WASHINGTON COUNTY, Ore. – Four people have been arrested in connection with a late-January shooting at an apartment complex in Aloha that left a 28-year-old man critically injured.
The Washington County Sheriff’s Office says deputies responded at 4:11 a.m. Jan. 31st to a report of a shooting at the Cedar Crest Apartments. Deputies and officers from the Beaverton Police Department found the victim inside an apartment with a gunshot wound.
Investigators believe the shooting occurred during an armed robbery and involved multiple suspects. Detectives learned the victim had been with Yaneli Jaime, 26, shortly before the shooting.
The suspects initially fled and were not found during an extensive search. Detectives with the Sheriff’s Office Violent Crime Unit and the Washington County Major Crimes Team later executed more than 20 search warrants and conducted follow-up investigations across Oregon and Washington.
Jaime was arrested Feb. 2 at a residence in Vancouver, Washington, and booked into the Clark County Jail.
On Feb. 4, Diego Torres-Topete, 18, of Kennewick, Washington, was arrested by the Richland Police Department and booked into the Benton County Jail in Washington.
On Wednesday, the United States Marshals Service arrested Arnoldo Avila, 20, and Roberto Huato, 18, in Hermiston. Both were booked into the Umatilla County Jail.
All four suspects face charges of second-degree attempted murder and first-degree robbery.
Los Angeles officials just made it easier to convert empty commercial buildings to housing, opening the door to the creation of thousands of apartments across a city clamoring for housing.
Developer Garrett Lee is already rolling.
After years of struggling to find white-collar tenants for a gleaming office high-rise on the edge of downtown, he has just begun converting its office space into close to 700 apartments.
With the new Citywide Adaptive Reuse Ordinance going into effect this month, many more housing conversions are coming to Los Angeles, Lee said.
“This is monumental for the city.”
The ordinance opens the possibility of conversion for many more buildings than the 1999 guidelines, which paved the way for converting older downtown buildings and jump-started a residential renaissance that turned downtown into a viable neighborhood after decades as a commercial district where few wanted to live.
The first ordinance applied to buildings erected before 1975 and was focused primarily on downtown. Under the new guidelines, commercial buildings that are merely 15 years old throughout Los Angeles can be converted to housing with city staff approval, rather than going through lengthy review processes that may reach the City Council.
Streamlining conversion approvals for projects that meet city guidelines will remove one of the biggest hurdles for developers who have historically had to guess how long it would take to start construction, Lee said.
“When you take that risk off the table, it materially improves the feasibility of conversions,” he said.
“It addresses both the housing shortage and the long-term office vacancy issue,” said Lee, president of Jamison Properties.
Jamison Properties is converting this office high-rise on the edge of downtown Los Angeles into housing.
(William Liang/For The Times)
There are more than 50 million square feet of empty office space in Los Angeles, according to industry experts, spread among the city’s many commercial districts and corridors such as Wilshire Boulevard.
The new ordinance inspired developer David Tedesco to move ahead with plans to convert a high-profile office building in Sherman Oaks, a neighborhood that wasn’t previously included in the city’s adaptive reuse guidelines.
His company, IMT Residential, plans to turn the former headquarters of Sunkist Growers into 95 apartments.
The eye-catching inverted pyramid designed in brutalist style is visible from the 101 Freeway and served as Sunkist’s headquarters from 1970 to 2013. The Los Angeles Conservancy called the building “a symphony in concrete,” worthy of city landmark status.
Earlier, there were plans to renovate the building for new offices, but as demand for office space plunged after the pandemic, developer Tedesco says his company decided to use the new adaptive reuse ordinance to make it into residences.
The new rules mean “we could move forward a lot faster” and avoid a potentially lengthy environmental impact review, he said.
The 1999 ordinance proved that people wanted to live downtown and that converting old office buildings to housing or hotels could transform a neighborhood, said Ken Bernstein, a principal city planner in L.A.’s Planning Department.
People walk through the Union Bank Plaza in downtown Los Angeles in August.
(Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)
Construction of new apartments followed the wave of conversions downtown in the early 2000s, and the ordinance was expanded to a few other neighborhoods with older buildings, including Hollywood and Koreatown.
But until this month, residential conversions in most of the city still required more approvals, permits and hearings as well as an environmental review, Bernstein said.
“That could be a very time-consuming, cumbersome and expensive process,” he said.
The new rules “unlock the potential,” he said, of thousands of underutilized structures all over the city, including such commercial centers as Westwood, Olympic Boulevard, South Los Angeles, Ventura Boulevard and the Harbor District.
The ordinance is not limited to office buildings. Industrial buildings, stores and even parking garages are eligible for conversion to housing.
Bernstein envisions shopping center owners converting part of their retail and garage space to housing under the new guidelines. Even smaller strip malls would qualify for conversion to housing.
While the new ordinance lowers hurdles for landlords interested in converting their underused buildings, they still face market and regulatory forces that bedevil all housing developers.
Mockup of an apartment inside a 1980s office tower at 1055 W. 7th St. in Los Angeles that is going to be converted to housing.
(Eddie Shih/E22 Studios)
Among them are interest rates that make construction loans more expensive . Higher tariffs have driven up the prices of construction materials and equipment, while the crackdown on undocumented workers has thinned and spooked much of the international workforce on which the housing industry depends.
Developers also say that Measure ULA, the city’s “mansion tax” on large property sales, hurts the outlook for the profitability of any housing.
Measure ULA “is really impeding developers from doing any development in the city of Los Angeles,” said local architect Karin Liljegren, who specializes in adaptive reuse projects and helped the city craft the new ordinance.
Developers also worry that new apartments won’t generate enough income to cover construction costs.
Apartment renters accustomed to steady price hikes saw a downward shift last year as the median rent in the L.A. metro area dropped to $2,167 in December — the lowest price in four years, according to data from Apartment List.
Experts disagree on the momentum behind the drop. Some say it’s a sign of things to come, while others suggest it’s merely a brief price plateau and rents will rise again this year.
Conversion activist Nella McOsker, president of the Central City Assn. business advocacy group, said the new ordinance is “tremendous” and creates “incredible flexibility” for owners who want to make changes. But L.A. needs to follow the example of other cities and do more in the way of financial incentives for developers trying to make a project pencil out.
The Central City Assn. wants the city to consider financial incentives for conversions, even though it is experiencing budget shortfalls, McOsker said.
City leaders should consider offering financial incentives, such as those used in other cities, to bridge the gap to profitability, McOsker said, citing programs in other central business districts.
New York, Washington and Boston have property tax abatement programs, for example. San Francisco offers transfer tax exemptions, and Chicago uses tax-increment financing to encourage some redevelopments. In Canada, Calgary offers direct grants.
In Washington and New York, there has been widespread adoption of adaptive reuse, Lee said, resulting in makeovers of buildings that each add 1,000 to 2,000 residential units.
Lee, who has converted nearly 2,000 apartments so far, said he plans to take advantage of terms in the new ordinance that will allow him to put more apartments on each floor.
“We’re taking projects that are fully designed already and we’re redesigning them for more, smaller units,” he said, which helps reduce rents.
The new rolling 15-year age requirement will also bring up a new crop of conversion candidates every year. More recently built structures need fewer upgrades and may not require seismic retrofits to meet safety codes.
“Vintage matters,” Lee said. “Converting a building from 1990 versus one from 2010 is night and day due to the differences in code eras.”
A gas explosion sent fire racing through the top floors of a high-rise apartment building in New York City early Saturday, killing one person and injuring 14 others as temperatures plunged into the single digits overnight, authorities said.Firefighters responded shortly before 12:30 a.m. to the 17-story building in the Bronx, where people were seen leaning out of windows calling for help as flames engulfed parts of the top floors, officials said.Chief John Esposito said firefighters were investigating reports of a gas odor on the 15th and 16th floors when the explosion occurred. He said there was major structural damage to about a dozen apartments and fires in 10 apartments on the 16th and 17th floors.Authorities did not immediately release information on the person who died. Another person was critically injured, five had serious injuries and eight had minor injuries, officials said.Officials said the building had been undergoing renovations, and work on the natural gas system had been completed and inspected. The cause of the explosion was under investigation. The building was formerly run by the New York City Housing Authority, but it has been under private management since 2024, city officials said.”It’s an incredible tragedy. We’re sending all our thoughts to the families involved,” Leila Bozorg, deputy mayor for housing and planning, said at a morning news conference.Mayor Zohran Mamdani said all utilities in the building were shut down, and all 148 apartments vacated. Officials set up a reception center for the displaced residents at a nearby school, and the American Red Cross was there to help provide housing and other needs.”As you can imagine, this has been a deeply frightening and devastating morning for them,” Mamdani said at a news conference Saturday afternoon. “They are not alone. Our city will stand by them and do everything in our power to help them get back on their feet.”The Red Cross said it had registered more than 100 households and 305 people, including 89 children, for emergency aid by early Saturday afternoon.More than 200 fire and emergency crews worked the scene, according to the fire department. When the explosion occurred, some firefighters were trapped briefly in an elevator, officials said.”There were injuries. It was a very, very difficult night on a very cold night, which caused even more difficulty,” Fire Commissioner Lillian Bonsignore said.Around half a million New Yorkers live in aging buildings run by the city’s housing authority, known as NYCHA, which is the largest in the nation.Many of the properties date back to the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. In 2019, a federal monitor was appointed to address chronic problems like lead paint, mold and lack of heat. When he wrapped his five-year term in 2024, the monitor, Bart Schwartz, noted that the overarching issue for residents remained the “poor physical state of NYCHA’s buildings.”In October, a massive brick chimney running 20 stories up the side of a housing authority apartment building in the Bronx collapsed after an explosion, sending tons of debris plummeting to the ground but amazingly not injuring anyone. Officials linked it to a natural gas boiler.
A gas explosion sent fire racing through the top floors of a high-rise apartment building in New York City early Saturday, killing one person and injuring 14 others as temperatures plunged into the single digits overnight, authorities said.
Firefighters responded shortly before 12:30 a.m. to the 17-story building in the Bronx, where people were seen leaning out of windows calling for help as flames engulfed parts of the top floors, officials said.
Chief John Esposito said firefighters were investigating reports of a gas odor on the 15th and 16th floors when the explosion occurred. He said there was major structural damage to about a dozen apartments and fires in 10 apartments on the 16th and 17th floors.
Authorities did not immediately release information on the person who died. Another person was critically injured, five had serious injuries and eight had minor injuries, officials said.
