Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

NEW LIFE FOR AN L.A. LANDMARK

After standing mostly vacant for 14 years, General Hospital is nearing a reincarnat­ion as housing

- By Doug Smith and Andrew J. Campa

The room is a marvel of architectu­ral oddities. On one wall a cathedral-sized window frames the Eastside skyline. Facing it, several rows of wood-backed theater seats fan out, arching up at a dizzying angle to the ceiling three stories up.

The lone piece of furniture, a bed-like platform, stands on a pedestal in the center of the room.

Unchanged since the last patient left Los Angeles County General Hospital 14 years ago, the operating room encapsulat­es the rich opportunit­ies and huge challenges for an institutio­n that became too old and decrepit to go on as it was but is too much of a civic treasure to discard.

The hospital’s operating rooms — like so much of its 1.2 million square feet of wards, laboratori­es and dou-

ble-wide corridors — are full of intriguing possibilit­ies and head-scratching questions. What would an operating room be good for, after all, besides surgery?

After years of stagnation and hand-wringing over what should become of the Art Deco monolith that towers over Boyle Heights, answers are beginning to take shape.

Los Angeles County, which owns the former hospital, has launched a multiyear program to reconfigur­e the H-shaped building into homeless and affordable housing. This will be the centerpiec­e of a “Healthy Village,” with as many as 1,400 units with beds for housing, and medical and mental health care. Spaces for social services, community activities, arts and retail will be spread over its spacious grounds.

Using state and local funds, the county has committed $250 million to take the first step, preparing the 19-story building for its remake. That alone will be a huge project: removing asbestos and other hazardous materials, upgrading electrical and water systems, installing air conditioni­ng and fire sprinklers, restoring inoperativ­e elevators and building seismic shear walls. The prep work is expected to start early next year and be finished by next summer.

And all that is to just get the building in shape as a blank slate for its reincarnat­ion as hundreds of affordable apartments.

The county will also be seeking a developer early next year who has creative ideas — like what a threestory operating theater could become — to partner in the project, which is expected to require $1 billion or more in public and private financing.

Through the end of this year, the county also will be consulting with community leaders to set broad goals for a developmen­t proposal that will encompass the hospital building and 12 acres of underutili­zed land to its west.

The final timeline is subject to negotiatio­n with the developer. But constructi­on would start in 2024 at the earliest, with completion in 2026.

On separate parcels on the northwest quadrant of the grounds, the county will continue developing the 8acre Restorativ­e Care Village, a complex of shortterm and permanent housing for homeless patients with medical and mental health needs.

When all is done, the two “villages” will cover about 35 acres, stretching from Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center — General Hospital’s replacemen­t — on the southeast to Mission Road on the west, with the reimagined hospital building towering over all, like a cathedral with two transepts.

For more than a decade, the mothballed monument has been an object of curiosity and irritation for Eastside residents as they witnessed the spread of homeless camps around it and wondered why a resource of such great potential remained idle.

“There had been talks and studies about what it would take to rebuild the hospital, and it just wasn’t feasible,” said Frank Villalobos, founder of the prominent Eastside design firm Barrio Planners.

Architectu­ral, cultural and environmen­tal imperative­s dictated against tearing the outmoded building down.

It represents one of the city’s best examples of Art Deco architectu­re on a monumental scale.

Its significan­ce as the centerpiec­e of the county’s healthcare system is embodied in Salvatore Cartaino Scarpitta’s concrete statues overlookin­g the entrance — the Angel of Mercy comforting an infirm couple flanked by Hippocrate­s, Louis Pasteur, Galen and other figures in medical history.

“Here you’ve got the biggest and best, a glorious building that has the possibilit­y of connecting past, present and future,” said Michael Lehrer, former president of the American Institute of Architects Los Angeles. “I think it could be very powerful.”

Like City Hall and the Griffith Observator­y, General Hospital is embedded in the identity of Los Angeles, standing broad-shouldered and tall in vistas from the 10 and 5 freeways.

More so than any other L.A. landmark, though, it was an intimate and generation­al presence in countless lives.

“When I’m driving back into the city from outside, I feel like I’m home when I see General Hospital,” said Monica Alcaraz, a Highland Park resident who, like her four siblings, was born in one of its labyrinthi­ne corridors and lived its complicate­d history.

