Skid Row is the New Arts District in Downtown LA

Skid Row Arts Festival This Week, Events District and Bike Registration

Valentine Event Space 4th Street Downtown

Previously, the L.A. Loft Blog has called Lincoln Heights “the new Arts District,” and today we’re calling Skid Row the new Arts District as well.  Let’s compare the three evolving neighborhoods and take a look at where they are today, where they’ve been and where they’re headed. #dtla #skidrow #arts

Blight and struggle are the root of much creativity, while suffering and toil are often considered to be linked to salvation and redemption. While the Arts District of Downtown L.A. is now one of the most expensive real estate neighborhoods on planet, with average selling prices approaching $900,000, the Arts District was forged through the challenges of LA’s neglectful urban blight period from the 1970s through 2000.

Arts District Downtown Los Angeles Lofts & Condos For Sale

Artists see beauty in run-down buildings and neighborhoods, especially if the buildings were from creative beginnings with industrial and historic architecture. As industrial neighborhood rents stagnated for decades, thousands of artists were able to take advantage of the economic large spaces where they could create oversized works with relatively cheap production costs. Today that has changed.  Due to gentrification of the once-affordable loft neighborhood, most struggling artists have been forced to live in Skid Row or the desert areas. Some successful or lucky artists have been able to move to places like the Alta Lofts in Lincoln Heights, with nicer, larger and cheaper lofts for sale.

Festival for All Skid Row Artists
Festival for All Skid Row Artists

Take your broken heart, turn it into art. Today, the most economical (and blighted) place for artists to live in urban L.A. is Skid Row in the middle of Downtown Los Angeles.  While it’s best known as Southern California’s capital of poverty and homelessness, the city center provides the economy and challenges that launch and foster a wealth of creativity.

Festival for All Skid Row Artists Nov 3-4, 2018

Created by the Los Angeles Poverty Department, the 9th annual Festival for All Skid Row Artists has become one of the most anticipated grassroots cultural events in the vibrant artistic community.  It’s an occasion to celebrate and preserve the rich artistic heritage of Skid Row.

Since 2010, every year on the 3rd weekend of October (normally in Gladys Park in Skid Row), the festival encourages neighborhood artists, well-known and soon to be discovered. It will be in San Julian Park this time. The Los Angeles Poverty Department helps by collecting information about the artists, documenting their work and keeping a registry of Skid Row artists, which now numbers more than 700.  #events

Skid Row Arts Festival November 3 & 4, 2018 each day from noon – 4pm at SAN JULIAN PARK, 312 E 5th St. Los Angeles, CA 90013

SKID ROW EVENTS DISTRICT

The best hope for solving the problems of Skid Row requires public and private funds with efforts stemming from a revolutionary idea such changing California laws to create a family-friendly Skid Row Casino District entertainment area that could generate billions required to fully clean up Skid Row and house the bulk of the homeless while creating hundreds of new businesses and many thousands of new jobs.

Valentine Event Space – Cindercone Bar by Artist Josh Beckman

Until that happens, we have smaller steps that are already occurring to beautify and employ city center resources and nearby talents. One example of this re-invention is Valentine, a unique event space for weddings, receptions and productions among bountiful art, verdant gardens and storied historic industrial architecture.

These beautiful events and powerful creations build on Downtown’s energetic history to illustrate today’s exciting potential and to manifest bright future possibilities for the coming new Arts District.

Nearby lofts that are affordable and popular with Loft Blog readers include Little Tokyo Lofts and Santee Village.


PROTECT YOUR BIKE WITH REGISTRY

The Los Angeles Police Department uses Bike Index to aid owners of stolen bicycles to recover their possessions.  The website has helped to reunite more than 5,000 owners with their lost or stolen green mode of transportation.

Bicycles, and bike theft, are growing in popularity in DTLA. To protect your set of two wheels, register it free online at www.bikeindex.org


Affordable Lofts —  Creativity is contagious. Hanging out with artists increases access to creative resources, ideas, motivation and opportunities.  Get a free list of affordable lofts. Fill out the online form:

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What’s Wrong With Downtown Lofts – Special Update #dtla #problems

While all Downtown loft buildings have issues that prospective buyers want to be aware of, the Downtown real estate market is having just a bit of a lull currently due to the relatively high prices as compared to a few years ago. It’s scary for some — an opportunity for others.

