According to a UCLA study, Black residents in Altadena were more likely to have their homes damaged or destroyed by the Eaton ...
The Altadena fire wiped out much of a historic Black enclave in this picturesque town in the San Gabriel Valley.
Community members to put their tech skills and cameras to work, creating an online map of about 15,000 homes in the Eaton ...
But a drive through the charred neighborhoods around Altadena shows that the fires ... Some now fear the most destructive fires in California’s history have altered that for good.
Women in Film's Kirsten Schaeffer invites TheWrap to Altadena one week later, where neighborhoods are left in ash from the wildfires.
Fast forward to now, the aftermath of a catastrophic January day in 2025, when extreme wind fueled the hellish Eaton fire ...
The website features a map of about 15,000 homes in the Eaton Fire zone and allows users to click through to current photos of those ... becoming part of Altadena's historic record.
lies the town of Altadena, which was decimated by the Eaton Fire. Among the thousands of structures burnt down were a number of historic buildings used in movies and TV series. As the area ...
Many of the small businesses along Lake Avenue and Mariposa Street have burned to the ground. How many will reopen?
The destruction caused by the Eaton Fire in Los Angeles County, which has decimated more than 14,117 acres in the last week, ...
(Photo by Keith Durflinger ... in the area and needed to legally reside within city limits, according to Altadena Historical Society. These annexation efforts continued until at least 1984 ...