Officials said the building had been undergoing renovations, and work on the natural gas system had been completed and inspected. The cause of the explosion was under investigation. The building was formerly run by the New York City Housing Authority, but it has been under private management since 2024, city officials said.
FDNY via AP
This image provided by FDNY shows FDNY members operating at a fire on the top two floors of a high-rise apartment in the Bronx, New York City, early Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026.
“It’s an incredible tragedy. We’re sending all our thoughts to the families involved,” Leila Bozorg, deputy mayor for housing and planning, said at a morning news conference.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani said all utilities in the building were shut down, and all 148 apartments vacated. Officials set up a reception center for the displaced residents at a nearby school, and the American Red Cross was there to help provide housing and other needs.
“As you can imagine, this has been a deeply frightening and devastating morning for them,” Mamdani said at a news conference Saturday afternoon. “They are not alone. Our city will stand by them and do everything in our power to help them get back on their feet.”
The Red Cross said it had registered more than 100 households and 305 people, including 89 children, for emergency aid by early Saturday afternoon.
More than 200 fire and emergency crews worked the scene, according to the fire department. When the explosion occurred, some firefighters were trapped briefly in an elevator, officials said.
“There were injuries. It was a very, very difficult night on a very cold night, which caused even more difficulty,” Fire Commissioner Lillian Bonsignore said.
Around half a million New Yorkers live in aging buildings run by the city’s housing authority, known as NYCHA, which is the largest in the nation.
Many of the properties date back to the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. In 2019, a federal monitor was appointed to address chronic problems like lead paint, mold and lack of heat. When he wrapped his five-year term in 2024, the monitor, Bart Schwartz, noted that the overarching issue for residents remained the “poor physical state of NYCHA’s buildings.”
In October, a massive brick chimney running 20 stories up the side of a housing authority apartment building in the Bronx collapsed after an explosion, sending tons of debris plummeting to the ground but amazingly not injuring anyone. Officials linked it to a natural gas boiler.
As Los Angeles grapples with a housing shortage, it could learn from San Diego, which has proved better at convincing construction companies to build more.
The city is more welcoming to developers, industry insiders say, with fewer regulations and fees, better planning and less rent control.
“It is easier to build in San Diego over Los Angeles because of its legal structure, political culture and defined processes,” said Kevin Shannon, co-head of capital markets at real estate brokerage Newmark, which is overseeing the sale of a sprawling development site in San Diego that is zoned to have thousands of apartments.
The result: As of last quarter, the number of new apartments under construction in San Diego County rose 10% from three years earlier, CoStar data show. New apartment construction in Los Angeles County tumbled 33% over the same period, hitting an 11-year low in the three months through December. San Diego is expanding its apartment pool at nearly twice the rate of L.A. and other major city clusters in the state.
View of An apartment building is under construction in downtown San Diego on Jan. 16, 2026. The city is more welcoming to developers than Los Angeles, industry insiders say,
(Sandy Huffaker / For The Times)
L.A.’s vacancy rate is among the lowest in the country and rental rates are among the highest nationwide. Still, the supply of fresh rental units, which make up the bulk of new housing in Los Angeles, is thinning out despite robust demand.
Although local lawmakers create regulations to protect renters and keep rents down, hoping to combat homelessness, developers and economists warn that the wrong regulations often can add to the cost of building and maintaining apartments, making it hard to make a profit on new and existing projects. People who already have apartments may be protected, but over the long run, fewer are built, they say.
Rent control has been at the center of the debate recently. The city of Los Angeles just tightened its rent control.
It has just lowered the cap on rent increases for rent-stabilized apartments, a massive portion of the city’s housing stock that houses nearly half of the city’s residents. Although the cap doesn’t apply to units built after 1978, it still discourages developers, as it sends the wrong signal to those already worried about restrictions.
At the state level, a similar housing bill that would have halved the cap on rent increases to 5% a year died in the Assembly last week. Assemblymembers decided that too many restrictions can be counterproductive.
“That sounds nice and humanly caring and all that and warm and fuzzy, but someone has to pay,” said Assemblymember Diane Dixon (R-Newport Beach). “How far do we squeeze the property owners?”
San Diego doesn’t have traditional rent control, though it does enforce less restrictive statewide tenant protections.
In Los Angeles, Measure ULA, known as the mansion tax, is another top reason that developers decide to build elsewhere. They also point to other local regulations that make it challenging to evict tenants who don’t pay their rent.
“L.A. has been redlined by the majority of the investment community,” apartment developer Ari Kahan of California Landmark Group said in October.
It’s easier to do business in San Diego because of its real estate development policies, project approval process and overall business-friendly attitude, industry insiders said. It outlines what it wants in a general plan, and if projects line up with that, they can be approved at the city staff level.
“San Diego has a clear, enforced General Plan, and for the most part, it sticks to it,” Shannon said. “San Diego updates its Community Plan and then lets projects proceed if they comply.”
“In contrast, L.A.’s General Plan is outdated and inconsistent,” he said. “Almost everything requires discretionary approvals.”
A view of the downtown San Diego skyline Jan. 16, 2026. It’s easier to do business in San Diego because of its real estate development policies, project approval process and overall business-friendly attitude, industry insiders said.
(Sandy Huffaker / For The Times)
Elected officials in L.A., including the City Council, have the discretion to decide whether a new project can be built, which can add months to its approval process as the proposal winds through City Hall and public meetings.
“The City of San Diego continues to prioritize the permitting and development of new homes to address our region’s housing needs and support a better future for all San Diegans,” said Peter Kelly, a spokesman for the city Planning Department. “Through updated community plans, streamlined permitting processes and proactive implementation of state housing laws, we are working to increase housing supply and affordability in all neighborhoods.”
The city updates its Land Development Code annually to streamline the permitting process and accelerate housing production, he said. It also adds capacity to build new homes through rezoning and updates to the city’s community plans, with a focus on placing new homes and jobs near transit, parks and services.
“If we can bring more supply, it will hopefully bring down rents,” said Kip Malo, a real estate broker in JLL’s San Diego office.
Most new apartments are being built outside of downtown San Diego, Malo said. “The city has made a concerted effort to try to clean up downtown and it has gotten better, but it’s still got a ways to go.
Of course, developers in San Diego still face the same headwinds that affect developers in other cities, such as interest rates that make construction loans more expensive than they have been in years past.
Recent policy out of Washington also hasn’t helped. Higher tariffs have driven up the prices of construction materials and equipment, while the crackdown on undocumented workers has thinned and spooked much of the international workforce on which the industry depends.
An apartment building is under construction in downtown San Diego on Jan. 16, 2026. In L.A., elected officials, including the City Council, have the discretion to decide whether a new project can be built, which can add months to its approval process as the proposal winds through City Hall and public meetings.
(Sandy Huffaker / For The Times)
California’s construction industry depends on immigrant workers. Around 61% of construction workers in the state are immigrants, and 26% of those are undocumented, according to a June report from the Bay Area Council Economic Institute.
San Diego is “still California,” Malo said, and has hurdles to get projects approved that aren’t faced by builders in Texas and other states with more lax requirements for new projects, Malo said, but “the political winds have shifted in developers’ favor.”
A man accused of ambushing and fatally stabbing his ex-girlfriend’s new boyfriend has been extradited to Orange County to face a murder charge after eight years on the run in Mexico, authorities said.
Humberto Rodriguez Martinez, 39, is accused of working with a friend to kill his romantic rival outside his ex-girlfriend’s apartment in 2017, according to the Orange County district attorney’s office. Martinez is a Mexican citizen and was in the U.S. illegally at the time of the killing, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors charged Martinez in 2017 with the murder of 32-year-old Daniel Reyes, as well as with felony enhancements for allegedly lying in wait and for using a knife. But for years police were unable to arrest him.
Martinez’s car was recovered in San Diego, while he remained wanted on a $2-million warrant.
His friend, Adan Zapot-Leyva, was arrested two days after the attack and later sentenced to 15 years to life after pleading guilty in 2023 to one felony count of second-degree murder.
Mexican authorities, working with the U.S. Marshals Service, tracked down Martinez in 2024 in Mexico, where he was arrested at the request of the U.S.
On Dec. 4, he was extradited to the U.S. and homicide detectives from the Anaheim Police Department took him into custody at Los Angeles International Airport. He pleaded not guilty to murder on Tuesday and is being held without bail.
“This arrest does not undo the pain the victim’s family has endured, but it reinforces our commitment and promise to our community: We will never stop working until justice is served,” Anaheim Police Chief Manny Cid said in a statement.
Prosecutors accuse Martinez of carrying out a deliberate, jealousy-driven murder plot.
Martinez shared two children with his ex-girlfriend and they were co-parenting for several months after they broke up. On Oct. 17, 2017, Martinez and Zapot-Leyva went to the woman’s apartment to watch the children while she went to work, prosecutors said.
She returned home around 8:30 p.m. and the men left the apartment. About 30 minutes later, her new boyfriend arrived, prosecutors said.
Early the following morning, Anaheim police officers responded to the intersection of Santa Ana and Helena streets after witnesses reported seeing two men chasing Reyes and one of them stabbing him. Reyes died at the scene.
Zapot-Leyva later told authorities that he and Martinez had watched the apartment for several hours because they knew that Reyes was inside, according to his 2023 plea agreement obtained by City News Service.
The ex-girlfriend had called Zapot-Leyva to ask where he and Martinez were and, in a “deliberate trick,” Zapot-Leyva told her they had left the area hours ago, according to the plea agreement. The goal was to fool Reyes into thinking it was safe to exit the apartment.
Once he did emerge, the men chased him down and attacked him, and Martinez stabbed him 10 times, Zapot-Leyva told authorities, according to the plea deal.
Reyes begged them to stop, saying “please don’t … I have children,” according to the plea deal.
“The pursuit of justice will never be derailed by time or distance,” O.C. Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in a statement Friday. “We are grateful for the incredible work of our investigators and prosecutors and of our partners, both domestic and international, for their assistance in tracking down a wanted [murder suspect] and bringing him back to Orange County.”
Severe mold contamination inside an apartment at Alden Towers in Detroit left two adults and a baby seriously ill, forcing them to throw away nearly everything they owned and ultimately leaving them homeless with ongoing health problems, a family says.
KaDeidra Copeland, 28, and her partner, DaQuan Grantham, say their ordeal began shortly after Grantham moved into Unit A210 at Alden Towers in October 2024. Copeland, who had just given birth, and the couple’s infant soon joined him in the apartment.
