- Share via
Since Los Angeles’ unprecedented January firestorms, the Eaton and Palisades fires have consumed nearly 40,000 acres of homes, businesses and landmarks in Altadena and Pacific Palisades and have killed more than two dozen people.
Although final numbers have yet to be released, on-the-ground inspectors have completed their inspections of both blazes. The Eaton and Palisades fires now rank as the second- and third-most-destructive wildfires in California history, with an estimated economic loss of $250 billion.
Check your home’s status on L.A. County's damage maps
Impacted residents can find damage level, inspection reports and images of their homes on the county’s official damage maps.
The Los Angeles Times is tracking damage in the fire areas but encourage residents to utilize the recovery.lacounty.gov resource to find details about specific locations. The recovery maps give residents the ability to identify the conditions at their homes, even before evacuation orders are lifted and allow them to begin the insurance claims process.
Inspections of the Eaton and Palisades fire zones are ongoing.
According to preliminary assessments, the Eaton fire destroyed more than 9,400 structures in an area of nearly 22 square miles. An additional 6,800 buildings were lost to the Palisades fire, which burned 36.5 square miles of the Santa Monica Mountains.
Most of the buildings affected were single-family residences. In Altadena, community fixtures such as the Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center and Saint Mark’s Episcopal Church burned to the ground. Coastal landmarks in the Palisades and Malibu — Reel Inn and Cholada Thai — were consumed by flames. Schools were gutted.
Eaton fire
Early in the evening of Jan. 7, Altadena and Pasadena residents saw flames in the distance at Eaton Canyon — an area known for horseback riding, hiking trails, streams and wild animals. The earliest reports indicated that the fire was modest, but it ballooned amid hurricane-strength winds, ultimately swallowing up more than 14,000 acres as it spread through neighborhoods, destroying thousands of structures and taking the lives of at least 17.
A power outage had left much of the area pitch-black. Tens of thousands of residents were ordered to evacuate. As powerful winds grew, some stayed to fight the flames while others fled, navigating their way from home without working traffic lights amid flying debris. Residents of a senior home were rushed to safety.
By 3 a.m., the fire had moved east to west. Embers rained down as more residents escaped while their streets burned behind them.
The next morning, many returned to find their homes crumbled or on fire. Desperate, they sprayed flames with hoses and tried to prevent embers from flying again as firetrucks were sparse. The lucky ones whose houses stood coped with survivors’ guilt, unsure why their home was spared when others were not.
In Altadena, Maral Nazarian, 60, watched in tears as the remnants of her house burned. She grew up in the rustic town; this disaster was incomprehensible.
“We never expected this. We thought we were far enough from the hills,” she said in disbelief.
Altadena sits above Pasadena, nestled against the foothills of the mountains. But it isn’t considered a traditional mountain town.
The fire left longtime residents in shock that it made it so far south, leaving many residents who live and work in the community without home or income. Nearly 42,000 people live in the largely working-class neighborhood.
It destroyed the area’s first main business district on North Lake Avenue, demolishing longtime fixtures such as Altadena Hardware and Fox’s Restaurant, Steve’s Pets and the Rancho. It gutted the Aldi grocery store, nearby schools and churches. Farther north, the buildings at the historic Charles S. Farnsworth Park were gone.
500 FEET
N. Lake Avenue
THE BUNNY
MUSEUM
East Altadena Drive
SAINT MARK’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
ALTADENA
COMMUNITY
CENTER
RANCHO BAR
STEVE’S PETS
FOX’S RESTAURANT
ALDI
ELIOT ARTS
MAGNET
MONTECEDRO
RETIREMENT
COMMUNITY
500 FEET
N. Lake Avenue
THE BUNNY
MUSEUM
East Altadena Drive
SAINT MARK’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
ALTADENA
COMMUNITY
CENTER
RANCHO BAR
STEVE’S PETS
FOX’S RESTAURANT
ALDI
ELIOT ARTS
MAGNET
MONTECEDRO
RETIREMENT
COMMUNITY
Buildings that are destroyed or damaged may be shown in gray if officials have not inspected the area yet.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
Less than two miles west on North Fair Oaks Avenue, the fire destroyed more Altadena staples including the beloved Little Red Hen Coffee Shop and a newer neighborhood favorite, Pizza of Venice.
500 FEET
COBB ESTATE
TRAILHEAD
PASADENA
ROSEBUD
ACADEMY
E. Loma Alta Drive
N. Lake Avenue
Charles S.
Farnsworth
Park
500 FEET
COBB
ESTATE
TRAILHEAD
PASADENA
ROSEBUD
ACADEMY
E. Loma Alta Drive
N. Lake Avenue
Charles S.
Farnsworth
Park
Buildings that are destroyed or damaged may be shown in gray if officials have not inspected the area yet.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
Farther east, a historic Pasadena synagogue was left shattered.
In between and all around, the fire left a wake of disaster. In certain parts, it wiped away entire neighborhood blocks.
- Share via
Gonzalo M., 53, had driven for three days from Arizona to check on his home in Altadena where he grew up and where his mother still lived. His mom was evacuated by a neighbor and was safe. But the house he’d known his entire life was destroyed, along with the others on his street.
A fire hydrant had been installed on the corner of his block in recent years as California’s brush fires had grown. Gonzalo doesn’t know if it was used or if the water had run out.
“It’s devastating,” he said. “You work so hard for all this stuff. It’s terrible.”
