Quote:
Originally Posted by broadwy_central_bldg
Hey, Beaudry, our friend Ed Workman gave us an update on that LARY car in this comment. (Brace yourself: it's not good news.)
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Thanks! Somehow I missed that (I just said in my last post I needed to learn to pay attention) and...gads, I have no idea how to respond. I mean...let me see if I got this straight:
a) arguably, among those things Angelenic commonly revered and routinely fetishized nothing is so beloved as the fabled streetcar of yore—we have this collective
Who Framed Roger Rabbit memory about our glorious streetcar past (which, in all honesty, did not really exist),
however despite that, b) the streetcar is so indelibly part of our fabric, especially downtown, that one would think we should have some single remaining LARy or Red Car basically on a revolving platform with Klieg lights on it 24 hrs a day, which we
kind of had, to wit:
rrpicturearchives/Charles Freericks
c) an actual car has been a favorite touchstone of those who knew it was there (
since 1999), and had we hauled her out and put her on said aforementioned platform all would have been delighted, except for d), and here's where it gets weird: in the last few weeks we decided to take this St Louis Streetcar Company Class H-3 built in 1924,
and destroy her, through neglect, stupid accidents, and cannibalism?
There had to have been some better plan for the girl, considering that
RPR Consulting "performed a condition survey of this streetcar prior to acquisition and shipment to Los Angeles for potential use as a display in the downtown area, and also served as a sub-contractor to California Waterproofing & Restoration, who developed a restoration proposal for static display of the car."
I suppose it's not the most ignominious end. Like being an organ donor, she gave parts to worthy kin living in
Perris. Still, I'm going to miss 1435, who gave a lot of pleasure to folk from there in her hideaway these last sixteen years, and who could have given downtown a real pride-laden boost if there had been the right combination of vision and guts to put her on display.