cazalea[Seiko Moderator]
19346
Ocean Beach - Apartments, Architecture & Autos, Part 1
This apartment, known as Haven Pt Loma has been intriguing me for a year or two since it was remodeled to be more attractive to tenants (and passers-by). It was just a big ugly stucco block before.

This exo-skeleton is very appealing in some ways, though I bet it was a chore to put up and paint.

The green safety railings mirror the grid.

NOTE: The
building Haven website says
"In old English, a haven was an inlet providing shelter for ships or boats; a harbor or a small port. It was a place of refuge from the storms, a place to gather together, to share and to prepare for the travels ahead.
Haven Point Loma is a community of like-minded souls growing, loving and living together. Haven is a home, a resting place from studies or work and a vivacious collection of humans seeking betterment.”
Sample vivacious tenants (?) obviously seeking betterment of their tans at the beach a few blocks away … rents from $1475-2900.
We walked into the
"Central social plain to meet and hang with your neighbors” and the architectural theme is clear from inside as well.

A different angle on things...

Moving on, do you suppose the owner of this car lives in that apartment? I have to confess this is the most garish front end I’ve seen in many years. Notice the windshield screen and license plate.

Notice the low-budget windshield screen and nearly identical license plate!

Notice the home-made matching red plastic windshield screen complete with beaded necklace, over peeling red paint.

Notice the windshield screen’s folding corrugations, over peeling red paint (again?).

Notice the windshield screen’s twin hoops. A bit sloppy, I think.

Notice the windshield screen’s mirrored sunglasses. No one is living here, nothing to see, move along now.

OK, back to the architecture. My wife calls this slump block. It’s a late Forties/Fifties thing. Looks a bit messy,

but not nearly as messy as the retaining wall next door.

While immediately across the street from these two places we saw this — an apartment generation gap!

Coming back to the old side of the street, it’s amazing what catches our eyes in the midst of so many details.
Please continue on to Part 2.
PS - The watch!