“We would come in and there was a weird smell,” Copeland tells Metro Times. “You could smell mildew. It smelled stuffy.”
Not long after, Grantham began suffering from frequent and severe nosebleeds.
“The blood was pouring out,” Copeland says. “He ended up having to get surgery.”
At the time, they did not know what was causing it.
Grantham says the couple only discovered the mold months later, in early May 2025, when one of his children nearly put a paint chip in his mouth.
“It had black dots on it,” Grantham says. “We caught it in time.”
Grantham said he immediately notified building management. Maintenance workers came to the apartment and chipped away some paint, then sprayed the area.
“They told us it wasn’t mold at first,” Copeland says.
Grantham says he pushed management to hire a professional remediation company, arguing that maintenance employees were not qualified to handle the situation. A contractor later tested the apartment and found moisture inside the walls, Grantham says.
According to lab results from PEL Laboratories shared with Metro Times, air and surface samples from the unit detected Ascomycetes species, basidiomycetes species, and cladosporium species, fungi commonly associated with moisture intrusion and indoor mold growth.
Hospital records provided by the couple show Grantham also tested with elevated levels of Alternaria and Stemphylium herbarum, molds that can act as airborne allergens and are uncommon in high concentrations indoors. Copeland tested with elevated levels of Cladosporium herbarum and Penicillium notatum, fungi frequently found in water-damaged buildings and associated with indoor mold growth.
Grantham says the mold was found beneath air vents throughout the apartment.
“When the heat came on, it circulated through the whole place,” he says. “The mold was in the master bedroom, the kitchen, the bathroom, the living room. Everywhere.”
As the situation worsened, Copeland says, her health rapidly declined. She developed chronic hives and swelling and was eventually prescribed an EpiPen, steroids, and other medications she had never needed before.
“My throat felt like it was closing,” she says. “I was disoriented, but I still had to make sure my baby was OK.”
Their infant began waking up screaming and developed rashes, hives, and pink eye, Copeland says. One of Grantham’s older children, who visited the apartment, also began experiencing nosebleeds.
“One night he woke up with blood all over the bathroom,” Copeland says. “We thought it was DaQuan at first. Then we realized it was his son.”
Grantham says he ultimately required emergency nasal surgery because he could not breathe out of one side of his nose.
His symptoms linger, he says.
“My nose still burns,” he says.
KaDeidra Copeland says mold in her apartment at Alden Towers gave her hives that won’t go away. Credit: KaDeidra Copeland
Copeland continues to struggle with hives and swelling near her eyes and says she went to the hospital Wednesday night because her condition worsened.
Copeland and Grantham say they repeatedly asked Alden Towers management for help, including temporary relocation while the mold issue was addressed. They say those requests were ignored, and audio recordings from the pair support those claims.
After Grantham’s surgery, Copeland says, he was forced to return to the apartment.
“They couldn’t even accommodate him knowing he had surgery coming up,” she says. “We didn’t have anywhere else to go.”
Grantham says management initially told him he would not need to pay rent while the issue was being investigated, but later reversed course.
“They said they would work with me,” he says, providing audio recordings that back up his claims. “Then they said I had to pay the balance before they would fix the apartment.”
Ultimately, the family was evicted.
The family was removed from the apartment in August 2025, and Grantham’s security deposit was never returned, he says.
“I ended up homeless,” Grantham says. “I was staying with family, taking the bus to work, sometimes walking. I missed Christmas.”
Copeland says management also accused Grantham of breaching his lease because she was staying in the unit, even though staff knew she and the baby were living there full time.
“They knew that unit was messed up,” she says . “I stayed there all day.”
Before leaving, Copeland says the family threw away most of their belongings out of fear they were contaminated, including furniture, electronics, cookware, and clothing.
“We literally couldn’t take anything with us except bags and sealed totes,” she said. “We had just bought all of it when we moved in.”
As they were moving out, Grantham says he slipped and fell because of a leak in the ceiling.
“I slipped on the staircase and injured my ankle,” he recalls. “I still have back spasms, and my ankle still hurts sometimes.”
Before they had trouble with mold, they say their apartment was infested with cockroaches.
“I had just had my baby. The roaches were crawling on the counter near my baby’s formula,” Copeland says.
Today, Copeland says she wakes up itching and remains fearful of mold exposure anywhere she goes.
“If I see a spot on a wall, I’m scared,” she says. “I’m traumatized.”
She says the experience, combined with postpartum depression, pushed her into isolation.
“My son didn’t get a Christmas,” she says. “Do you know how many days I cried because of that?”
The company that manages the building, Friedman Real Estate, said through a spokesperson on Wednesday that it would respond to Metro Times’s questions for comment. But since then, the company has gone silent.
Alden Towers, originally built in 1922 and once considered one of the most distinctive apartment complexes on the Detroit River, now faces a long list of complaints, including broken elevators, mold, flooding, overflowing trash, roach infestations, unsafe hallways, and a management company that tenants say is indifferent and punitive.
Residents say the decline began after the building was purchased in 2019 by Alden Towers Holding Company LLC, a company tied to Belfor Holdings Inc., according to tax and state property records and a previous report from Crain’s Detroit Business that lists a Belfor executive as a member of the LLC. Metro Times could not reach the owner for comment.
The family’s allegations are similar to those raised by other Alden Towers tenants over the past several years.
Last year, management didn’t turn on the heat until Nov. 1, weeks after temperatures dropped, and it went out three days later in one of the building’s four towers, forcing tenants in 98 units to warm their homes with space heaters. A temporary boiler has since been installed to provide heat.
On Dec. 9, one day after Metro Times contacted the city about the outage, Detroit began issuing a $2,000-a-day fine to the building’s owner until the heat resumed.
Others have described chronic elevator failures, roach infestations, water shutoffs, and mold following leaks and fires. Some tenants who raised complaints said they later faced eviction notices or lease terminations.
Since August 2024, the city has cited the owner at least six times for violations ranging from failing to obtain a certificate of compliance and maintain clean, sanitary conditions to ignoring unsafe building conditions, broken fire-safety doors, and required safety equipment that wasn’t working.
Tenants have picketed outside the building and sought help from city officials, arguing that management has failed to address longstanding habitability issues in the nearly century-old complex.
Copeland says the experience has permanently changed how she views housing and safety.
“Nobody should have to live like this,” she says. “Especially not with a baby.”
Grantham says he and his family are still trying to rebuild their lives.
“We had everything mapped out,” he says. “And then it all fell apart.”
Deputies are searching for Kendrick Graham, 18, who allegedly stole a loaded firearm from his grandmother’s apartment on Belltower Avenue in Deltona.According to the report, there were signs of forced entry to her bedroom. Graham has since been posting photos with the gun on social media.His family has been in contact with him, and he’s refusing to turn himself in. If you have information, contact VSO on 911 or email Det. Borbely at JBorbely@volusiasheriff.gov.
VOLUSIA COUNTY, Fla. —
Deputies are searching for Kendrick Graham, 18, who allegedly stole a loaded firearm from his grandmother’s apartment on Belltower Avenue in Deltona.
According to the report, there were signs of forced entry to her bedroom. Graham has since been posting photos with the gun on social media.
Volusia County Sheriff’s Office
His family has been in contact with him, and he’s refusing to turn himself in. If you have information, contact VSO on 911 or email Det. Borbely at JBorbely@volusiasheriff.gov.
The heat has been out for more than a month in a large part of the historic Alden Towers apartment complex on Detroit’s east riverfront, forcing tenants in 98 units to warm their homes with space heaters in a building that has a growing list of safety and maintenance problems.
The city’s Buildings, Safety Engineering and Environmental Department (BSEED) issued an emergency correction order on Nov. 24 after inspecting the four-tower complex and confirming that one tower lost heat on Nov. 4. Tenants say building management, Friedman Real Estate, didn’t turn on the heat until Nov. 1, weeks after temperatures dropped, and it went out three days later. Tenants still have no heat in the A Tower.
On Tuesday, one day after Metro Times contacted the city about the outage, Detroit began issuing $2,000 fines to the building’s owner, Alden Towers Holding Company LLC, and will continue writing tickets every day until heat is restored. The city is also weighing legal action.
“We have been aware of isolated heat complaints in one of the towers at Alden Towers but were unaware of it being a widespread issue until just recently,” BSEED spokesperson Georgette Johnson told Metro Times in a statement Tuesday. “Last week, we wrote an emergency correction order for the landlord to address the issues. As of Monday, the issue still had not been fixed. This is unacceptable. Yesterday, we issued tickets to the owner in the amount of $2,000 and will continue to write tickets daily until the issue is addressed and tenants have reliable heat. We also are working with the Law Department on potential legal action against the owner of the building.”
In May 2023, a three-alarm fire ripped through the B Tower after a candle fell in one of the units, sending thick black smoke through hallways and trapping residents. Tenants say some alarms never sounded. Two people were treated for smoke inhalation.
Now, tenants say they’ve been told to rely on multiple space heaters to stay warm because management cannot provide heat. Temperatures are expected to plummet to single digits this weekend.
“I have three space heaters. My son lives here with me,” one long-time tenant who asked not to be named for fear of retaliation tells Metro Times. “They were super late turning the heat on this season. We were already freezing on Halloween.”
Tenants are worried the space heaters will significantly increase their electric bills and potentially cause a fire.
Another tenant, who has lived in the building for about seven years, says he has trouble working because his apartment is so frigid.
“It’s been so cold,” he says. “I got home from business and it was freezing and I couldn’t even work. I have two space heaters.”
Tenants have posted handwritten signs on the hallways, encouraging residents to reach out to the city.
In a statement to Metro Times on Tuesday, Friedman Real Estate said the outage was caused by a failed boiler and circulation pump and that a temporary solution is in the works.
”A custom replacement circulation pump is already on order and is scheduled for delivery and installation in mid-January,” the statement read. “In the meantime, ownership has authorized the rapid deployment and installation of a temporary boiler to restore heat as quickly as possible. Supplemental heating is also available upon request, and our property management team is working closely with both the City and mechanical specialists to stabilize heating throughout the building as quickly as possible.”
Tenants countered that the ”supplemental heating,” meaning space heaters, has already ran out and is no longer available.
The owner did not return calls for comment.
Since August 2024, the city has cited the owner at least six times for a total of $1,600 in fines for violations ranging from failing to obtain a certificate of compliance and maintain clean, sanitary conditions to ignoring unsafe building conditions, broken fire-safety doors, and required safety equipment that wasn’t working.
