These would be the Fuller Lofts in Lincoln Heights. The project was shut down in early 2008 due to a lawsuit between Liveable Places (the owner) and the contractor which resulted in Liveable Places having to file for bankruptcy and abandoning the project. The project sat for almost a year.
As of April this year it has been taken over by Lee Homes and is resuming construction. The project is designed by Pugh + Scarpa. If you go to Curbed LA and search for Fuller Lofts you can read about all the drama.
I recall seeing somewhere that the original intent was that a portion of the building was going to be for low-income housing with the top 2 floors being the more expensive units. I'm not sure if with the new developer they will keep this idea or not.
All in all, it's an interesting project but in a totally weird area. Aside from the nearby Gold Line stop and the Home Depot, there really isn't a lot going on in this area of LA. Although the same could be said about the Toy and Biscuit Company Lofts that seem to be doing exceedingly well despite that after you leave the film set street they are on your likely to get mugged.
It is a little like a spaceship landed on top of the building. Given that it was also originally designed as a mixed-income community the clear division between the two styles is a little disconcerting given that it clearly is not mixed. It would have been nicer to see some of the "design moves" for lack of a better term, played through the rest of the structure.
The rehab of industrial space vs a designer-condo. .._. .._ _._. _._ you make an interesting point about the stylistic differences literally symbolizing/marking the class differences.
I'm thinking that SCI_Arc should invest in the potential and move. They no longer fit in the current building and have been all but run out by the gentrification in the area. There seems to be room for expansion here in adjacent lots and they wouldn't be locked into a historically preserved building anymore. Proximity to Gold Line and Home Depot would be nice benefits. Also affordable housing along the Gold Line would make up for lack of dorm rooms.
Aug 30, 09 12:42 am ·
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Anyone familiar w this project at Humboldt and San Fernando in LA?
Wondering if anyone is familiar with this project? Its at the corner of Humboldt and N San Fernando in northeast LA. Looks like construction stopped.
Anyhow looks like an interesting project with the top 2 floors being redone on the outside.
oops too big
These would be the Fuller Lofts in Lincoln Heights. The project was shut down in early 2008 due to a lawsuit between Liveable Places (the owner) and the contractor which resulted in Liveable Places having to file for bankruptcy and abandoning the project. The project sat for almost a year.
As of April this year it has been taken over by Lee Homes and is resuming construction. The project is designed by Pugh + Scarpa. If you go to Curbed LA and search for Fuller Lofts you can read about all the drama.
I recall seeing somewhere that the original intent was that a portion of the building was going to be for low-income housing with the top 2 floors being the more expensive units. I'm not sure if with the new developer they will keep this idea or not.
All in all, it's an interesting project but in a totally weird area. Aside from the nearby Gold Line stop and the Home Depot, there really isn't a lot going on in this area of LA. Although the same could be said about the Toy and Biscuit Company Lofts that seem to be doing exceedingly well despite that after you leave the film set street they are on your likely to get mugged.
Did the search for you:
Fuller Lofts now renames Alta Lofts
Looks like gone with mixed-income community and in with trust fund artists. Just what LA needs.
I'd argue that the lower five floors are more interesting than the top two...
yes citizen the top two are a bit 2nd year student project, imho...
It is a little like a spaceship landed on top of the building. Given that it was also originally designed as a mixed-income community the clear division between the two styles is a little disconcerting given that it clearly is not mixed. It would have been nicer to see some of the "design moves" for lack of a better term, played through the rest of the structure.
Agreed citizen.
The rehab of industrial space vs a designer-condo. .._. .._ _._. _._ you make an interesting point about the stylistic differences literally symbolizing/marking the class differences.
Stylistic conformity as class unifier?
Could those top two be additions? Or are they original with a (supposedly) hip wrapping? It's tough to tell....
thanks for the replies guys. It does have a weird spaceship hat on the top 2 floors.
$320/ sf starting price? Hmm. Not crazy high but maybe above what that area can handle now.
And there is I think a parking structure next to it. That contains all the parking for the building?
the drama continues.
I think at this point this project is a lost cause.
The city should just use its power of eminent domain and take it, finish it and resell it.
I'm thinking that SCI_Arc should invest in the potential and move. They no longer fit in the current building and have been all but run out by the gentrification in the area. There seems to be room for expansion here in adjacent lots and they wouldn't be locked into a historically preserved building anymore. Proximity to Gold Line and Home Depot would be nice benefits. Also affordable housing along the Gold Line would make up for lack of dorm rooms.
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