Raw lofts and fixers in Downtown LA

On top of that, people are scared of the upcoming election, and not it’s the holiday season, the only slow season for Downtown. In addition to Skid Row and nearby homeless, many loft and condo buildings also have real problems such as lawsuits and financing problems. The good news is that, even with its drawbacks, Downtown keeps outperforming expectations. Here’s just a few of the issues that buyers should know about:

1100 Wilshire – Lawsuits, reduced maintenance. Dwindling reserves. Views soon blocked.
655 Hope – Claustrophobia. Windows don’t open. No guest parking.
Alta Lofts – Notice of claim – HOA to sue developer – construction defects. Theft.
Barker Block – Lawsuit settled for construction defects.
Bartlett Building – No parking space included.
Barn Lofts – Free street parking is going away.
Beacon Lofts – Nobody knows what it is. No staff.
Biscuit Company – No metro nearby. Getting hard for guests to park.
Bunker Hill Tower – High HOA dues. No washer-dryers in most units.
Concerto Lofts – Lawsuit. HOA suing developer – construction defects.
Cornell Building – Most parking spaces are a block away in skid row.
Douglas Building – Most units have no parking. No guest parking.
Eastern Columbia – Parking lawsuit. High HOA does. Views being blocked.
Eckardt Building – Most parking spaces are a block away in skid row.
El Dorado Lofts – No amenities. Nobody’s heard of it. Don’t own parking.
Elleven Lofts – No fitness center. Shares pool and courtyard with Luma.
Evo – Lawsuit. HOA suing developer for construction defects.
Flower Street Lofts – No views and losing views. HOA dues rising.
Glen Donald Building – Not in Downtown. Dirty neighborhood.
Gallery Lofts – Construction next door.  Mostly no views.
Grand Avenue Lofts – No character. No amenities.
Higgins Building – High HOA. Special assessment. No parking. No amenities.
Library Court – No character. Most have no views. Litigation.
Little Tokyo Lofts – Homeless shelters next door.  Leak concrete. Mental clinic in building.
Luma – Losing views. Glut. Expensive. Construction nearby. Litigation.

New condos by the river suffer from freeway noise


Market Lofts – No character. Unfriendly security.
Metropolis Los Angeles – Not finished yet.  Expensive.  China company.
Molino Lofts – Some units not updated. Nearby construction.
Mura Condominiums – Not a loft. Oppressive rules.
Oceanwide Plaza – Not built yet. Stuck in big event traffic.
Ostrich Farm Lofts – Far away.  Out in the tulies.
Pan American Building – Nothing for sale.  Nobody has heard of it.
Promenade Condominiums – The 80s called. They want it back.
Promenade West – Expensive.  High HOA dues.
Puerta Del Sol – Disrepair. Nothing to walk to.  Freeway. Black lung disease?
Ritz Carlton Residences – Expensive HOA. Hotel nuisance. Mandatory valet parking.
River House – Freeway noise. Blah architecture. Prowling coyotes. River bums.
Rowan Lofts – High HOA dues. Most have no views. Don’t own parking.
Santee Village – Most parking spaces are a block away in skid row.
Savoy Condominiums – Not a loft. No character. Some have no views.
SB Grand – Loiterers, renters galore. HOA financials incomplete. Many issues.
Skyline Condominiums – 1980 wants its condos back.
Sky Lofts – No pool. High HOA dues. Construction noise.
SL70 – Not in Downtown. No pool.
Ten50 – Not completed yet.  Cramped floorpans. No microwave oven.
Teramachi Homes Senior Condos – Gotta be a senior age 55+.
Textile Building – Nothing really available.  Can’t lease it out.
Title Guarantee – Canceled. Nothing for sale.
Tokyo Villa Condominiums – 1979 wants it back. Weird koi pond courtyard. Outdated.
Toy Factory – No metro nearby. Slowly losing its street parking. No guest parking.
Toy Warehouse – Noisy floors and thin ceilings.
Vero – Not in Downtown. No character. Most have no views. Thin walls.

Report problems and fixes:  Call (213) 880-9910 or email update@laloftblog.com

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Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE#01889449  Not associated with the homeowner’s association, seller or developer. For more information, contact (213) 880-9910 or visit LAcondoInfo.com  Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Based on information from the Association of REALTORS®/Multiple Listing as of [date the AOR/MLS data was obtained] and /or other sources. Display of MLS data is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed accurate by the MLS. The Broker/Agent providing the information contained herein may or may not have been the Listing and/or Selling Agent.

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