Cracks in Watts Towers
LACMA conservation scientist Frank Preusser has hooked the Watts Towers up to several devices. Three sensors track movements of the cracks, measuring wind gusts and minute vibrations. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
From a distance, the Watts Towers rise as a beacon of pride in a community that has struggled for years with poverty and crime. But up close, tiny cracks are tearing through the historic sculpture. Read ‘Engineers, conservationists work on lasting fix for Watts Towers.’
A cement casting is being used to test different cement compounds to see which ones bond the best. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
Frank Preusser, conservation scientist for LACMA, examines the Watts Towers. He and four full-time museum employees keep daily tabs on them. At right, electronic devices monitor cracks in the posts. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
A cross-piece in the sculpture includes the year Simon Rodia began building the towers, 1921. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
Advertisement
LACMA employee Sylvia Schweri-Dorsh applies epoxy to a bolt on a post adorned with a mosaic. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
The ornate address over the door of the house where Simon Rodia lived. Rodia, a construction worker without any art training, spent his free time over 33 years building the Watts Towers in his backyard without the city’s approval. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
Using funds raised by LACMA, Frank Preusser and four full-time museum employees keep daily tabs on the towers. In December, UCLA engineers joined the effort to perform structural tests. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
Cracks are causing decorative ornaments -- pieces of glass and other items -- to fall off. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
Advertisement
The Watts Towers draw onlookers. Besides the towers’ daily movement, Mother Nature is also contributing to the slow deterioration. A 2003 hailstorm brought down glass, seashells and tile ornaments. But LACMA conservation scientist Frank Preusser and his team are finding that howling winds are causing the most damage. (Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles Times)
Neighborhood kids watch the Watts Towers restoration in 1984. (Marianna Diamos / Los Angeles Times)
Watts Towers as seen from the Pacific Electris Red Car route, now the Metro Blue Line, in the Watts community of Los Angeles. (R.L. Oliver / Los Angeles Times)