'Mr. Fix-It' and his work on El Capitan helped spark rebirth.FRESH off a plane from Wisconsin, Jeff Rouze stood on the sidewalk in front of the El Capitan El Cap·i·tan A peak, 2,308.5 m (7,569 ft) high, in the Sierra Nevada of central California. Its dramatic exposed monolith rises some 1,098 m (3,600 ft) above the floor of the Yosemite Valley. Theatre--which was literally falling down from years of neglect, subway construction and earthquake damage--and imagined the great movie palace it had been in the 1920s. How he managed to convince the insurance company he worked for to invest in the property says a lot about Rouze's faith in Hollywood. "These 10-inch thick concrete walls on the second story had twisted and busted apart," Rouze recalled. "It was very unsafe after the earthquake. I kept thinking it was going to fall down on the buildings next to it." By the time it was completed, Rouze had convinced CUNA Cuna Chibchan-speaking Indian people who once occupied the central region of what is now Panama and the neighbouring San Blas Islands and who still survive in marginal areas. In the 16th century they lived in federated villages under chiefs who wielded considerable power. Mutual Group in Madison, Wis., to invest more than $20 million restoring the theater and he had persuaded Walt Disney Noun 1. Walt Disney - United States film maker who pioneered animated cartoons and created such characters as Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck; founded Disneyland (1901-1966) Disney, Walter Elias Disney Co. to open a retail store at the site--the first national chain to open on Hollywood Boulevard For uses other than the original street, see Hollywood Boulevard (disambiguation). Hollywood Boulevard is a boulevard in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States, beginning at Sunset Boulevard in the east and running northwest to Vermont Avenue, where it straightens out in almost 50 years. It took four years to remake the building but the completed project has become a Hollywood centerpiece. More than 350,000 people bought tickets to see Disney's animated feature "Lion King" in its run at the theater, which made it the top-grossing single-screen theater in the nation. "He stands out in that he is a pioneer who would go where other people weren't investing at that time," said Dick Gee, a principal at John Ash This article is about John Ash. For other people named Ash, see Ash (surname). John Ash may refer to several people:
Rouze moved his family to Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. and has started restoring other Hollywood buildings on his own. His first project: the historic Hillview Apartments, an abandoned property that had become a homeless encampment. Rouze bought the building for $3.75 million, and expects to have it restored as high-end apartments by early summer. "When I fast saw the building, I thought it was a disaster," said Bruce Neviaser, chairman of Great Wolf Resorts Inc., traditionally a developer of Midwestern resorts that has invested $14 million in the project. "It was hard to see the vision but I think anyone would have had that reaction at first." Rouze has other ideas for Hollywood, including the Warner/Pacific Theatre tower, a largely vacant office building with a large non-operating theater. But it was the El Capitan that not only transformed his career but arguably ar·gu·a·ble adj. 1. Open to argument: an arguable question, still unresolved. 2. That can be argued plausibly; defensible in argument: three arguable points of law. set Hollywood's renaissance in motion. By 1992, the theater had closed and the building's tenants, stung by the recession, were leaving. The Northridge earthquake The Northridge earthquake occurred on January 17, 1994 at 4:31 AM Pacific Standard Time in the city of Los Angeles, California. The earthquake had a "strong" moment magnitude of 6. two years later didn't help. Soon after, the building's owners had defaulted on their mortgage with CUNA and the property had fallen into Rouze's hands. "What I thought I could do was bring experience to this project," Rouze said. "I had all the tools and experience from doing restorations for 20 years, and I figured: Why not apply it to this building?" Back in Madison, Rouze made his case to save the theater. CUNA, flush with cash at the time, committed the funds and gave him a long leash. "It took a lot of convincing," he said. "I had a good track record of repairing buildings. After I got them repaired and upgraded, we were able to get higher rents and in the end make gains on the properties. Basically, I was Mr. Fix-It for the company." When the theater re-opened, the business improvement district that had been formed was paying for street cleaning and hired armed security guards to patrol the boulevard. "That's when people decided they were safe coming to Hollywood," said Steve Ullman, an owner of Grant Parking Inc. and former president of the property-based BID. "When parents could line up outside the theater with their children and not be accosted ac·cost tr.v. ac·cost·ed, ac·cost·ing, ac·costs 1. To approach and speak to boldly or aggressively, as with a demand or request. 2. To solicit for sex. , they went home and told their friends, 'You know, Hollywood is really different.' That worked better than any press release." Pioneer Jeff Rouze Born: Rockford, Ill., 1952 Position: Partner, Historic Hollywood Hillview LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol. LLC - Logical Link Control Accomplishments: Convinced investors in Midwest to pony up more than $20 million to renovate the El Capitan Theatre; then struck out on his own and is rebuilding the Hillview Apartments building, which had degenerated to a rundown homeless encampment Quote: "I still feel I have an unfinished story here. My novel isn't done and I fell like I still need to write a couple more chapters." |
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