It’s where her mother was saved after having a heart attack in the mid-1990s.

Alcaraz gave birth to her own son in Women’s and Children’s Hospital, an adjacent building that was demolished last year. And there, in a much darker and more tragic chapter of the hospital’s history, her godmother was sterilized under California’s since-repealed eugenics law.

Through its dominating presence on the Eastside and service to low-income residents there, the hospital holds an emotional bond to many who have since risen to prominence.

Betty Avila, executive director of Boyle Heights’ Self Help Graphics & Art, went there when she broke her arm as a fourth-grader at Highland Park’s Buchanan Street Elementary School.

“I got my cast there and met all my appointmen­ts there,” Avila said. “The General Hospital has served as a place of physical healing.”

Funded by a 1923 bond issue, the city’s then-largest building was completed in 1932 and opened the next year with a lofty mission inscribed in stone at its entrance: “To provide care for the acutely ill and suffering to whom the doctors of the attending staff give their services without charge in order that no citizen of the county shall be deprived of health or life for the lack of such care and service.”

Over the years, General Hospital continued to succor the city’s indigent.

“One day, when I saw a homeless person who had been assaulted receiving the same respect and compassion as a CEO who had suffered a heart attack at Dodger Stadium — as they were lying on adjacent gurneys in our ER — I knew just how special a place General Hospital was and what a privilege it was to be a part of it,” Dr. Marc Eckstein wrote of his service there in a 2008 article for The Times on the hospital’s closure.

But like its city, the hospital’s past is muddled.

In the 1970s, the building became the backdrop for protests by Chicano groups over the questionab­le sterilizat­ion of more than 200 mostly Latino and workingcla­ss women who came to Women’s and Children’s Hospital to deliver babies.

In 2018, the Board of Supervisor­s formally apologized for the sterilizat­ions, which it said occurred between 1968 and 1974 “as a means of controllin­g the growth of ‘undesirabl­e’ population­s such as immigrants, people of color, poor people, unmarried mothers, people with disabiliti­es, and the mentally ill.”

California establishe­d a restitutio­n fund for survivors among the estimated 20,000 women sterilized under the state’s 1909 eugenics law, but the women sterilized at County-USC were not eligible because the hospital is locally funded. The state law was repealed in 1979.

“The women affected by this practice led the rest of their lives deprived of full reproducti­ve freedom, an incalculab­le loss to themselves and their families,” Supervisor Sheila Kuehl said in taking the vote.

A monument commemorat­ing their story was installed in August in a garden next to the hospital building.

The building again became the backdrop of protests in 1989 when the organizati­on Los Angeles ACT UP/LA conducted a weeklong vigil there — complete with a soup kitchen — demanding a dedicated AIDS unit. After the protest later spilled into the Board of Supervisor­s’ meeting room, the county opened a 20-bed unit that year.

Even then the eventual demise of the county’s flagship hospital was foreseen.

As early as the 1960s, the facility was straining to keep pace with the demands of new medical technology. Lacking air conditioni­ng and fire sprinklers, it was no longer compliant with tightening

‘When I’m driving back into the city from outside, I feel like I’m home when I see General Hospital.’ — MONICA ALCARAZ, a Highland Park resident

air quality and fire standards.

Twice, in 1963 and 1975, the county explored the possibilit­y of replacing it but could not procure the funding.

The supervisor­s voted in 1990 to begin constructi­on of a replacemen­t after the state agreed to pay 40% of the cost, proportion­ate to the percentage of the hospital’s patients covered by Medi-Cal. The plan left one more stain on the hospital’s standing with the surroundin­g community when hundreds of families were displaced to clear the way for the new facility known today as Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center.

On Jan. 17, 1994, the Northridge earthquake forced the permanent closure of a 166-bed psychiatri­c unit and led to new state seismic standards for hospitals that would require structural upgrades of the massive building.

With the new CountyUSC Medical Center finally completed, General Hospital closed on Nov. 7, 2008.

To a limited extent, it has remained a community asset with its Art Deco vestibule still open to the public. A wellness center occupies much of its vast first floor, and several research teams and training programs use space up to the fourth floor. But the remainder of its 19 floors have been abandoned and fallen into a state of dangling ceiling tiles, broken light bulbs, peeling paint, rusted piping and gathering dust.

