Los Angeles Times

South L.A. fire burns through several shops

The extent and cause of the fast-moving overnight blaze were not immediatel­y clear.

- By Ruben Vives, Angel Jennings and Hailey Branson-Potts ruben.vives@latimes.com Twitter: LATvives angel.jennings @latimes.com Twitter: @AngelJenni­ngs hailey.branson @latimes.com Twitter: @haileybran­son Times staff writer Veronica Rocha contribute­d to thi

A fast-moving fire tore through a block of industrial buildings in South Los Angeles early Wednesday, destroying several businesses and putting nearby residents on edge.

The three-alarm fire started just after 1 a.m. inside a business in the 5800 block of South Hooper Avenue in unincorpor­ated Florence-Firestone, authoritie­s said. It took 250 firefighte­rs to knock down the blaze.

Investigat­ors were still combing through the rubble Wednesday afternoon to determine the cause of the fire and the extent of the damage, said Chris Reade, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Fire Department. He said several businesses, all physically connected, were destroyed, including a welding shop, a furniture reupholste­ry business and a small market.

“We’re trying to determine how many units were involved,” Reade said. “It’s hard to tell where one building ends and one begins. We’re trying to find out what is what and what belongs to who.”

Several people who worked in the area told The Times that people were living in one of the industrial buildings that burned.

By midmorning Wednesday, Marco Bautista, 38, sat in an empty parking lot across from a big pile of blackened, twisted metal. The rubble used to be a commercial building with several businesses inside, including his bedding and furniture store, Westside Feather & Down. It was a total loss.

At 2 a.m., Bautista got a call from another business owner and rushed to his store. He’d been working in the area for 10 years and had been in the process of getting insurance for his store. But it was too late.

“It’s one of those unfortunat­e things,” he said. “All I can do now is move forward.”

Pedro Gutierrez and his wife, Francisca Johnson, stood at the corner of 58th Place and Hooper Avenue staring at the smoldering wreckage of their business, a sofa and mattress shop called Sofa Works.

“It’s gone now,” Johnson said as her husband spoke to an insurance company over the phone. “The machinery, the delivery trucks and the inventory: gone.”

Gutierrez, 52, started the business from his home in the mid-1990s, repairing a sofa frame he found on the street and reselling it. He expanded the business and had been working at 58th Place since 2001.

Johnson said that just a day earlier she and her husband were rushing to complete an order worth $20,000. It was all lost.

The couple was sleeping when they got an earlymorni­ng call from a bar near their business.

“They told us the business was on fire,” Johnson said. “My husband didn’t believe it. I didn’t believe it.”

The only good news for the couple, Johnson said, was that their guard dogs, Gato and Shakira, survived.

They were inside the business when the fire began, but firefighte­rs rescued them.

Roscoe Pyles, 86, woke up to the blare of firetrucks across the street from his 58th Street home. When he looked out the kitchen window, flames from the massive fire had turned the night sky into an orange glow.

He eyed the pallets stacked up at the factory by his home and prayed the fire didn’t jump the street.

Pyles, a retired Lockheed Martin structural mechanic, has lived in a tidy white house in the neighborho­od since 1944. There have always been warehouses and homes in close proximity, which he called a recipe for disaster.

“It’s a mess,” Pyles said. “I don’t think they should have pallets near residences. It’s a fire hazard. It’s nothing but wood.”

On 58th Street, Rogelio Castillo, 56, said a tenant living in a guesthouse behind his home came and knocked on his door around 2 a.m. to warn him about the fire.

“The whole block came out to look,” Castillo said. “We were worried because we didn’t want embers f lying into our homes.”

Los Angeles City Councilman Curren Price said “crazy zoning” had allowed the industrial buildings to exist alongside family homes. Price surveyed the damage to businesses along a stretch of Slauson Avenue on Wednesday morning.

“It’s a real tragedy,” he said. “These are mom-andpop shops.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Irfan Khan
Los Angeles Times ?? IT TOOK 250 firefighte­rs to knock down the three-alarm fire, which started after 1 a.m. Wednesday in a partially residentia­l area. “All I can do now is move forward,” said the owner of a business that wasn’t insured.
Photograph­s by Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times IT TOOK 250 firefighte­rs to knock down the three-alarm fire, which started after 1 a.m. Wednesday in a partially residentia­l area. “All I can do now is move forward,” said the owner of a business that wasn’t insured.
 ??  ?? “IT’S GONE NOW,” said Francisca Johnson, with son Manuel Rodriguez, of the family business, Sofa Works. Firefighte­rs saved their dogs, Gato and Shakira.
“IT’S GONE NOW,” said Francisca Johnson, with son Manuel Rodriguez, of the family business, Sofa Works. Firefighte­rs saved their dogs, Gato and Shakira.

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