The former Manhattan co-op apartment of the late actor Sidney Poitier hit the market on Tuesday for $11.5 million.
The iconic landscape of Los Angeles County and its surrounding region have been forever transformed by a massive, multi-front firestorm that has leveled an area more than twice the size of
Los Angeles was forced to slash funding for the fire department after mayor Karen Bass awarded gilded contracts to city workers, a review of public records by the Manhattan Institute shows.
LA leaders are beginning to ponder a monumental task: rebuilding what was lost in the Southern California wildfires.
The wildfires in Southern California have led to the evacuations of over 130,000 people and have destroyed over 10,000 structures. Overlaying the wildfire outbreak across other major U.S. cities shows that the blaze is one of the worst in United States history, as it continues to spread across residential areas in Los Angeles.
Erewhon, the luxury supermarket chain that turned grocery shopping into a hyper-trendy Los Angeles lifestyle, is ramping up its pace of expansion with three new stores planned to open in 2025.
Even as four wildfires continued to burn in Los Angeles County Wednesday, the blazes were already rewriting the record books.
Allegations of leadership failures and political blame have surfaced as state investigators prepare to investigate the cause of one of the most enormous blazes.On Friday, Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered state officials to determine why a 117 million-gallon (440 million-litre) reservoir was out of service and why some hydrants ran dry,
For more perspective, Central Park in NYC is only 843 acres. So, the wildfire is currently the equivalent of almost 24 Central Parks combined. Actually, the entirety of Manhattan is 14,600 acres, or 22.81 square miles, so the Palisades Fire is bigger than the whole borough.
A little-known arm of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has directed over $1 billion into “sexual and gender minority”
A law barring monthly rents of more than $10,000 for new listings is stopping high-end homes from going on the market, real estate agents and brokers say. Such homes could be in demand for wealthy fire victims.
Fueled by powerful winds and dry conditions, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted the second week of January and roared across the Los Angeles area.