cabanafrau
DIS Legend
- Joined
- May 10, 2006
- Messages
- 15,718
There are plenty of modest homes and even modest neighborhoods in Pacific Palisades. Even in the uber-weathly areas there some older smaller homes that have been in the same family for many decades, not torn down to build ostentatious mansions.
Granted, due to location, location, location, those modest homes can be sold for a few million, but it’s not like the owners are swimming in excess cash. Rebuilding will be a struggle or financially impossible.
And factor in how building a house in southern CA is a night and day difference from 1-20-25 compared to 12-20-24. Building materials have not stopped a steep climb in prices due to many factors since things like the Covid shutdowns, labor shortages, Covid renovation boom, other disasters putting a dramatic increase on demand, etc.
Got past the sticker shock and delivery delays to secure your materials to rebuild? Good for you, now take a number and stand in the line and someone will call you back about when they might get around to discussing potentially getting you on the schedule to do the work. Talk about a line that could use a lightning lane.
This is long lists of entire communities in a major metro area. People are simply going to be scrambling for ways to keep a roof over their heads for years so they can attempt to resume their work lives while they wait and wait to sort out their permanent housing situation again. Rents will be eating into the lives of so many people in so many ways and changing futures as well.
This weekend it dawned on me that LA is poised to host the Olympics in 3 years. That's a monumental undertaking in and of itself. This was set to be a games with a bit less major prep needed, as a veteran host city with a vast array of venues to tap into. No doubt these fires will bedevil some of the details in ways unforeseen at the moment. Definitely not an issue that's any type of immediate priority, but the impact will be felt there also.