crenshaw Christian Center, formerly Pepperdine College, ca 1937, John M. Cooper and H.L. Gogerty, architects, Katherine Bashford and Frederick Barlow Jr., landscape architects. Originally, all of the Streamline Moderne buildings of the campus were painted an aqua blue color, “Pepperdine blue.” In 1981, Pepperdine vacated to Malibu.

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Cafeteria, Crenshaw Christian Center

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Classrooms, Crenshaw Christian Center

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Bookstore, Crenshaw Christian Center


Faith Dome

Faith Dome, 1988, aluminum geodesic dome, seats 10,000+, pastor Dr. Frederick K.C. Price and son, Fred Price, preach the “prosperity gospel”

“Every church should be a big church.”—Frederick Price. In Anne C. Loveland & Otis B. Wheeler, From Meetinghouse to Megachurch (University of Missouri, 2003), p. 127.

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Entrance, Faith Dome

Approach to Faith Dome

Approach to Faith Dome

1 thought on “South L.A. 2015

  1. Marilyn Novell's avatarMarilyn Novell Post author

    South Vermont Avenue corridor, South L.A., former Pepperdine College, now the Ever Increasing Faith Ministries, Streamline Moderne campus buildings, 1937, Thomas Cooper, architect; Katherine Bashford and Frederick Barlow Jr., landscape architects, geodesic dome, FaithDome, 1988, seats 10,000+, Dr. Frederick K.C. Price preaches the “prosperity gospel”

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