The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Wildfire-charred movie ranch to be rebuilt over 2 years

- By Andrew Dalton

AGOURA HILLS >> Standing amid the charred foundation­s and burned-out movie sets of Paramount Ranch, officials from the National Park Service said Friday that they plan to rebuild and reopen the site that holds decades of movie history and still hosts a steady stream of Hollywood production­s within the next two years.

Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area Superinten­dent David Szymanski announced the plan Friday as he guided reporters through the twisted metal and ashes that once made up the ranch’s “Western Town,” most of which burned shortly after a huge wildfire broke out Nov. 8 and swept through the surroundin­g mountains and community, destroying more than 700 homes and other buildings.

“The site is almost a total loss,” Szymanski said. “It’s easy to be somber. But there’s some things that I’m hoping will allow us to be a little bit less somber. We’d like to get Paramount Ranch rebuilt in the next 24 months.”

A church built for HBO’s “Westworld” and a train depot constructe­d for the 1990s CBS series “Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman,” the two production­s most associated with the site, are all that remain of the structures, backed by the blackened hills of a wildfire that many feared for years.

“We’ve all dreaded it, we’ve tried to prepare, but sometimes the wind just takes over,” said Rory Skei, the chief deputy executive officer of the Santa Monica Mountains Conservanc­y. “We do what we can do.”

Elsewhere on the fire, more residents were allowed Friday to return to homes they fled from days earlier.

Authoritie­s reopened more areas in Los Angeles and Ventura counties. But they kept some locations within the Woolsey Fire zone off-limits because of hazards ranging from burned power poles to compromise­d gas lines and destroyed roadways.

Utility crews worked to remove damaged equipment and bring in replacemen­ts, including numerous power poles.

Although walls of flame and towering columns of smoke were gone, firefighte­rs continue to expand containmen­t lines around the scorched area. Fire commanders said the 153-square-mile (396-square-kilometer) burn area was 78 percent surrounded.

The count of destroyed This Friday file photo shows Paramount Ranch, a frontier western town built as a movie set that appeared in countless movies and TV shows, after it was decimated by the Woolsey fire in Agoura Hills Southern California­ns faced with the loss of lives and homes in a huge wildfire are also grappling with the destructio­n of public lands popular with hikers, horseback riders and mountain bikers. The Woolsey fire has charred more than 83 percent of National Park Service land within the Santa Monica Mountain National Recreation­al Area.

structures reached 713. Another 201 structures were damaged.

Los Angeles County sheriff’s detectives were investigat­ing three deaths. Two adults were found in a gutted car last week, and the remains of a person were found Wednesday in the rubble of a home that had burned to the ground.

At the Paramount Ranch, structures that served as barns, hotels, saloons and barbershop­s for decades of movies and TV shows are gone. Workers will salvage what they can and then work to rebuild.

The site began as a set for Paramount Pictures in the 1920s and was taken over by the National Park Service in 1980. It got a major restoratio­n in 1985, with the park service trying to maintain as much as it could from the original

buildings. Corrugated tin roofs on many of them still dated to the 1920s. Now those roofs lie burned and twisted on the ground like pieces of a crashed plane.

Western Town specifical­ly was built for TV production­s in the 1950s and was used for such westerns as “The Cisco Kid” and “Dick Powell’s Zane Grey Theatre.”

But the site lent itself to production­s of all kinds.

“American Sniper,” the 2014 film starring Bradley Cooper, was also partly filmed there, as was 2006’s “The Lake House,” starring Sandra Bullock and Keanu Reeves.

“It could be adapted for anything,” Szymanski said.

It remained to be seen how much the ranch being out of commission would affect Hollywood production­s.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE

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