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‘THEY JUST CAN’T TAKE THIS KIND OF BEATING’: CALIFORNIA MANSIONS ON THE BRINK


ACROSS SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, SLOPE FAILURES AND GROUND MOVEMENT AFTER A SERIES OF
STORMS HAVE PUT HOMES IN HARM’S WAY

By Joshua Partlow
February 21, 2024 at 10:00 a.m. EST

Tarps hang behind a cliff-top home along Scenic Drive in Dana Point, Calif., on
Tuesday. Mud, rocks and debris broke loose along the bluffs, causing a landslide
earlier this month, after several days of rainfall in the area from an
atmospheric river that rolled through Southern California. (Jeff Gritchen/AP)

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The latest storm battering the California coast has brought fresh flooding,
mudslides, sinkholes and coastal erosion to the state — but the three mansions
atop the cliffs of Dana Point remain anchored in place.


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planet, in your inbox every Tuesday.ArrowRight


After a chunk of those cliffs sloughed off amid an atmospheric river earlier
this month, the views from Scenic Drive in Orange County became even more
dramatic, as the houses suddenly had very little separating them from the
Pacific Ocean below.



The owner of the multimillion dollar home closest to the landslide, Lewis
Bruggeman, has told various media outlets that his house is stable despite its
perilous appearance. And city officials have said the home is anchored to the
bedrock. But an executive with an engineering firm that said it visited and
assessed the property after the slide said future storms and rains are “going to
continue to eat away at the slopes.”

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“That’s going to need major, major work to stabilize that property,” said Kyle
Tourjé, executive vice president of Alpha Structural, a Los Angeles engineering
firm that specializes in soil and structural work. Bruggeman did not respond to
The Post’s requests for comment.

The erosion of the sheer cliffs is just one vivid example of the sloughing and
sliding happening across Southern California as heavy rains this month have
swollen rivers and waterlogged the soil. Tourjé said his firm has responded for
emergency assessments and repairs for over 60 landslides in the past week in
Southern California, a particularly heavy load.

“The rainy seasons always get busy for us but this one’s beginning to change the
game a little bit,” he said. “We’re seeing more damage, and I think we will
continue to see more significant damage. Between back to back years of heavy
saturation, these houses, these properties … they just can’t take this kind of
beating.”

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The recent rains have accelerated a slow-moving process of ground movement over
hundreds of acres in Rancho Palos Verdes, an affluent seaside city in Los
Angeles County. The shifting and slumping land has damaged homes and caused
water and gas leaks. Crews have been working to fill in fissures and engineers
have described the recent movement as unprecedented for the area.

“Because the ground’s already saturated, all this rain certainly does not help,
it makes it worse,” Rancho Palos Verdes Mayor John Cruikshank said in an
interview. “People in their homes have seen lots of new movement. Areas that
were only moving in inches are now moving in feet per year.”




The city has dealt with landslides for decades but the past two wet winters have
accelerated the movement. In recent months, two homes have been red-tagged —
deemed unsafe for occupancy — and the city closed eight miles of trails because
of safety issues from open fissures, Cruikshank said. Wayfarers Chapel, a
popular ocean-view wedding venue known as the “glass church,” also closed
earlier this month because of earth movement.

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“Clearly with that much glass above the temple area and being so precarious, you
just can’t leave that open,” he said. “That would be way, way too dangerous.”

Cruikshank said the city will be asking Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) to declare a state
of emergency specifically for Rancho Palos Verdes. He said there is typically a
delay of a week or more from a heavy rain to reports of new movement, as water
seeps into the soil, so he worries what the current rainstorm will mean for his
city.

“We’re always just dreading the fact that someone new might call and say they’ve
got something major in their homes,” he said.

The rain that fell in downtown Los Angeles over three days earlier this month
amounted to more than half of the average accumulation for a year.

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Since the weekend, thunderstorms, high winds and rain have swollen rivers and
caused flooding and landslides in different parts of the state. In Los Angeles
and Ventura counties, the state Department of Transportation announced road
closures from erosion, sinkholes and mudslides — including on stretches of the
scenic Pacific Coast Highway.

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“It’s been very wet for February,” said Bob Oravec, a forecaster with the
National Weather Service. “The winter is the wet season for California but
still, these amounts are really heavy.”

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The heavy rain over the past two winters has been a boon to the state’s
reservoirs, which had fallen to critical lows after years of drought. Most are
fuller than normal and the two largest — Shasta Lake and Lake Oroville — are
above 80 percent capacity. The storms have dropped heavy snow in the Sierra
Nevada mountains but snowpack for the year remains below average.

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Matt Thomas, a research hydrologist with the U.S. Geological Survey’s Landslide
Hazards Program, said the recent storms in California have so far not produced
widespread landslides across the state’s mountain ranges. While a lot of rain
fell, it didn’t fall with the type of intensity that can generate those type of
major landscape movements. Instead, the problem has been focused in heavily
developed urban hillsides in Southern California.

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The latest storm has hit developed coastal counties hard, amassing more than 10
inches over the past three days in some places, including hilly areas that have
already been inundated by earlier downpours. The heaviest rains on Tuesday are
expected in Southern California between Los Angeles and San Diego, Oravec said.

“Anytime you get 5 to 10 inches of rain on those hills you’re going to have
problems with landslides,” he said.

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The erosion of the headlands in Dana Point on Feb. 8 prompted concern that three
large homes might be at risk of falling over the cliff. But the city said in a
statement released to various media outlets last week that a building inspector
and a geotechnical engineer assessed the area.

“At this point, the City has deemed that no additional action is necessary, and
out of an abundance of caution has recommended that the property owner contract
for a professional engineering assessment of the property,” the statement read.

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Dana Point city manager Mike Killebrew did not respond to a request for comment.

“The house is fine, it’s not threatened and it will not be red-tagged,”
Bruggeman told KCAL-TV last week. “The city agrees that there’s no major
structural issue with the house.”

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The other homeowners on the cliff did not respond to requests for comment.

Alpha Structural officials said they visited the Scenic Drive landslide site at
Bruggeman’s request. The firm said it couldn’t provide a detailed report on its
assessment or recommendations for the home.

Tourjé said such bluffs in general can sometimes be fortified by netting or by
spraying a seed mix of native plants with deep roots onto the slope.

“Planting and ground cover are these most practical and effective proactive
maintenance one can do,” he said.

But the storms this month have left a trail of destruction far beyond Dana
Point. Tourjé attributes much of the problem to development decades ago under
insufficient building and grading codes. Residents often make problems worse, he
said, by directing roof downspouts or pool runoff pipes onto vulnerable slopes.
He and his colleagues have been racing to Malibu beachfront homes with the sand
below them scoured away; train lines wiped out by landslides; homes knocked
down; swimming pools filled with mud.

“It seems to be getting progressively worse, year after year,” he said.


MORE ON CLIMATE CHANGE

Understanding our climate: Global warming is a real phenomenon, and weather
disasters are undeniably linked to it. As temperatures rise, heat waves are more
often sweeping the globe — and parts of the world are becoming too hot to
survive.

What can be done? The Post is tracking a variety of climate solutions, as well
as the Biden administration’s actions on environmental issues. It can feel
overwhelming facing the impacts of climate change, but there are ways to cope
with climate anxiety.

Inventive solutions: Some people have built off-the-grid homes from trash to
stand up to a changing climate. As seas rise, others are exploring how to
harness marine energy.

What about your role in climate change? Our climate coach Michael J. Coren is
answering questions about environmental choices in our everyday lives. Submit
yours here. You can also sign up for our Climate Coach newsletter.


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