In Skid Row, a 19-story residential tower for homeless people will offer gym, cafe, art studio
“We’re trying to make our little corner of the world look and feel a little better,” says Kevin Murray, president and chief executive of Weingart Center Assn. and mastermind of a Skid Row residential project. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Doug Smith
Los Angeles Times
June 5, 2024
From the courtyard balcony on the 19th story of the new residential tower, Skid Row seems small and distant below. Its barely visible tents and shanties melt into vistas of the downtown skyline and San Gabriel Mountains to the north and the flat expanse of city south to the sea. Even the row of buildings on San Pedro Street that form the core of Skid Row’s service institutions — the Midnight Mission, Union Rescue Mission, LAMP Community, JWCH Institute, the Cobb residences and the 11-story Weingart Center — are reduced to rooftop outlines.
And that’s the idea. The 278-unit tower, due to open this month, is meant to be a self-contained environment that will insulate its formerly homeless residents from the squalor and hopelessness around them and, at the same time, elevate the neighborhood.
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Murray’s grand plan will take its first step this month when Weingart begins leasing the first of three high-rise buildings that will wrap around the nonprofit’s headquarters at 6th and San Pedro streets.
The second tower, with 302 rooms, is now rising on the south side of 6th Street and is scheduled to open in about 18 months. A third, 104-unit tower is in the planning phase.
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A patio in the Weingart residential tower on Skid Row has a view of the Los Angeles skyline. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
The 19-story building on Skid Row has 278 units for formerly homeless people. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
A patio atop the residential tower on Skid Row. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)