The following are
a series of articles that appeared in the Los Angeles Times on
the day (May 24, 1989) after the final Pan Pacific fire, but,
as they say in the newsroom, the news....
See photos here of the fire,
http://www.onlyolivia.com/visual/xanadu/building.html
Fire
Destroys Pan Pacific Auditorium
By George
Stien and Niesom Himmel, Times Staff Writers
A suspicious fire Wednesday distroyed Los Angeles' Pan Pacific
Auditorium, a 54-year-old landmark that for decades served as
one of the city's major sports and entertainment centers and
commended a worldwide reputation for it's distinctive architecture.
"I think it could be arson," said Assistant Fire Chief
Tony Ennis.
"We got inside for a quick look, but we couldn't tell anything.".
said Capt. Gary Seidel of the Fire Dept.'s arson squad. "Everything
was all wet. It well be a couple of days before we know the cause."
Investigators said late Wednesday that they want to question
a man arrived at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's emergency room
suffering from smoke inhalation.
"Right now, we just want to talk to him in regards to what
he observed at the time of the fire" said Seidel.
The fire began shortly after 7 p.m. At times, flames from the
dilapidated, boarded-up auditorium at 7600 Beverly Blvd. shot
up to 200 feet into the night sky and could be seen from as far
away as the Civic Center and the Silver Lake area.
Streets were closed for four blocks in each direction from the
blaze, but spectators by the hundreds walked to the scene, just
east of CBS' Television City, and watched flames write the final
chapter in the auditorium's uncertain recent history.
"We have lost a monument here," said Stanley Treitel,
head of a community group working to revitalize the Fairfax district.
He said the county was moving toward rehabilitating the building
and preserving the facade.
The spectacle created a tremendous traffic jam. "People
were still coming home from work, and the streets were gridlocked"
said Carol Botney, 27. "People were getting out of their
cars, and some were fighting. With the huge smoke cloud, it looked
like a scene after they dropped the bomb."
The fire started in the building's southwest corner, Ennis said.
Two firefighting task forces arrived almost immediately, one
going inside and another going to the roof to open it for ventilation,
he said.
"Our first fire units in found a man either just in or just
out of the building when they arrived," said Fire Marshall
Grieg Drummond. "He appeared to have suffered slight burns,
and they took him to the rescue ambulance for treatment. But
he bailed out and disappeared into the crowd."
Officials believe this was the same man who later appeared at
Cedars. No other injuries were reported.
The smoke inhalation victim left the hospital before he was treated,
Seidel said, but a witness jotted down his license plate number.
Arson investigators went to an undisclosed address where the
car's registered owner lives. The man had not arrived by 11 p.m.,
Seidel said.
Seidel said the man was not considered a suspect. He said preliminary
indications were that the man was a passer-by who tried to help
put out the fire.
Firefighters said it was virtually impossible to fight the fire
from outside because the fire's "seat", or point of
origin, was inside.
"If you can't get to the seat of the fire, You'll never
put it out." said firefighter Roy Rodrigues, a member of
the first company to arrive at the scene. "We're going to
let it go, then we're going to put it out."
Within the hour, the buildings east wall and the roof had collapsed.
Witnesses said they heard what sounded like two large explosions
before the roof was engulfed in flames.
John Ewing, 48, a vice president of a heating and air conditioning
firm, said he saw at least 10 firefighters "up on the roof
cutting holes. The flames came through the holes. You could see
them backing away."
Officials said they ordered firefighters off the roof when it
came evident that they could not "stay ahead of the flames."
Fire Capt. Keith Massey expressed disappointment in the ability
to check the blaze. "We've been out here ever month for
the last 15 years, practicing how to fight this fire." he
said.
Officials said the fire traveled along the roof very quickly.
Ten minutes after the firefighters left the roof, part of it
collapsed.
"It sounded like a big tree falling, crackling noises at
first and then a big crash," said Scott Vincent, 29, of
the roof's collapse. "Standing across the street, you can
feel the heat."
