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In the autumn of 2025, my west Altadena neighbors from the block came together in a park for tamales, iced tea, and commiseration. The fire took away our houses, but it’s not going to take away our community without a fight. Some neighbors asked for first names only for this story, so they could speak more freely, with insurance and other financial matters in flux.
Vincent and Maria were born and raised in this area. It’s not just their house at the northwest corner of our street that burned to the ground a year ago; their list starts with Vincent’s first childhood home.
“On Terrace Street,” he said, noting that his brother lived there before passing away. “And that house burnt down, too.” When he thinks back on all the houses he’s had in Altadena over the years, he said not one of them is still standing, as they were all burnt down by this fire. “None of them.” Vincent has worked at the same car dealership for 45 years now. As for Maria, she’s semi-retired, working at a Dollar Tree now. “Just for some fun, you know, just something to do,” she said. For now, they live an hour to the west. “The commute is one thing,” Maria said. “But I mean, you adapt. What do you do?"
The house they lost was 1,600 square feet. It had four bedrooms after Vincent, his son, and his brothers built an expansion in the late 1990s.
“They [the brothers] passed away, so that's why we kind of want to rebuild,” Vincent said. Could 2026 be the year they get back in? “I'm hoping to have this done by next year this time,” he said. Lori Ann, another resident, is a retired teacher who, before that, was in my line of work: a business reporter. “And I had taken that day off because it was my birthday, and I was walking through the house, and I thought, ‘I love my house,’“ Lori Ann said. I felt this, too. Had my joy in finding a nice little house on this street prompted punishment from the fates?
“There was something very — I don't know, the energy was so good, you know? It's like, it felt happy,” she said. “And then, 24 hours, it was gone.” |