One tenant says her family, including her baby, has developed significant health problems caused by mold in their unit. She says the building has not addressed the issue despite repeated complaints.
Overflowing dumpsters outside Alden Towers in Detroit. Credit: Steve Neavling
On Tuesday, Metro Times spotted dumpsters outside Alden Towers that were so overfilled that trash was heaped above the lids and spilling down the sides, with bags, boxes, and loose debris scattered across the snowy ground.
Alden Towers, originally built in 1922 and once considered one of the most distinctive apartment complexes on the Detroit River, now faces a long list of complaints, including broken elevators, mold, flooding, overflowing trash, roach infestations, unsafe hallways, and a management company that tenants say is indifferent and punitive.
Residents say the decline began after the building was purchased in 2019 by Alden Towers Holding Company LLC, a company tied to Belfor Holdings Inc., according to tax and state property records and a previous report from Crain’s Detroitthat lists a Belfor executive as a member of the LLC.
“It went extremely downhill,” one tenant says. “You can tell they don’t care. Previously it was calm and quiet. As soon as they let their guard down, they let in anyone. It changed the culture of the people living there.”
Maintenance issues have been piling up, tenants say.
“One of the biggest things is the elevators,” a tenant says. “They break down on a weekly basis. Sometimes both of them break down at the same time. What happens to people who are handicapped? There are no fire escapes.”
Several tenants say management has responded to complaints by refusing to renew leases, forcing outspoken residents out. One tenant says her lease was not renewed after she repeatedly contacted the city about problems in the building. She has lived there nine years.
“They said they refused to renew it,” she says. “I had to file a counterclaim against them. I’ve never paid rent late. I’ve never had complaints or violations of my lease.”
The threats of eviction stretch back at least a year or two. In a Metro Times story chronicling the problems at Alden Towers in April 2024, a resident said she was threatened with eviction after raising concerns about safety and sanitation. Other residents described poor conditions, from lack of heat and hot water to broken elevators and roaches.
It has only gotten worse since, tenants say, accusing the city of not taking quicker and more drastic action.
“It’s like being stuck,” the long-time tenant says. “The city is kind of scared to hold them accountable because they don’t want to scare away investors.”
With nearly 400 units across four eight-story towers, Alden Towers is home to seniors, working families, disabled residents, and lower-income tenants. According to census data cited by a resident, 22% of tenants live below the poverty line.
“We have vulnerable, elderly people here,” one resident says. “A lot of our residents are either really young or really old. A lot of them are SSI recipients.”
Without functioning heat, many tenants say they are worried about winter conditions and the risk of using space heaters in a century-old building that already experienced a major fire.
“Now you have a bunch of tenants with space heaters, which are potential hazards,” a tenant says.
Originally built as the Berman Apartments, Alden Towers features crenellated limestone rooflines, ornate brickwork, courtyards, and sweeping river views. The complex was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. Its current website describes it as a boutique, modern riverfront community.
Tenants say the description is nothing like what they’ve experienced.
“It used to be a nice place to live and a good community,” a tenant says. “Now most people are trying to move.”
The long-time tenant who keeps three space heaters says she is leaving this month after nine years. She considers herself lucky.
“If I didn’t know where I was moving to, this would be a lot worse,” she says. “I love and care about my neighbors, and I really feel bad for them.”
Metro Times could not reach the owner or management company for comment.
Alden Towers is just the latest historic building in Detroit to face repercussions for neglect and deplorable conditions. The historic Leland House in downtown Detroit is on the verge of getting shut down because of delinquent DTE Energy bills and decades of neglect.
One night last December, six men met at a home in the Hollywood Hills to plot a kidnapping, prosecutors say.
Their alleged target was a 17-year-old operator of a cryptocurrency business. His abductors, authorities charge, included a felon with ties to Israeli organized crime and a former officer from the Los Angeles Police Department.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Jane Brownstone on Friday disclosed details of the alleged kidnapping at bail hearings for the alleged gangster, Gabby Ben, and the former officer, Eric Halem. Both men have pleaded not guilty to the charges against them.
Ben, 51, has twice been convicted of fraud and deported to Israel, according to court records. Along with his blue jail jumpsuit, he wore a yarmulke and towel around his neck. He shrugged and shook his head when Brownstone said he has “ties to the Israeli mafia.”
Halem, 38, who appeared in court in an orange jumpsuit, served 13 years in the LAPD. By the time he left the department in 2022, he had developed lucrative side hustles, including a luxury car rental business and an app that allowed actors to audition remotely. He was also flirting with the idea of developing a reality show about his life, former associates told The Times.
Around 2 a.m. on Dec. 28, 2024, Halem, Ben and four other men drove in two cars — Ben’s rented Lamborghini Urus and a Range Rover — to a luxury high-rise in Koreatown where the alleged victim lived, Brownstone said in court.
Dressed in dark clothing, Halem, Ben and two other men punched in the access code to the victim’s apartment, Brownstone said. The teenager wasn’t home, but the intruders found his girlfriend in a closet and restrained her with LAPD-issued handcuffs, according to the prosecutor.
“Everyone was armed,” Brownstone said. “They claimed they were from the Los Angeles Police Department and they were executing a search warrant.”
When the intended victim returned home, the men handcuffed him and demanded he open his crypto wallet on his phone and computer, Brownstone said. The teen tried to bluff by showing an empty digital wallet, she said.
The intruders threatened to shoot the teenager in the foot and waterboard him if he didn’t surrender his crypto, turning on a shower to emphasize the threat, the prosecutor said.
Only then did he provide the code to a safe that held a “hard-wired” crypto wallet stored on a thumb drive, Brownstone told the judge. The wallet contained $350,000 in crypto, she said.
Surveillance footage showed Ben, Halem and the other intruders leaving the victim’s apartment building about 25 minutes after they entered, according to the prosecutor. They did not touch the Rolex watches or stacks of cash inside the safe and scattered throughout the apartment.
Halem’s attorney, Megan Maitia, cast doubt on the “alleged motive” for the case, questioning how the young man described by authorities as a victim had accumulated so much crypto.
“How does a 17-year-old do this?” she asked.
Maitia argued it wasn’t her client who’d threatened to hurt the teenager, but a sixth, still-unidentified suspect who “everyone thought was the most dangerous.”
Brownstone told the judge that police are still searching for a sixth suspect.
Maitia asked Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Victoria Wilson to grant her client bail. Far from the high-flying, deep-pocketed wheeler-dealer he was portrayed to be, Halem, a father of two, was now broke, his lawyer said. His house was encumbered with liens and he’d sold a “prop plane” that prosecutors cited when arguing he was a risk to abscond, Maitia said.
“The bank accounts are empty,” she told Wilson.
Maitia also argued Halem was in danger in the Los Angeles County jails. “He worries he is going to be killed because he was a cop,” she said.
Wilson said she would order the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, which runs the jails, to protect Halem but was not moved to grant him bail.
Nor did she approve the release of Ben. His attorney, Kellen Davis, said his client had no violent convictions and always complied with court orders “from the limited record he does have.”
Ben was convicted of orchestrating a “bust out” scheme by paying people to open bank accounts that were later used to commit fraud, court records show. He was also accused of defrauding elderly people after entering their homes disguised as an HVAC technician and secretly photographing driver’s licenses and bank statements.
Ben, who lived in Los Angeles and Miami, owned healthcare and assisted living facilities, Davis said. “They are legitimate and he’s been operating them for years,” he told Wilson.
The judge wasn’t persuaded. Wilson called the allegation that Ben and his co-defendants posed as policemen “extremely troubling,” and she said there was a chance he could cause “great bodily harm to others” if let out of jail.
Times staff writers Libor Jany and Richard Winton contributed to this report.
HIM. A SACRAMENTO FAMILY IS MOURNING THE LOSS OF A MAN DESCRIBED AS A LOVING AND FIERY SPORTS FANATIC. IT’S TOUGH. IT’S FRUSTRATING. AFTER WEEKS OF SEARCHING, WE WEREN’T GETTING ANY ANSWERS FROM HIM. THE FAMILY OF 59 YEAR OLD RICHARD MCCLINTOCK NOW WANT ACCOUNTABILITY. WE’RE NOT GOING TO STOP UNTIL UNTIL WE GET JUSTICE FOR RICHARD MCCLINTOCK, WHO HAD CEREBRAL PALSY RELIED ON CARETAKERS FOR SUPPORT. NOW, THE WOMAN HIRED TO HELP HIM IS CHARGED WITH HIS MURDER. 41 YEAR OLD CHRISTINA COHEN WAS ARRAIGNED ON MURDER AND FRAUD CHARGES. THE COURT NOT ALLOWING KCRA 3 TO SHOW HER FACE, BUT IT’S ONE HIS FAMILY KNOWS WELL. THIS IS WHAT WE SUSPECTED ALL ALONG. THE FAMILY SAYS COHEN’S WAS RICHARD’S CARETAKER FOR YEARS. THEY NEVER NOTICED ANYTHING WRONG UNTIL HIS SISTER DIED. AND SUDDENLY THEY COULDN’T GET IN CONTACT WITH RICHARD. MY AUNT SHELLY, SHE WENT OVER TO HIS APARTMENT, KNOCKED ON THE DOOR, AND THERE WAS NO ANSWER. ALL OF A SUDDEN. THEN WE STARTED GETTING TEXT MESSAGES FROM HIS FACEBOOK ACCOUNT. MESSAGES, THEY SAY LOOKED UNUSUAL. AND WHEN THEY CAME BACK THAT SAME NIGHT, THE CARETAKER WOULD NOT LET HER SEE OR WOULD NOT LET HER SEE RICHARD. THE FAMILY ASKED POLICE FOR A WELFARE CHECK ON OCTOBER 25TH. SACRAMENTO POLICE SAY OFFICERS WENT TO THE APARTMENT BUT DIDN’T FIND MCCLINTOCK. NEARLY TWO WEEKS LATER, POLICE FOUND RICHARD’S REMAINS AFTER GETTING A WARRANT TO SEARCH HIS APARTMENT TO KNOW THAT SOMEBODY IS CAPABLE OF DOING THIS TO A DISABLED PERSON. AND MY UNCLE’S CONDITION IS IS JUST OUTRAGEOUS. COHEN’S WAS INITIALLY ARRESTED FOR UNLAWFUL DISPOSAL OF HUMAN REMAINS, GRAND THEFT, AND ATTEMPT TO CONCEAL A DEATH. SHE’S NOW CHARGED WITH MURDER AND WELFARE FRAUD. HER ATTORNEY ASKED FOR CONTINUATION IN COURT TODAY. SHE’LL BE BACK IN COURT ON NOVEMBER 24TH. LIVE IN THE NEWSROOM CECIL HANNIBAL KCRA THREE NEWS. ALL RIGHT. CECIL, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE UPDATE. COURT RECORDS ALSO SHOW COHEN WAS ARRAIGNED ON FELONY EMBEZZLEMENT CHARGES BACK IN JULY, BUT WE DON’
Sacramento man with cerebral palsy was killed by caretaker in July, court documents allege
Newly-released court documents shed new light on the death of a Sacramento man with cerebral palsy who was believed to have been killed by his caretaker. Richard McClintic was reported missing by his family on Oct. 25. His body was found in his apartment on the night of Nov. 6, the Sacramento Police Department said, after officers executed a search warrant. (Previous coverage in the video player above.)Christina Cowens, 41, McClintic’s caretaker, was arrested in connection with his death. She was initially charged with unlawful disposal of human remains, grand theft, and concealment/attempt to conceal a death, before she was also charged with McClintic’s murder and making fraudulent claims to an officer. A felony complaint filed in Sacramento County on Nov. 10 indicates prosecutors believe McClintic was murdered on or about July 3, more than four months before his body was found. The circumstances surrounding McClintic’s death remain unknown, and it’s unclear how Cowens may have concealed McClintic’s remains after his death. Sacramento police said they had carried out a welfare check at his apartment soon after he was reported missing, but initially did not find him. Just a couple of weeks after McClintic’s death, Cowens was also charged with fraudulently appropriating a U-Haul truck, sometime between July 15 and 21. It’s not clear if that was related to the concealment of McClintic’s death.McClintic’s family described him as “a fiery guy,” who was “fun to be around.” “Very strong guy, 59 years old, with cerebral palsy and pushed through his entire life with that condition and never complained,” his nephew, Ryan Klagenberg, previously told KCRA 3.Cowens first appeared in court on Nov. 10. At that hearing, her attorney requested a continuation. She will return to the courtroom on Nov. 24. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
SACRAMENTO, Calif. —
Newly-released court documents shed new light on the death of a Sacramento man with cerebral palsy who was believed to have been killed by his caretaker.