Martin Echivibel said he first "saw the smoke from Venice,
then from Culver City. I decided to come watch. The flames were
big. Watching from Culver City, it looked so close."
At the fire's peek, more than 200 firefighters from 30 companies-some
from as far away as the San Fernando Valley-battled the flame.
As firefighters contained the flames, all that was left standing
were three charred walls and the distinctive fin-shaped pylons
at the entrance. The pylons began to collapse about an hour later.
The fire was stubborn. By 10 p.m., it was finally controlled,
but the damage was done. Only one pylon remained standing, and
it fell about 15 minutes later.
Opened in 1935, the once-magnificent auditorium was an early
home to the Ice Capades, car shows, circuses, conventions, political
gatherings, concerts and hockey and basketball games.
Considered a prime example of the short-lived architectural style
called Streamline Modern-an expression of America's romance with
machines and transportation-the auditorium has stood empty since
1972.
Like Debut
in 1935, the Pan's Final Was a Spectacle
By ESTHER
SCHRADER and PATT MORRISON, Times Staff Writers
The Pan left the world the way it came in-ass a media event,
and a good show to the last.
Fifty-four years and one week after the Pan opened to a blast
of Boy Scouts bugles, the twilight crowds in the Fairfax District
strolled over on Wednesday evening to watch the old auditorium
die in the wine of Fire Department sirens.
People walking dogs, young couples in a clinch, all stood watching.
Film students, a good dozen at least, ran toward the flames,
rolling tape, trailing wires, marveling at the spectacle. High-school-age
Talmudic scholars from Yeshiva school abandoned their books to
watch, their black coats flapping as they ran down the street.
"People are tripping up and down the street," said
Joel Deutesh, 45, who lives a block away. "This is all spectating.
There's never any population out on the streets in this area
this time of night. This is the most festive evening we can remember,
actually."
Much of the city shared the spectacle from where they were. By
sunset, the vast smudges of smoke spread out, obscuring the Hollywood
Hills, and at the fire scene, spectators could only occasionally
glimpse the four distinctive curved towers of the Pan's apple-green
facade. By 10 a.m., the last of them tipped over in a gush off
flames and sparks, green and black smoke.
"It's very sad," said Sarah Housepeters, 45, who stood
watching and holding her daughter Lily, 5,. "It's a remnant
of history, part of a bit of Los Angeles is gone. It's a terrible
loss."
For much of her life, Nancy Heilbron, 61, has lived nearby. "It's
like losing a friend that you loved in a way, if you can love
a building like a friend...it's a part of my life that's gone."
She used the Pan to navigate by. "We'd say, 'You know where
the Pan Pacific Auditorium is?'...Now we'll have to sat CBS,
I guess."
It was fruitless for the Fire Department to warn people away,
the flames drew them to the place-for some, for the first and
last time.
David Logan, 25, and, Brandi Machapo, 21, were both dressed in
black, but only coincidentally. They had never heard of the Pan,
although they live nearby. Machapo, who works at a Melrose boutique,
explained what brought them, "I like fire. The whole tram
thing. It's neat, as long as it's never at my house."
As firefighters trailed long stretches of hose through Pan Pacific
Park, which embraces the auditorium, the baseball and soccer
games went on 200 yards from the fire, after the briefest of
interruptions. The Yeshiva students returned to class. After-dinner
joggers jogged on the running tracks. Up on Beverly, the usual
line of diners waiting for hip Southwestern cuisine at the Authentic
Cafe had something to entertain them as they waited outdoors;
they stood watching the fire fight.
"The sky was a royal blue; all the black smoke going up,"
said John Ewing, waiting for dinner with his wife and two children.
"So spectacular."
Robert DeRoas. 39, was more angry than sentimental: "It's
gotta be arson. It's a political thing. It's common knowledge
that certain people in this city don't want it renovate it."
Psychic reader and adviser Dora Evans, whose shop is a block
away, allowed that she had not foreseen the fire, but "I
felt it was done accidentally by a crew of people....they didn't
mean for it to get so big."
