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Housing & Homelessness

Their mobile homes burned down in the Palisades Fire. Now the property is quietly up for sale

A woman with light skin tone net to a block wall with palm trees visible behind her.
Lisa Ross stands outside the Palisades Bowl mobile home park where she and her family lived for 33 years.
(
David Wagner
/
LAist
)

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Their mobile homes burned down in the Palisades Fire. Now the property is quietly up for sale
Before it burned in last year’s fires, the Pacific Palisades Bowl Mobile Estates was a rare piece of affordable beachfront real estate. But that affordable housing could be permanently lost now that the owners of the destroyed property have started quietly seeking new buyers.

Before it was destroyed in last year’s fires, the Pacific Palisades Bowl Mobile Estates was a rare piece of beachfront real estate. The mobile home park provided affordable housing to families unable to buy one of the multi-million dollar homes more typical of the neighborhood.

“This was like paradise,” said Rashi Kaslow, a sailboat rigger who had lived at the property for 17 years. “There's nowhere else I want to be.”

Kaslow has been living on a boat since his Palisades Bowl home was lost in the fire.

Now that affordable housing could be permanently lost, with owners of the destroyed property now quietly seeking new buyers.

In a confidential offering memorandum obtained by LAist, the former 173-lot mobile home park is being pitched to investors as “a rare blank canvas for transformative development.”

Former residents are still fighting to return to the rent-controlled lots where they hope to rebuild new manufactured homes. But they say the owners have not been clear about the park’s future.

“A lot of our residents are already traumatized and still grieving,” said Jon Brown, president of the Palisades Bowl Community Group, an organization formed by displaced residents.

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“Without the park owners communicating with us, we don't really know what's going on,” Brown added. “We can only remain confident that our government is going to continue to try to protect us.”

 Rashi Kaslow, a man with medium skin tone, stands in a beach parking lot across from the Palisades Bowl mobile home park, where residents' burned cars still haven't been removed.
Rashi Kaslow stands in a beach parking lot across from the Palisades Bowl mobile home park, where residents' burned cars still haven't been removed.
(
David Wagner/LAist
)

No price disclosed

Aerial view of devastated coastal neighborhood with charred remains of buildings and palm trees standing amidst rubble.
The Palisades Fire ripped through the Pacific Palisades Bowl Mobile Estates.
(
Myung J. Chun
/
Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
)

Matthew Wenzel, a broker with the firm Marcus & Millichap, did not share the price the owners are asking for the 861,181-square-foot property. When asked about the former residents, he told LAist, “The owner is exploring all options for future use of the property.”

LAist contacted park co-owner Colby Biggs for comment, but did not receive a response. We also received no response after emailing the attorney for co-owner Loretta Biggs.

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According to the sales document, the land is zoned to allow single-family homes with minimum lot sizes of 40,000 square feet.

Muhammad Alameldin, senior policy advisor at the pro-housing group California YIMBY, said at that size, fewer than two dozen homes could fit on the property. He said redevelopment could involve replacing former residents with much fewer — and much wealthier — homeowners.

“It's a shame that these fires happened, they destroyed people's lives, and now the existing local rules say the only thing that can be built is mansions,” Alameldin said. “This is one of the last parcels of affordable home ownership in the Palisades area. That's going to disappear.”

What rights do residents have?

Mobile home residents have a unique relationship with park owners. Unlike most renters, they own the structures they live in. But unlike most homeowners, they don’t own their land — they rent lots from park owners.

Clemente Mojica, president of the affordable housing nonprofit Neighborhood Partnership Housing Services, said legal protections are often lacking for mobile home residents after natural disasters. He said mobile home parks have rarely been rebuilt after past California fires.

“Rebuilding isn't a choice for residents, but for the park ownership,” Mojica said. “In the case of the Palisades Bowl, the park ownership clearly does not intend to rebuild, which means that the next best option we see is a sale to the residents.”

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 Former residents have hung signs on the chain-link fence outside the Palisades Bowl mobile home park.
Former residents have hung signs on the chain-link fence outside the Palisades Bowl mobile home park.
(
David Wagner/LAist
)

Former residents say the Palisades Bowl owners should continue to honor their tenancies, which were subject to the city of L.A.’s rent control laws.

“They're hoping that somebody with a lot of money comes along, and maybe they don't do their due diligence,” said Lisa Ross, who lived at the Palisades Bowl for 33 years.

Since the fire, her family has been renting a Marina Del Rey apartment, but insurance money for rent has run out.

“I don't know what they possibly think,” Ross said of the owners. “I do know that we have people behind us in government officials who are adamant.”

State lawmakers worry about displaced seniors

State Sen. Ben Allen has introduced Senate Bill 1092, which would require mobile home park owners to give residents the chance to put in competitive bids to buy properties with the help of nonprofits or local governments.

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“This park has been home to hundreds of seniors and families over the years,” Allen said in a statement to LAist. “The idea of deliberately and permanently displacing these residents, in such opportunistic fashion, puts a bad taste in all of our mouths.”

But even if Allen’s bill is signed into law, it likely wouldn’t take effect until 2027. Palisades Bowl residents worry a sale could be finalized before then. Allen said that if the sale goes through in the near future, residents should be legally entitled to relocation payments.

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Councilmember Traci Park, who represents the neighborhood’s on the L.A. City Council member, told LAist she supports preserving the property’s use as a mobile home park. L.A. County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath, who represents the Palisades, said elected leaders are working to get the residents back to their former homes.

“After surviving one of the most devastating wildfires in our nation’s history, residents of Palisades Bowl should not be facing new uncertainty about their homes,” Horvath said.

 Giorgi Antinori, a woman with light skin tone, and her husband, a man with light skin tone, stand at the edge of Will Rogers State Beach.
Giorgi Antinori and her husband stand at the edge of Will Rogers State Beach.
(
David Wagner/LAist
)

Sellers say park is a ‘generational offering’

The firms CBRE and Marcus & Millichap have been circulating the confidential sales document to institutional investors and developers. They’re positioning the property for high-end development. Just across Pacific Coast Highway from Will Rogers State Beach, the property is described as “a prime asset in a highly coveted, supply-constrained market.”

The document notes that the neighborhood’s average annual household income is north of $350,000, and average home values are above $1.9 million. It states that the Pacific Palisades is “one of Los Angeles’ most exclusive residential enclaves,” with “high barriers to entry,” such as “strict zoning regulations.”

Residents worry the plans are designed to stop them from ever returning.

Giorgi Antinori lived at the Palisades Bowl for five years with her husband. Their 3-year-old daughter was born in their home. Antinori, a Santa Monica native, said she and her husband spent years looking for affordable housing on L.A.’s Westside before discovering the Palisades Bowl.

Addressing potential buyers, Antinori said: “I would want them to really understand the heart of this place, and appeal to them to rebuild this for what it actually is and what it was. It was beautiful.”

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