Richard McClintic was reported missing by his family on Oct. 25. His body was found in his apartment on the night of Nov. 6, the Sacramento Police Department said, after officers executed a search warrant.
(Previous coverage in the video player above.)
Christina Cowens, 41, McClintic’s caretaker, was arrested in connection with his death. She was initially charged with unlawful disposal of human remains, grand theft, and concealment/attempt to conceal a death, before she was also charged with McClintic’s murder and making fraudulent claims to an officer.
A felony complaint filed in Sacramento County on Nov. 10 indicates prosecutors believe McClintic was murdered on or about July 3, more than four months before his body was found.
The circumstances surrounding McClintic’s death remain unknown, and it’s unclear how Cowens may have concealed McClintic’s remains after his death. Sacramento police said they had carried out a welfare check at his apartment soon after he was reported missing, but initially did not find him.
Just a couple of weeks after McClintic’s death, Cowens was also charged with fraudulently appropriating a U-Haul truck, sometime between July 15 and 21. It’s not clear if that was related to the concealment of McClintic’s death.
McClintic’s family described him as “a fiery guy,” who was “fun to be around.”
“Very strong guy, 59 years old, with cerebral palsy and pushed through his entire life with that condition and never complained,” his nephew, Ryan Klagenberg, previously told KCRA 3.
Cowens first appeared in court on Nov. 10. At that hearing, her attorney requested a continuation. She will return to the courtroom on Nov. 24.
Mayor Mike Johnston wields a plug during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for new Buzze electric vehicle charging stations at Koelbel and Company’s Sienna on Sloans Lake affordable apartments. Oct. 23, 2025.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Besides the upfront price tag, there’s a good reason most electric vehicle drivers own single-family homes.
If you have a garage or carport, it’s easy enough to replenish an EV battery with a standard outlet or a faster “Level 2” home charger. Besides convenience, recharging at home also unlocks steep cost savings, allowing EV owners to avoid the high price of visiting the gas pump or fast charger once or twice a week.
A new initiative aims to bring the same benefits to Denver’s less wealthy apartment dwellers. On Thursday, Mayor Mike Johnston joined a ribbon-cutting for a bank of six chargers outside Sienna at Sloanes Lake, a former 1940s-era dorm for nurses converted into an affordable apartment complex.
Mayor Mike Johnston helps cut a ribbon on new Buzze electric vehicle charging stations at Koelbel and Company’s Sienna on Sloans Lake affordable apartments. Oct. 23, 2025.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
“It used to be that if a vehicle was electric, only some folks could afford it,” Johnston said. “No one is more likely to want to use an electric vehicle than someone who’s living in affordable housing.”
The average price of a new EV is around $58,000 in the U.S, which remains far out of reach for most low-income families. Colorado, however, offers programs to help less wealthy residents afford EVs. And since plug-in cars quickly lose value, pre-owned electric cars and trucks are now almost as cheap as used cars powered by fossil fuels, according to recent sales figures published by Cox Automotive.
Apartment chargers could unlock a new category of potential EV buyers. It could also help places like Denver reach closer to its climate goals as the federal government withdraws support for climate-friendly technology.
The project, however, wasn’t financed by the city. Koelbel and Co., the developer behind the affordable housing project, built the chargers by contracting Buzze, a company focused on installing EV plugs at commercial and multifamily properties. Xcel Energy also offered rebates to subsidize the plugs.
The same collaboration has plans for similar charging setups across the Mile High City. Over the next year, Buzze plans to install 600 chargers in Denver, putting a majority at or near affordable housing projects, according to Aaron Lieberman, the company’s founder and CEO.
Aaron Lieberman, CEO of Buzze EV Charging, speaks during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for new electric vehicle charging stations at Koelbel and Company’s Sienna on Sloans Lake affordable apartments. Oct. 23, 2025.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Lieberman started the company after buying his own electric car. At first, he didn’t own a garage charger, which left him planning errands around unreliable and expensive public fast chargers, where recharging can cost $20 to $45 per session. Once an electrician installed a plug at home, he said EV ownership became “a dream.”
“That’s the dream that’s being made possible for everybody who lives in this development,” Lieberman said.
Colorado is an especially favorable environment for EV charging companies
It’s clear there are plenty of Colorado drivers willing to at least try all-electric driving.
On Wednesday, Gov. Jared Polis’ office announced that 32% of new vehicles registered in the state in the last quarter were electric, according to the latest report from the Colorado Automobile Dealers Association.
Sales surged nationwide as drivers rushed to claim the federal EV tax credit before it expired on Sept. 30. Colorado, however, not only set the pace for the highest EV adoption rate in the nation between July and September, surpassing California. It also set the highest single-quarter EV adoption rate ever recorded in any state.
A new Buzze electric vehicle charging station juices up a Ford truck at Koelbel and Company’s Sienna on Sloans Lake affordable apartments. Oct. 23, 2025.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Colorado drivers have now registered more than 210,000 EVs, according to state data. More than 55,000 are plug-in hybrids, which can drive short distances on a battery before switching to a gas- or diesel-powered motor. The other 155,000 are battery-electric vehicles demanding either overnight charging or visits to public fast chargers.
Xcel Energy, Colorado’s largest power provider, has also made EV adoption a priority. In 2024, it won approval for a $264 million plan to offer EV purchase rebates and subsidize EV infrastructure. The utility now offers up to $20,000 to offset the cost of each charging port at an apartment, with additional support available in less wealthy communities.
Robert Kenney, the president of Xcel Energy’s Colorado division, said the utility is investing more than $80 million to help commercial customers, like apartment complexes, design and build EV charging stations.
“The future of transportation is electric, and that future has to be accessible to everyone,” Kenney said.
Robert Kenney, president of Xcel Energy Colorado, speaks during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for new Buzze electric vehicle charging stations at Koelbel and Company’s Sienna on Sloans Lake affordable apartments. Oct. 23, 2025.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
It’s still way cheaper to charge an EV in a privately-owned garage
Residents using the new Buzze charging station will pay between 35 cents to 40 cents per kilowatt hour. Since most standard EV batteries hold between 60 to 100 kWhs, recharging a car to full capacity should cost roughly $30.
That’s far more than it costs to recharge an EV in a garage. In Colorado, Xcel Energy currently charges residential customers around 15 cents per kWh, so topping off a battery would cost roughly half as much as using one of the Buzze chargers installed at the apartments.
A new Buzze electric vehicle charging station at Koelbel and Company’s Sienna on Sloans Lake affordable apartments. Oct. 23, 2025.Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Lieberman said the extra cost helps pay for physical infrastructure and software behind the charging system. Even though it’s more expensive than home charging, it’s still cheaper than high-powered fast chargers owned by companies like Tesla and Electrify America.
“And all of it beats gas without the oil changes and everything else,” Lieberman said.
A proposed mega-development in downtown Los Angeles, which would replace a cold storage facility with a $2-billion residential and commercial complex, cleared a major hurdle last week when the city Planning Commission backed it.
Commissioners unanimously recommended the construction of Fourth & Central in the Skid Row neighborhood.
The 7.6-acre compound along Central Avenue that would contain apartments, offices, shops and restaurants in 10 distinct buildings of various sizes that would change the city skyline. The City Council will consider final approval later this year.
The project, which would be built near the neighborhood’s boundary with the Arts District, is being proposed by property owner Larry Rauch, president of Los Angeles Cold Storage. His family has operated food chilling facilities at Fourth Street and Central Avenue since the 1960s and plans to move the business to a new location.
In its place would be 1,589 rental apartments with 249 affordable units, along with 401,000 square feet of creative office space and 145,748 square feet of retail or restaurant space. The complex was conceived by Long Beach architect Studio One Eleven.
In response to changing market conditions and reactions from community members, a number of revisions have been made to Fourth & Central since the project was initially proposed in 2021.
Rendering of Fourth & Central, a $2-billion mixed-use development planned to replace a cold storage facility in downtown Los Angeles.
(Tomorrow Inc)
The tallest building, an apartment tower, has been reduced to 30 stories from 44. With housing more in demand than lodging, the hotel originally planned for the project has been replaced by additional residential units, including more affordable housing units.
The open space design has been changed to create better pedestrian connections to the Little Tokyo Galleria shopping center north of the complex. The 2 acres of open space in the project will be accessible to the public, Rauch said.
Denver real estate developer Continuum Partners, which initially launched the project with Rauch, is no longer involved, Rauch said.