Before the towers had even fallen, Kathleen Rogers had organized
Friends of the Pan Pacific Auditorium to force officials to rebuild.
"We've just seen too much distruction of too meny historic
buildings in this area. It's criminal what's going on in this
city. We're just going to have a row of banks down Wilshire Boulevard
and Beverly Boulevard."
The Pan's history, tarnished by brushes with demolition and years
of neglect, began in May 1935: Ten thousand people turned out
of the auditorium's debut, waiting behind a wire barricade for
hours before a fanfare of Boy Scouts bugles announced the grand
moment has arrived. The first show to play the auditorium was
a 16-day exposition honoring "the Great American Home."
Journalists at the time described the new facility in breathless
tones: "The auditorium, huge as it is, has architectural
dignity....It is a permanent structure and will be used for further
expositions and conventions."
For 54 years. the permanence held.
Flames
Spell an End to Last Word in Art Deco
By PATT
MORRISON, Times Staff Writer
The Pan Pacific Auditorium
had flirted with death for years-death from fire, death from
neglect, death from bureaucratic indifference.
It was not always so.
From the day it opened on May 18, 1935, and for more then 35
years thereafter, the Pan was the one of the biggest gathering
places in Los Angeles, and the last word in Art Deco. It's western
facade, 228 feet long with four upswept fin-shaped towers, was
a magnificent piece of Streamline Moderne that epitomized a 1930's
American enamored of flight, speed and dynamism.
Before the Music Center, the Sport Arena and the Convention Center
ever existed, it was the Pan that embraced in it's cavernous
hall the home and auto shows, the ice hockey games, the Ice Capades
and political rallies from constant rumbling.
In 1936, Leopold Stokowski conducted in it's all-wood auditorium.
Twenty-one years later, Elvis Presley played the Pan just before
he entered the Army, and police reportedly warned him to keep
his act clean.
In 1947, a dozen years after it was built at the cost of $125,000
to host a Depression-era national housing show, the Pan's stockholders-among
them Gen. James Doolittle, orchestra leader Kay Kyser and actors
Walter Pidgeon, Dick Powell and Joan Blondell-sold it for $2.25
million to auto magnate E. L. Cord, whose magnificent cars matched
the Pan's sleek facade for aerodynamic chic.
Ten thousand people showed up in 1945 for the broadcast of the
radio program "Queen For A Day"; only 6,000 could be
seated. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower spoke to more than 20,000 people
at the Pan, a month before the 1952 election that made him President.
For Councilman Zev Yaroslavski, who saw the fire from his home
four blocks away, the blaze swept up pleasant memories. "I
saw my first basketball game here, the Harlem Globetrotters,
my first indoor tennis match, my first ice skating contest."
"There are probably several hundred thousand people in Los
Angeles County who grew up with this as the main indoor arena."
By 1972, a year after the Los Angeles Convention Center opened,
the Pan was closed, left behind as an outmoded shell. Behind
the glorious facade was a less-distinctive and less-than-salable
100,000 square feet of space.
By 1978, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places,
which did not seem to impress the vandals and drifters who hacked
it, painted it, set it on fire once or twice. Around Los Angeles,
around the county, the Pan was more talked about than tended.
Architectural historians lauded it, and managed to hold off the
wrecking ball, but in the end, the Pan was a place many people
talked about but few really did anything about it.
Endless proposals came and went. The Pan seemed perpetually on
the brink of being torn down, or perhaps just falling apart on
it's own.
As late as November, the Board of Supervisors was still trying
to revive it, voting this time to negotiate with a developer
to put in an ice rink and a theater.
Robert Winter, co-author with David Gebhard of 'Architecture
in Los Angeles", which praised it as "probably the
city's most photographed and painted monument," was in his
office at Occidental Collage in eagle Rock when he saw the far
away smoke.
"What a disaster," he mourned when he learned the source.
The Pan, he said, was "incomparable....Nobody took it seriously
because it was just a plaster facade, but it spoke of the 30's
like nothing else I know."
Above
articles and fire photos (c) Los Angeles Times.
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