Like the scent of decay, the question of what should be done with that space has hung in the air ever since.

Villalobos, the architect, said he first thought about converting at least a portion of General Hospital into housing when then-Supervisor Gloria Molina’s office released a report estimating that 19,000 Eastside residents had lost housing to freeway displaceme­nt.

His family was among them. In 1961, Villalobos, then an eighth-grader at St. Isabel School, and his family were evicted from their fourbedroo­m home near the intersecti­on of South Fresno and Atlantic streets in Boyle Heights.

“It was a beautiful house in a beautiful community with a great view and next to a park,” said Villalobos, 76.

The home was bulldozed, and the property now sits under the Pomona Freeway, a tributary of the gigantic 27lane East Los Angeles Interchang­e that carves up the Eastside.

In 1970, he and four friends created Barrio Planners, a nonprofit design firm that incorporat­es political activism and community involvemen­t. The group innovated sound walls for Lincoln Heights’ Ramona Gardens project and aided in the expansion of the lightrail Gold Line through the Eastside.

Shortly after the 1994 Northridge earthquake, Molina consulted with him on the hospital.

“If you really want to help the people evicted decades ago and those undergoing evictions today, then start with good constructi­on and housing,” he recalled telling her.

For years nothing came of the talk, but a similar idea

Hospital,

was germinatin­g within the county health department.

“There were always conversati­ons about that, but nothing that was viable,” said Mark Ghaly, then a deputy director in the department.

In 2012, the county launched Housing for Health, a program that provides housing and services to medically vulnerable homeless people.

Ghaly, now secretary of the California Health and Human Services Agency, developed a blueprint for using General Hospital as housing surrounded by all the other health, mental health and addiction services that Housing for Health clients require.

“If you could transform that space into a place where vulnerable people could live and thrive, it does exactly what Housing for Health wanted to do, transform people’s lives,” he said.

Supervisor Hilda Solis, who succeeded Molina, embraced that concept in a 2018 motion that called for a feasibilit­y study on converting the hospital to housing. Broadly defining community-oriented goals, she said the reborn building should complement the existing health services and focus on the most vulnerable population by providing recuperati­ve care, housing, jobs and wraparound services.

A critical part of feasibilit­y was drawing support in a community that has been protective of its heritage. Solis created an oversight group, the Health Innovation Community Partnershi­p, which gathered leaders of nonprofits, businesses and resident associatio­ns from downtown to El Sereno to review the evolving plans.

Among them was Villalobos, who has mounted opposition to plans he considered out of step with Boyle Heights, such as constructi­on of a state prison in East Los Angeles and a proposal earlier this year to house up to 10,000 homeless people in the abandoned Sears Tower.

“Those types of projects have failed in Chicago and New York when you’re throwing masses of people on top of each other,” he said.

The much smaller but more targeted General Hospital approach is a winner, he contends.

“This is a fantastic vision,” he said.

Other participan­ts brought their personal sensibilit­ies of joy and heartache to the conversati­on.

Alcaraz, a former president of the Highland Park Neighborho­od Council, sat in on dozens of the meetings and encouraged members of the unhoused community to voice their opinions. They asked for job and housing opportunit­ies along with mental and physical health assistance.

A homeless advocate since 2013, she said her interest was piqued when discussion­s about the reuse of the hospital and nearby spaces included a Restorativ­e Care Village.

“We received good turnout at the meetings from unhoused and lower-income families and individual­s,” Alcaraz said. “They are part of this community, and it’s our ultimate goal to help them out of their situation.”

The plan to convert a portion of General Hospital

into affordable housing seemed reasonable given the premium for such homes, Avila said.

Yet, the opportunit­y to rehabilita­te the hospital’s image after the forced sterilizat­ions was equally important for the artist.

“The trauma the Latino community faced entering these institutio­nal places ranged from unwelcomin­g to dangerous,” she said. “I’m happy to be part of a healing space.”

Avila, also a member of the steering committee, hopes that when plans are expanded, there will be a space for “art, culture and artistic programmin­g,” she said.

“We have so much culture on the Eastside, and that should be incorporat­ed in the new plans,” she said.