“Continuum has chosen to focus its resources elsewhere at this time; the Fourth & Central Project will be moving forward with LA Cold Storage at the lead,” he said in a statement.
If approved, it would probably take a year to 18 months to complete final plans for the project before starting work. Fourth & Central is moving through its preliminary stages at a time when many other developers have put residential projects in Los Angeles on hold because it’s difficult to find viable construction financing at current interest rates.
Many equity investors, such as pension funds and insurance companies, are also reluctant to park money in L.A. because the rapidly changing rules make it impossible to predict profits.
Among investors’ concerns are public policies such as the United to House Los Angeles (Measure ULA) transfer tax on large real estate sales, and also temporary limits on evicting tenants that were enacted during the pandemic.
“We’ve spent years working on our plan to transform this industrial property into a mixed-use community, which made it so rewarding to hear city decision-makers agree with our vision,” Rauch said after the Planning Commission vote.
Among the organizations voicing support for the project were the Los Angeles/Orange Counties Building and Construction Trades Council, the Downtown Los Angeles Neighborhood Council, the Little Tokyo Business Assn. and the Central City Assn.
“This project represents a significant stride toward addressing the region’s housing challenges,” said Nella McOsker, president of the Central City Assn. “Plus, the new retail and restaurant space will attract business and people to downtown.”
Fourth & Central is not the only mega project being planned on the east side of downtown.
In July, the City Council approved 670 Mequit, a $1.4-billion complex intended to have apartments, offices, a hotel, a charter elementary school, shops and restaurants. It is to replace a cold storage facility on the west side of the Los Angeles River with the mixed-use complex designed by Danish architect Bjarke Ingels Group.
Montgomery County police are investigating a man found dead in an apartment in Maryland on Sunday as a homicide.
The death of a man whose body was found in his Maryland apartment Sunday morning is being investigated as a homicide, according to Montgomery County police.
Officers responded to an apartment in the 5900 block of Montrose Road in North Bethesda shortly before 7:45 a.m. and found a man dead inside.
The department’s Major Crimes Division will be leading the homicide investigation, according to police.
Police said there is no suspect information available and no one in custody. The body has been transferred to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for a full autopsy.
The victim has not yet been publicly identified.
See a map of the location where the man’s body was discovered here:
Courtesy Google Maps
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A Florida State linebacker is in critical but stable condition after being shot while visiting family, the Seminoles said Monday.Ethan Pritchard, a 6-foot-2, 224-pound freshman from Sanford, was in intensive care at a Tallahassee-area hospital. He was shot Sunday evening while inside a vehicle outside apartments in Havana, according to the Gadsden County Sheriff’s Office.“The Pritchard family is thankful for the support from so many people, as well as the care from first responders and medical professionals, and asks that their privacy be respected at this time,” FSU said in a statement. “Further updates will be provided as they are available.”Pritchard did not play in Florida State’s season opener, a 31-17 victory Saturday over No. 8 Alabama in Tallahassee.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. —
A Florida State linebacker is in critical but stable condition after being shot while visiting family, the Seminoles said Monday.
Ethan Pritchard, a 6-foot-2, 224-pound freshman from Sanford, was in intensive care at a Tallahassee-area hospital. He was shot Sunday evening while inside a vehicle outside apartments in Havana, according to the Gadsden County Sheriff’s Office.
“The Pritchard family is thankful for the support from so many people, as well as the care from first responders and medical professionals, and asks that their privacy be respected at this time,” FSU said in a statement. “Further updates will be provided as they are available.”
Pritchard did not play in Florida State’s season opener, a 31-17 victory Saturday over No. 8 Alabama in Tallahassee.
A video of a cleaner removing smoke stains from an apartment that housed a smoker for 10 years has gone viral on TikTok.
The clip was shared by Kaylee Marie Green (@aliyahsmamaxox), 31-year-old mom who lives in Tennessee. The clip has garnered 10.1 million views since it was shared on August 13.
Text overlaid on the video reads: “More from our day of removing nicotine from the apartment of a 10 year smoker.” The clip shows smoke stains being scrubbed off of what appears to be an air conditioning unit, as well as a door and a floor.
The poster told Newsweek that she was cleaning the apartment for a customer who had just moved her father out of the house. “He lived there for 10 years. It took us eight days to clean the stains and smells,” the poster said.
She said: “We used Zep [a brand of cleaning products] purple degreaser in a pump sprayer, sprayed the walls down and wiped them with a paper towel.”
A screenshot from a viral TikTok video showing a cleaner scrubbing the floor of an apartment. A screenshot from a viral TikTok video showing a cleaner scrubbing the floor of an apartment. @aliyahsmamaxox on TikTok
The viral post comes as cigarettes are reported to be the most commonly used type of tobacco product in the United States, according to a 2022 report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In 2022, 49.2 million U.S. adults—nearly one in five—reported current tobacco product use, the report said.
While cigarette smoking among adults has declined over the past decades, the use of e-cigarettes, also known as vapes, among adults increased from 2019 to 2022. Those aged 18 to 24 had the highest prevalence of e-cigarette usage, while those aged from 45 to 64 years old had the highest prevalence of cigarette smoking, the CDC report found.
The national health body warns that “tobacco product use remains the leading cause of preventable disease and death” in the U.S., noting that “smoking causes many diseases including cancer and cardiovascular and lung diseases.”
‘Crazy’
Viewers on TikTok were shocked by the scene of the apartment captured in the viral post.
User huccimamatay asked: “Isn’t that really dangerous?” and the original poster replied: “To live in? Yes. To clean, not if you take the proper precautions and do it right which we did.”
User @thecinnamonspide wrote: “unfortunately no amount of cleaning is going to make this sanitary and livable in my opinion.”
EleanorKerry78 said: “So this is NASTY. I’ve never smoked, never will…I’ve been friends with people who had parents that smoked and I literally couldn’t be around them without having an asthma attack. There’s no way to hide the smell of cigarettes. Sorry, there just isn’t. Perfume and air fresheners do nothing btw [by the way].”
User curte wrote: “Imagine his lungs! Why would anyone want to put toxins into their own body,” and user935794600848 agreed, saying: “Just imagine the residue on the lungs.”
User libby said: “what’s crazy is this could’ve been completely prevented if they had just stepped outside. Smoking should NOT be [allowed] inside on any property. I don’t care how old you are.”
Do you have a similar video or story to share? Let us know via life@newsweek.com and your story could be featured on Newsweek.
When Natalie Babcock and Samuel Gibson found a listing for a sunny apartment in Beachwood Canyon five years ago, they immediately fell for the two bedroom’s charming built-in bookshelves, faux fireplace, hardwood floors and formal dining room. Practical amenities such as an in-unit laundry and a garage, which are often elusive in Los Angeles rentals, didn’t hurt.
In this series, we spotlight L.A. rentals with style. From perfect gallery walls to temporary decor hacks, these renters get creative, even in small spaces. And Angelenos need the inspiration: Most are renters.
Today, however, the couple says they are most impressed by the sense of belonging they have found in the community just outside their 1928 Spanish fourplex. Here, where tourists and brides in wedding gowns often pose for photographs in the middle of the street in an effort to capture the Hollywood sign in the background, Babcock and Gibson have become part of a larger family. “Everyone knows our dogs’ names,” says Babcock, a 35-year-old educator working in the adolescent mental health field. “There is a true community vibe in this neighborhood.”
Adds Gibson, a 38-year-old screenwriter and Spanish professor and tutor from London: “I’ve never lived in a place that felt like a neighborhood. We’re in a message group with our neighbors. Sometimes our dog walks take forever because we stop every few minutes to say hello to someone.”
The couple was living in a charming apartment in Los Feliz when Gibson had to return to England to care for his mother, who had pancreatic cancer. Compounding their distress, Babcock’s father suffered a stroke, and Babcock moved in with her parents to help her sister, Eve, care for their father.
“It was the worst year of our lives,” Babcock recalls of that period. “Sam’s mother died, and my father had a catastrophic stroke.”
Their Los Feliz apartment was filled with bad memories, and they were excited by the prospect of creating happier memories in a new apartment.
Gibson’s office is decorated with artworks by local artists including his sister and one found on the street.
After scouring countless rentals online, the couple found a listing for the Hollywood apartment on Zillow, only to encounter what they now describe as “a feeding frenzy” when they arrived at the open house. The apartment, they say, was priced too low at $2,995 compared with similar units, and they were faced with fierce competition.
So they decided to do what many people do when trying to persuade sellers to choose them to buy their house. They wrote a letter about themselves, included photos and sent it to their potential new landlord.
“Eve and I were in a panic because the apartment was so beautiful and we really wanted to live there,” says Babcock. “The three of us were an unconventional group, though, and we hoped they might choose us.”
The couple enjoys having dinner parties in their dining room, which has a mix of chairs and benches.
When they moved into the apartment in February 2020, they were thrilled, not realizing they would end up isolating there together during the COVID-19 pandemic. “The apartment was a welcome reset,” Babcock says, “It gave us plenty of time to nest and decorate.”
A year later, Eve moved out, and Gibson converted her bedroom into an art-filled office that now doubles as a guest room when family and friends visit. The key to a comfortable — and flexible — guest bed, they say, is a durable mattress topper from IKEA, which they store in the garage and carry into the apartment when they have overnight guests. “Blow-up mattresses always deflate,” Babcock says of their choice. “This is a better option.”
The couple’s taste is vibrant, and the colorful interiors reflect their sense of fun and love of design. They painted one wall in Samuel’s office a dramatic Kelly green, which makes the white-trimmed windows and his extensive art collection pop. Behind their bed in their bedroom, they painted an accent wall a charcoal hue, which gives the bedroom a peaceful feel.
Pictures of family and friends decorate the refrigerator.
Decorative tiles and sunshine illuminate the kitchen.
“Paint is your friend,” Babcock says. “Be bold in your color choices, and when it comes to DIY and landlords, ask for forgiveness, not permission.”
A glance around the apartment confirms not just their love of art but also the personal stories behind each piece: framed prints in the kitchen, black-and-white photographs in the dining room, large-scale oil paintings in the living room and hallway, and mixed-media pieces in the office, including works from local artists, EBay, Gibson’s sister and even one found on the street.
Mixed in with the artwork is an abundance of lush houseplants, including Monstera deliciosa, a rubber tree and a ponytail palm, that is thriving thanks to the surplus of bright, indirect light that filters in through the large picture windows overlooking bustling Beachwood Drive.
