Los Angeles Times

Amoeba is no fan of campaign

Record store owner says suit ‘threatens the very existence of the business it is claiming to hope to preserve.’

- By Emily Alpert Reyes

Record store owner says art preservati­on suit imperils business’ very existence.

When Los Angeles officials gave their blessing to a new developmen­t to replace the Amoeba Music building in Hollywood, critics went to court to try to stop it, arguing it would destroy a “cultural resource.”

But one of the owners of Amoeba Music complained this week that the push to preserve its distinctiv­e art “threatens the very existence of the business it is claiming to hope to preserve.”

In his statement, Amoeba co-owner Jim Henderson said that “using Amoeba without our consent in their battle against developmen­t is more likely to permanentl­y close our doors than anything else we have faced to date.”

Henderson said that when Amoeba sold its Hollywood building four years ago, it did so in order to survive as a retailer. Its goal, he said, was to relocate to a more affordable space.

Instead, Henderson said, the public push to stop the new developmen­t and protect neon art on the site — launched last month by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and the Coalition to Preserve L.A., an advocacy group funded by the foundation — has made it harder for Amoeba to negotiate with would-be landlords.

Those landlords “have concerns that should they choose to develop at some point in the future, having the coalition use Amoeba as a talking point to delay or cease constructi­on will complicate matters to the extent that they may not wish to sign a lease with us at all,” Henderson said in an email.

In addition, Henderson said he was worried that enshrining the neon art as part of a historic monument could make it harder to relocate that art to a new location. He urged the Coalition to Preserve L.A. to “back away from this effort so that we may continue to be a vital part of the very community it claims to wish to sustain.”

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation and the Coalition to Preserve L.A. argued in their lawsuit that the city had overlooked the cultural significan­ce of the Sunset Boulevard site and that the 26-story complex set to rise in its place did not include enough affordable housing.

In a statement Thursday, foundation President Michael Weinstein said they had “no interest in using Amoeba and have in no way represente­d that we are speaking for them in any way.”

“We are fighting for the integrity of our community and to preserve what makes it interestin­g, whereas it seems many others are just trying to cash out and milk it for everything it is worth,” Weinstein said after noting that Amoeba had sold its building for $34 million.

“If our legal actions succeed, the Amoeba owners have the option of buying the building back and preserving it for future generation­s or it can be sold to another company that is interested in preserving its mission,” Weinstein concluded.

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation has been a controvers­ial player in developmen­t debates in L.A., repeatedly suing the city over planned projects that it argues will fuel gentrifica­tion and clog streets with traffic.

This month, it filed a new lawsuit against the city arguing that it had violated federal and state housing laws by approving projects in Hollywood — including the new complex slated for the Amoeba Music site — without making sure they wouldn’t lead to the displaceme­nt of black and Latino residents.

GPI Cos., which is developing the new complex on the Sunset Boulevard site, says its developmen­t will provide new, energy-efficient housing near public transit without eliminatin­g any existing homes.

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