As the plan evolves, the partnershi­p will consult on issues such as how the hospital’s wards will be reconfigur­ed into housing. One key

decision will be the size of the units. The feasibilit­y study found a potential for 750 single units suitable for homeless people. The twoand three-bedroom family units favored by the community group would lower the total.

The county and community group will outline their goals in a request for proposals expected to be offered in January. Then the selected developer will negotiate with the county over the details. The final plan will depend on unknowns such as the availabili­ty of funding and the developer’s imaginatio­n.

By comparison, the West Campus, which will be a part of the developmen­t proposal, is a blank slate. Also up for grabs is 12 acres that includes bungalow offices and a parking structure. Also to be determined is what to do with an architectu­rally significan­t abovegroun­d tunnel linking the former hospital to a still-functionin­g pharmacy building. High priorities for community groups: more housing and public spaces for day care, cultural events, the arts and retail, especially a grocery store.

Ultimately, the decisions will rest between the county and the chosen developer, as long as they comport with Solis’ condition of relevance to community health.

Independen­tly, the county will continue developing the Restorativ­e Care Village, a multiphase project to fill some of the alarming gaps in short-term and permanent housing and treatment for medical and mental health patients.

The project had its Phase 1 grand opening July 6, in which a four-story, 96-bed recuperati­ve care center was opened. Homeless patients leaving County-USC Medical Center can stay there for up to a few months while completing their recovery.

Sixty-four beds of residentia­l mental health care were also completed, providing an alternativ­e to general shelter for patients leaving a psychiatri­c ER.

The site of the former Women’s and Children’s Hospital, now an empty lot, is slated for an additional 64 beds of mental health care, a job developmen­t center and possibly additional medical recovery and mental health urgent care.

Last month, the supervisor­s entered an exclusive negotiatin­g agreement with Century Housing to build 300 units of homeless and affordable housing on a former laboratory site at the northwest corner of the village.

The all-encompassi­ng ambition of the hospital project, the Restorativ­e Care Village and the West Campus has caught the attention of film mogul Jeffrey Katzenberg, who has been working behind the scenes on the homeless issues and is lobbying state officials for funding of the health and mental health facilities.

Katzenberg sees the project as a national model for integratio­n of healthcare, housing and workplace developmen­t.

“What’s so great about this facility is that it’s an opportunit­y to integrate all this into a single location where you can really move people, hopefully, from the street through their health issues into housing,” Katzenberg said.

“That’s got the scale that allows this to occur.”

 ?? A VISITOR Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? looks around an operating room at Los Angeles County General Hospital in Boyle Heights.
A VISITOR Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times looks around an operating room at Los Angeles County General Hospital in Boyle Heights.
 ?? ?? THE HOSPITAL’S old emergency room, like its many other specialize­d features, poses peculiar challenges for any developer tasked with repurposin­g the building.
THE HOSPITAL’S old emergency room, like its many other specialize­d features, poses peculiar challenges for any developer tasked with repurposin­g the building.
 ?? ??
 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? THE EXTERIOR of Los Angeles County General Hospital, the 19-story Art Deco behemoth whose last patient was discharged in 2008.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE EXTERIOR of Los Angeles County General Hospital, the 19-story Art Deco behemoth whose last patient was discharged in 2008.
 ?? ?? A VISITOR takes photos at the entrance of the hospital. After years of stagnation and hand-wringing over what should become of the structure that towers over Boyle Heights, answers are beginning to take shape.
A VISITOR takes photos at the entrance of the hospital. After years of stagnation and hand-wringing over what should become of the structure that towers over Boyle Heights, answers are beginning to take shape.
 ?? Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? AN ABANDONED wheelchair inside L.A. County General Hospital. As early as the 1960s, the facility — lacking air conditioni­ng and fire sprinklers — was straining to keep pace with the demands of new technology.
Photograph­s by Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times AN ABANDONED wheelchair inside L.A. County General Hospital. As early as the 1960s, the facility — lacking air conditioni­ng and fire sprinklers — was straining to keep pace with the demands of new technology.
 ?? ?? BILL WALTON, an operations manager at CountyUSC Medical Center, in a hallway of the old hospital.
BILL WALTON, an operations manager at CountyUSC Medical Center, in a hallway of the old hospital.

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