“Art is one thing that I am always happy to spend money on,” Gibson says.
In the bedroom, a charcoal-colored accent wall, vintage furnishings and art help to create an inviting retreat.
A painting by Alexander Mayet hangs in the hallway.
Last year, Gibson painted the kitchen walls blue and installed peel-and-stick floor tiles from WallPops over the dated yellow linoleum flooring, providing an inexpensive, albeit temporary, update. (One package of a dozen 6.2 x 6.2-inch sheets costs $17.99.)
“It wasn’t the hardest project,” Gibson says, “but you do have to measure each tile to the centimeter because the apartment has moved slightly over the years, presumably from earthquakes.”
Throughout the 1,200-square-foot apartment, the couple has decorated with vintage Midcentury furniture and thrifted furnishings and accessories sourced from Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist.
“There’s something nice about scraping together designs,” says Gibson. “It’s like a puzzle where you have to patch different styles together.”
Peaches lounges on the sofa in the living room.
In the living room, the couple has furnished the space with an L-shaped Bensen sofa, which they purchased at a warehouse sale mentioned on Craigslist, comfortable yellow swivel chairs they picked up from the back of someone’s car in downtown L.A. and a pair of leather loungers they found on Facebook Marketplace.
To accommodate their love of hosting formal dinner parties, they purchased a table that seats eight, which they found on Craigslist. “We found it in a grungy flat in Hollywood,” Gibson says.
Admitting her husband “has become the primary household chef,” Babcock takes the lead when it comes to dinner parties and “goes all out.”
“Sometimes our dog walks take forever because we stop every few minutes to say hello to someone,” says Gibson.
“I grew up around the dining-room table,” says Babcock, a Los Angeles native who was raised in West Los Angeles.
In the corner of their dining room, across from a thrifted wooden bar cart, they installed a stone cigar table inspired by their trip to Casa Luis Barragán in Mexico City. They purchased it from a designer who was living in a loft in downtown Los Angeles.
Ultimately, some of their rental’s decor, such as having washable sofa covers, is influenced by their dogs Chili, whom they rescued as a puppy in 2020, and Peaches, their “foster fail,” whom they adopted in 2023 after a neighbor pulled her from a shelter the day she was scheduled to be euthanized.
“We’ve made great friends here,” says Gibson. “From our apartment, we can walk the dogs in every direction. We can walk to the Hollywood Reservoir in the Hollywood Hills, to the caves in Bronson Canyon, to the Sunset Ranch stables at the top of Beachwood Drive, or to Griffith Park, which is a two-hour loop.”
Chili gives Babcock a kiss in the living room.
Do they ever dream of owning a home like other couples their age? “Yes, of course,” Gibson says. “But I think we would truly never leave this apartment unless we could buy a house with a yard. It’s like London, in that, having a yard is a luxury.”
Babcock agrees, admitting that small things such as an outdoor space for the dogs or a second bathroom would be nice.
But it would be a shame “to buy a house that’s not as nice as this,” Gibson says.
In the meantime, they are happy in their Hollywood Hills home, which reflects their love of art and their deep affection for their sweet-natured four-legged friends and their neighborhood.
“We joke that we will die here,” Babcock adds, laughing.
SEOUL — For many Americans, the apartment where 29-year-old IT specialist Lee Chang-hee lives might be the stuff of nightmares.
Located just outside the capital of Seoul, the building isn’t very tall — just 16 stories — by South Korean standards, but the complex consists of 36 separate structures, which are nearly identical except for the building number displayed on their sides.
The 2,000-plus units come in the same standardized dimensions found everywhere in the country (Lee lives in a “84C,” which has 84 square meters, or about 900 square feet, of floor space) and offer, in some ways, a ready-made life. The amenities scattered throughout the campus include a rock garden with a fake waterfall, a playground, a gym, an administration office, a senior center and a “moms cafe.”
But this, for the most part, is South Korea’s middle-class dream of homeownership — its version of a house with the white picket fence.
“The bigger the apartment complex, the better the surrounding infrastructure, like public transportation, schools, hospitals, grocery stories, parks and so on,” Lee said. “I like how easy it is to communicate with the neighbors in the complex because there’s a well-run online community.”
Apartment blocks are the predominant housing format in Seoul.
(Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Most in the country would agree: Today, 64% of South Korean households live in such multifamily housing, the majority of them in apartments with five or more stories.
Such a reality seems unimaginable in cities like Los Angeles, which has limited or prohibited the construction of dense housing in single-family zones.
“Los Angeles is often seen as an endless tableau of individual houses, each with their own yard and garden,” Max Podemski, an L.A.-based urban planner, wrote in The Times last year. “Apartment buildings are anathema to the city’s ethos.”
In recent years, the price of that ethos has become increasingly apparent in the form of a severe housing shortage. In the city of Los Angeles, where nearly 75% of all residential land is zoned for stand-alone single-family homes, rents have been in a seemingly endless ascent, contributing to one of the worst homelessness crises in the country. As a remedy, the state of California has ordered the construction of more than 450,000 new housing units by 2029.
The plan will almost certainly require the building of some form of apartment-style housing, but construction has lagged amid fierce resistance.
Sixty years ago, South Korea stood at a similar crossroads. But the series of urban housing policies it implemented led to the primacy of the apartment, and in doing so, transformed South Korean notions of housing over the course of a single generation.
The results of that program have been mixed. But in one important respect, at least, it has been successful: Seoul, which is half the size of the city of L.A., is home to a population of 9.6 million — compared with the estimated 3.3 million people who live here.
For Lee, the trade-off is a worthwhile one.
In an ideal world, she would have a garage for the sort of garage sales she’s admired in American movies. “But South Korea is a small country,” she said. “It is necessary to use space as efficiently as possible.”
Apartments, in her view, have spared her from the miseries of suburban housing. Restaurants and stores are close by. Easy access to public transportation means she doesn’t need a car to get everywhere.
“Maybe it’s because of my Korean need to have everything done quickly, but I think it’d be uncomfortable to live somewhere that doesn’t have these things within reach at all times,” she said. “I like to go out at night; I think it would be boring to have all the lights go off at 9 p.m.”
A general view shows steam rising from office and apartment buildings that define the Seoul skyline. (Ed Jones / AFP via Getty Images)
Apartment buildings light up in the evening as people return home from work in Seoul on March 25, 2021. (Marcus Yam / Los Angeles Times)
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Apartments first began appearing in South Korea in the 1960s and 1970s, as part of a government response to a housing crisis in the nation’s capital — a byproduct of the era’s rapid industrialization and subsequent urban population boom.
In the 1960s, single-family detached dwellings made up around 95% of homes in the country. But over the following decade, as rural migrants flooded Seoul in search of factory work, doubling the population from 2.4 to 5.5 million, many in this new urban working class found themselves without homes. As a result, many of them settled in shantytowns on the city’s outskirts, living in makeshift sheet-metal homes.
The authoritarian government at the time, led by a former army general named Park Chung-hee, declared apartments to be the solution and embarked on a building spree that would continue under subsequent administrations. Eased height restrictions and incentives for construction companies helped add between 20,000 to 100,000 new apartment units every year.
They were pushed by political leaders in South Korea as a high-tech modernist paradise, soon making them the most desirable form of housing for the middle and upper classes. Known as apateu, which specifically refers to a high-rise apartment building built as part of a larger complex — as distinct from lower stand-alone buildings — they symbolized Western cachet and upward social mobility.
“Around the late 1990s and early 2000s, almost every big-name celebrity at the time appeared in apartment commercials,” recalled Jung Heon-mok, an anthropologist at the Academy of Korean Studies who has studied the history of South Korean apartments. “But the biggest reason that apartments proliferated as they did was because they were done at scale, in complexes of five buildings or more.”
Essential to the modern apateu are the amenities — such as on-site kindergartens or convenience stores — that allow them to function like miniature towns. This has also turned them into branded commodities and class signifiers, built by construction conglomerates like Samsung, and taking on names like “castle” or “palace.” (One of the first such branded apartment complexes was Trump Tower, a luxury development built in Seoul in the late 1990s by a construction firm that licensed the name of Donald Trump.)
All of this has made the detached single-family home, for the most part, obsolete. In Seoul, such homes now make up just 10% of the housing stock. Among many younger South Koreans like Lee, they are associated with retirement in the countryside, or, as she puts it: for “grilling in the garden for your grandkids.”
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This model has not been without problems.
There are the usual issues that come with dense housing. In buildings with poor soundproofing, “inter-floor noise” between units is such a universal scourge that the government runs a noise-related dispute resolution center while discouraging people from angrily confronting their neighbors, a situation that occasionally escalates into headline-making violence.
Some apartment buildings have proved to be too much even for a country accustomed to unsentimentally efficient forms of housing. One 19-story, 4,635-unit complex built by a big-name apartment brand in one of the wealthiest areas of Seoul looks so oppressive that it has become a curiosity, mocked by some as a prison or chicken coop.
Apartment complexes in Seoul on Oct. 5, 2024. Apartments first began appearing in South Korea in 1960s and 1970s, as part of a government response to a housing crisis in the nation’s capital.
(Tina Hsu / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The sheer number of apartments has prompted criticism of Seoul’s skyline as sterile and ugly. South Koreans have described its uniform, rectangular columns as “matchboxes.” And despite the aspirations attached to them, there is also a wariness about a culture where homes are built in such disposable, assembly line-like fashion.
Many people here are increasingly questioning how this form of housing, with its nearly identical layouts, has shaped the disposition of contemporary South Korean society, often criticized by its own members as overly homogenized and lockstep.
“I’m concerned that apartments have made South Koreans’ lifestyles too similar,” said Maing Pil-soo, an architect and urban planning professor at Seoul National University. “And with similar lifestyles, you end up with a similar way of thinking. Much like the cityscape itself, everything becomes flattened and uniform.”
Jung, the anthropologist, believes South Korea’s apartment complexes, with their promise of an atomized, frictionless life, have eroded the more expansive social bonds that defined traditional society — like those that extended across entire villages — making its inhabitants more individualistic and insular.
“At the end of the day, apartments here are undoubtedly extremely convenient — that’s why they became so popular,” he said. “But part of that convenience is because they insulate you from the concerns of the wider world. Once you’re inside your complex and in your home, you don’t have to pay attention to your neighbors or their issues.”
Still, Jung says this uniformity isn’t all bad. It is what made them such easily scalable solutions to the housing crisis of decades past. It is also, in some ways, an equalizing force.
