Ennis, Anyone?
The fate of a crumbling Frank Lloyd Wright house in Los Angeles finally gains attention.
BY DAVID BOUL
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Badly damaged by the 1994 Northridge
earthquake and rainstorms this year, the Ennis-Brown
House is in need of emergency stabilization. (David Boul)
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Fans of old horror flicks may remember
the Ennis-Brown mansion from the Vincent Price thriller
The House on Haunted Hill, the tale of a millionaire
who holds a scary party and offers cash prizes to
whoever will spend the night. In later years, the
house also starred—along with Harrison Ford—in
the futurist fantasy Blade Runner. More recently,
actor Steve Martin took up residence there in Grand
Canyon, as did the handsome vampire Angel in the television
show Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
These days, drama of a different kind surrounds
Ennis-Brown.
Earlier this year, the concrete-block masterpiece,
designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for a steeply sloping
site northeast of Hollywood, was red-tagged by the
city of Los Angeles after officials declared the building
unsafe. Portions of a critical retaining wall had
collapsed, partly because of near-record winter rains.
Although the house's status has since been upgraded
to yellow tag, public tours are still prohibited and
use of the adjoining chauffeur's quarters and outdoor
motor court remains hazardous.
The fate of the building—which had been deteriorating
for years before the current crisis—remains in
doubt. "The Ennis-Brown House, Frank Lloyd Wright's
magnificent Maya-inspired home that has been a commanding
presence in the Los Feliz hills since 1924, is endangered
by serious structural problems that must be addressed
as soon as possible," reads a notice placed on
the Web site of the Los Angeles Conservancy, the city's
chief preservation group, which is working to save
the house. "Perched precariously on its hillside
site, the house is, very literally, on the brink of
disaster." In June the National Trust added the
house to its annual list of America's 11 Most
Endangered Historic Places. The landmark also made
this year's roster of the World Monument Fund's
100 Most Endangered Sites.
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