By Jan. 9, much of the area had been barricaded. The National Guard and law enforcement stationed themselves at most entry points to the neighborhoods where downed power lines and trees, debris and ash filled the streets.
Officials are still investigating the cause of the fire. An area around a Southern California Edison electrical transmission tower in Eaton Canyon has become a focus of their inquiry.
Inside the Pasadena Convention Center, at hotels, and on friends’ and families’ couches, residents found shelter. But they remained displaced, unsure of when they could return to see their home, sort through the remains of what was left of their land or confirm their worst fears: that their house was gone.
PALISADES
The Palisades fire started at 10:30 a.m. on Jan. 7. Within two days of intense Santa Ana winds, the fire grew to more than 17,000 acres, consuming much of the Pacific Palisades — a largely affluent community and home to more than 21,000 people — and Pacific Coast Highway between Santa Monica and Malibu. At least 12 people were killed in the fire.
Officials are investigating whether the fire started at Skull Rock, north of Sunset Boulevard in Pacific Palisades, by a rekindling of a New Year’s Eve fire that started with fireworks.
2,000 FEET
SKULL ROCK
Santa Ynez
Reservoir
Palisades
Drive
GETTY
VILLA
Castellammare
Sunset
Boulevard
27
1
2,000 FEET
SKULL
ROCK
Santa Ynez
Reservoir
Palisades
Drive
GETTY
VILLA
27
Castellammare
Sunset
Boulevard
1
Buildings that are destroyed or damaged may be shown in gray if officials have not inspected the area yet.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
Tatiana Prophet, who lives in an apartment along Sunset Boulevard with her 10-year-old son, Everest, got a text from her friend saying a fire had broken out along Palisades Drive, between her house and Everest’s school not far from the coast.
Prophet, who’s painfully aware of the fire history of the Palisades, was immediately worried. Then, an even more ominous warning came: The landline rang. A recorded message to evacuate.
In a rush, Prophet slammed the door behind her — without her keys, without her phone, without Everest’s beloved iPad.
As entire neighborhoods in the Palisades rushed to evacuate, the area’s major evacuation routes quickly became gridlocked.
Prophet made slow progress toward PCH, eventually getting stuck at an intersection just a quarter of a mile from the school.
“Then I saw the flames,” Prophet said. “They were huge, and they were just burning out of control.”
The fire had jumped from the hills nearly all the way to the coast, right along the evacuation route. Prophet whipped the car into the opposing lane and parked it on the shoulder.
“I didn’t even grab my purse,” she said. “I just started running.”
The fire quickly spread through the flammable invasive brushes of the Santa Monica Mountains. The blaze began rapidly engulfing the coastline and Pacific Coast Highway along both directions.
The next day, the fire had covered much of the road from Will Rogers State Beach to Carbon Beach in eastern Malibu. Burning telephone poles blocked lanes, and black soot swept across the pavement, blown by the howling winds. Fire personnel told Malibu residents that the extensive fuel break left by December’s Franklin fire helped stop the flames’ progression west.
But large swaths of the highway’s homes and restaurants were already gone.
- Share via
Landmarks such as Will Rogers’ Western-style Palisades home and Theater Palisades were destroyed in the flames. Iconic restaurants such as the Reel Inn, Cholada Thai and Moonshadows were also in the path of destruction.
“It’s sad,” said one lifelong PCH resident who used to frequent the Reel Inn and Cholada Thai and had sneaked into the evacuation zone to survey the damage. “It feels kind of lonely, right?”
Religious institutions such as Pacific Palisades Community United Methodist Church, Corpus Christi Church, Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church and St. Matthew’s Parish School were leveled. Palisades Charter High School also burned.
Castellammare and the end of Sunset Boulevard and Palisades Drive are some of the only areas where the Palisades fire did not reach the coast. The nearby Getty Villa took extensive measures to fend off the fire, including extensive brush clearing, an emergency staff on site to battle the flames, and help from an aerial fire crew.
Sunset Boulevard and Palisades Drive, an essential evacuation route, were the subject of intense police and fire presence on Jan. 8 and 9.
PALISADES CHARTER
HIGH
PALISADES
VILLAGE
YMCA
PALISADES CHARTER
ELEM. SCHOOL
Sunset Boulevard
LIBRARY
1
1,000 FEET
PALISADES
CHARTER HIGH
PALISADES
VILLAGE
YMCA
PALISADES
CHARTER
ELEM. SCHOOL
Sunset Boulevard
LIBRARY
1
1,000 FEET
Buildings that are destroyed or damaged may be shown in gray if officials have not inspected the area yet.
LOS ANGELES TIMES
The Palisades Village, the outdoor mall owned by billionaire Rick Caruso, remained standing among the wreckage. The YMCA and the Palisades Charter Elementary and Marquez Charter Elementary schools burned down.
Prophet’s community along Sunset was one of the neighborhoods hit the hardest. Her home, still with the Christmas tree up, didn’t survive.
Now, she finds a sense of irony in the local adage about the neighborhood. “You know, they always say, ‘The rich live in Beverly Hills, the famous live in Malibu, and the lucky live in the Palisades,’” she said.
Times staff writer Hannah Fry contributed to this report.
More to Read
About this story
Data is current as of Jan. 27.
Additional map layers come from NASA, U.S. Geological Survey, National Hydrography Dataset and U.S. Census Bureau. A previous version of these maps used building data from FEMA.
Versions of these maps, produced and designed for print by Lorena Elebee, ran on A1 in the Jan. 17 newspaper.
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.