“I think apartments are partly why certain types of social inequalities you see in the U.S. are comparatively less severe in South Korea,” he said.
Though many branded apartment complexes now resemble gated communities with exclusionary homeowner associations, Jung points out that on the whole, the dominance of multifamily housing has inadvertently encouraged more social mixing between classes, a physical closeness that creates the sense that everyone is inhabiting the same broader space.
Even Seoul’s wealthiest neighborhoods feel, to an extent that is hard to see in many American cities, porous and accessible. Wealthier often means having a nicer apartment, but an apartment all the same, existing in the same environs as those in a different price range.
“And even though we occasionally use disparaging terms like ‘chicken coop’ to describe them, once you actually step inside one of those apartments, they don’t feel like that at all,” Jung said. “They really are quite comfortable and nice.”
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People pose for photos among a field of cosmos flowers in front of high-rise apartment buildings in Goyang, west of Seoul.(Ed Jones / AFP via Getty Images)
None of this, however, has been able to stave off Seoul’s own present-day housing affordability crisis.
The capital has one of the most expensive apartment prices in the world on a price-per-square-meter basis, ranking fourth after Hong Kong, Zurich and Singapore, and ahead of major U.S. cities like New York or San Francisco, according to a report published last month by Deutsche Bank. One especially brutal stretch recently saw apartment prices in Seoul double in four years.
Part of the reason for this is that apartments, with their standardized dimensions, have effectively become interchangeable financial commodities: An apartment in Seoul is seen as a much more surefire bet than any stock, leading to intense real estate investment and speculation that has driven up home prices.
“Buying an apartment here isn’t just buying an apartment. The equivalent in the U.S. would be like buying an ideal single-family home with a garage in the U.S., except that it comes with a bunch of NVIDIA shares,” said Chae Sang-wook, an independent real estate analyst. “In South Korea, people invest in apateu for capital gains, not cash flow from rent.”
Some experts predict that, as the country enters another era of demographic upheaval, the dominance of apartments will someday be no more.
If births continue to fall as dramatically as they have done in recent years, South Koreans may no longer need such dense housing. The ongoing rise of single-person households, too, may chip away at a form of housing built to hold four-person nuclear families.
But Chae is skeptical that this will happen anytime soon. He points out that South Koreans don’t even like to assemble their own furniture, let alone fix their own cars — all downstream effects of ubiquitous apartment living.
“For now, there is no alternative other than this,” he said. “As a South Korean, you don’t have the luxury of choosing.”
After living in her two-bedroom apartment in Los Feliz for more than a decade, Debra Weiss encountered a problem experienced by many renters in Los Angeles: She was evicted.
“I moved into the apartment in 2014, and four years later, my landlord sold it to a wealthy family who bought it at a loss,” said Weiss, 69, who works as a textile artist and was evicted last year. “They knew they couldn’t evict us due to rent control.”
In this series, we spotlight L.A. rentals with style. From perfect gallery walls to temporary decor hacks, these renters get creative, even in small spaces. And Angelenos need the inspiration: Most are renters.
When the landlords put the three-unit complex on the market in 2022, however, they offered Weiss $50,000 to move out — far more than the amount required by law — to make the building easier for them to sell. She declined, concerned it would affect her Social Security benefits, as there is a limit to how much one can earn and still receive full benefits.
Then, last February, the three tenants received eviction notices under the Ellis Act, which allows landlords to evict renters from rent-controlled apartments if the building is being torn down or removed from the rental market. It’s currently for sale for $3.2 million.
As a senior, Weiss was entitled to a full year’s notice because she had lived in her unit for more than a year. Still, she knew she would eventually have to move out of the comfortable 1,200-square-foot duplex, for which she paid $2,670 a month in rent.
Artist Debra Weiss stands in her dining room where she often works as a fiber artist.
When she began looking for another apartment in the area, Weiss quickly learned that she could no longer afford to live in Los Feliz. “The apartments were so much more expensive than what I was used to paying, and they had no parking or a washer and dryer,” she said. (Weiss was paid $24,650 in relocation assistance, which was taxed, due to her age and the length of time she lived in her Los Feliz apartment.)
She also visited some small studios and considered purchasing a TIC, or Tenancy in Common, where buyers purchase a share in a corporation that owns a building. However, to secure a loan, she’d need someone to co-sign. “Even though they are cute, they are tiny and not necessarily in the best neighborhoods,” she said. Another option, a Craftsman apartment near USC, wasn’t in a good walking neighborhood, something that was important to Weiss. It was also dark and hundreds of dollars more a month than her previous apartment. “I’m almost 70 years old and I need light to work,” she added.
Handknitted sculptures, embroidered weavings and a tufted rug adorn the guest room.
When her son-in-law spotted a charming two-bedroom apartment near the Los Angeles County Museum of Art for $2,950 a month on Zillow, Weiss decided to check it out.
“My initial reaction was, ‘I want this,’ ” Weiss said of the fourplex.
The rental had high ceilings, oak floors, ample sunlight, an appealing fireplace, a garage and a washer and dryer. A newly redone modern kitchen felt out of character for the 1930s building, but that didn’t bother Weiss. “The kitchen is a blank canvas,” she said of the all-white cabinets and countertops. “The white background makes all of my stuff stand out,” including ceramics by Mt. Washington Pottery and Altadena artist Linda Hsiao.
Weiss knits a sweater for her granddaughter with yarn she purchased in Japan.
Concerned that the landlord wouldn’t want to rent to her because of her age, she was pleasantly surprised when she got the apartment. “The light is amazing,” Weiss said. “I was initially worried about some of the modern touches like the overhead lighting, but it floods the room with bright light that allows me to work at night.”
Nearly a year after moving in, Weiss has filled the apartment with her stitched collages, quilts and the artworks of others, many of which she described as “trades.” “I like color and pattern and objects,” she said as she pointed out some Japanese ceramics on her buffet and a dress that she crocheted with scraps of fabric, yarn and metal.
In the guest room, a wall hanging composed of three separate weavings in a gingham check pattern is embroidered with a series of characters she based on her 5-year-old granddaughter’s drawings. “It’s about people coming together in chaos and supporting each other,” Weiss said. “I like the pattern; it reminds me of eating together on picnic tables.”
“I like objects,” Weiss said of the many treasures and collections of things that are featured throughout her rental.
On the opposite wall of the guest room above her sewing machine, a series of metal sculptures she knitted with copper and silver hangs alongside cloth dolls and purses. In the corner, a cowl made of macrame, textiles and yarn adorns a mannequin. There’s also a colorful latch hook rug that she made with acrylic yarn that looks more like artwork than a functional accessory.
In her bedroom, a coverlet that Weiss assembled from vintage quilts adorns the bed.
The long hallway ends at the laundry room and is lined with her colorful quilts, some of which are mounted on Homasote board, along with weavings and stitched works, which, like her cooking, are improvisational.
“I work without planning and respond to the materials and see what it becomes,” she said. “I start knitting and see where it goes. I get excited about the material, and then I go for it. “
The hallway in Weiss’s apartment is lined with her artworks.
Much of the wood furniture in her apartment was made by her father, who died 13 years ago.
“I’ve had this since my kids were little, and you can see all the markings,” she said of the hutch in the corner of her dining room. “My dad made it 40 years ago for the Van Nuys house I grew up in.”
It is here, at the dining room table that her father made, that she works, hosts workshops and teaches lessons in fiber art, collage and stitching. Later this year, she hopes to host a sale of her work at a holiday open house in her apartment.
Weiss is an expert in mixing texture, pattern and color in her Mid-Wilshire apartment.
The mixing of colorful Persian rugs, textiles, natural materials, chunky wood pieces and intricately knitted metal sculptures creates a warm balance throughout her apartment.
Bursting with color and pattern, the rooms offer a sense of calm that Weiss appreciates as a woman who raised three daughters alone and has had to pivot during major life changes. Over the years, she has run a clothing company, Rebe, which closed in 2019 due to economic uncertainty, declared bankruptcy and sold her Woodland Hills house. Most recently, she was forced to weather the eviction process.
“I’ve always been an entrepreneur,” said Weiss, who works six to eight hours a day at home and sells her artwork and sewing patterns on her Specks and Keepings website and at L.A. Homefarm in Glassell Park. “I’ll always figure out a way to make money by selling the things that I make.”
Even though the process of having to move was stressful, Weiss is happy with her new home and neighborhood. “I take the Metro bus everywhere and hardly ever drive,” she said. “I go to the Hollywood Farmer’s Market on Sundays. Kaiser is nearby and I can walk to LACMA. Everything worked out perfectly.”
Weiss pulls out a drawer of her flat files cabinet filled with her artwork.
SAN JOSE — A big San Jose apartment complex has landed a key loan that will bankroll a wide-ranging upgrade of the property, which consists of affordable units.
Monte Alban Apartments in San Jose has landed nearly $30.2 million in a refinance loan, according to JLL, a commercial real estate firm.
The U.S. Housing and Urban Development Department provided the new loan, which was structured as a cash-out loan that provides funds to undertake renovations and improvements at the apartment complex.
The 192-unit apartment complex is located at 1324 Santee Drive in San Jose. It consists of garden-style units within 12 buildings.
The residential property is near one of the Bay Area’s major interchanges, where U.S. Highway 101 connects with interstates 280 and 680. It’s also fairly close to downtown San Jose and the city’s international airport.
“The community maintains 100% occupancy with many long-term tenants and provides rents that are 40% to 60% below market rates,” JLL stated.
The 30-year, fixed-rate loan from HUD exceeds the estimated value of the property, which was $24.8 million as of January 2024, according to documents on file at the Santa Clara County Assessor’s Office.
San Francisco-based The John Stewart Co., the property owner and loan recipient, intends to conduct upgrades on the site.
“The refinancing allows for $47,000 per unit in property renovations and upgrades,” JLL stated. That would equate to a total of about $9 million.
John Stewart Co. and JLL didn’t specify whether these upgrades wiould occurr within the units, in the common areas, or both.
Monte Alban Apartments was built in 1970 and renovated in 2006 and contains a mix of one-, two-, three- and four-bedroom units, according to the Apartments.com website.
“Monte Alban Apartments offers a range of amenities including air conditioning, appliances, a community room, laundry facilities, an exercise room, a basketball court, two swimming pools and two playgrounds,” JLL stated.
I’ve been looking for the right apartment close enough to work, in the right price range, and availability for a few months now and just about twenty minutes ago or so the manager of the property sent me a text and said that I had it!! GUYS I’M SO FRIGGIN PSYCHED