Skip to main content

Griffith Observatory: Face Lift or Slap In the Face?

Don't know about the rest of you but the Griffith Observatory has been a trusted fortress over the years -- a place to retreat when feeling like taking a break from the gridlocked streets below; a place to take first time visitors to L.A. for a spectacular panoramic view of the city from the valley to downtown and out into the ocean; a place to make out like crazy teenagers with a date no matter your age; a place to obsessively stare out wondering where in the hell your mate is on that star glittered night; or a place to reenact the famous knife fight scene from 'Rebel Without A Cause' -- come on Angelenos...you have to know what I'm talking about.

I can't tell you how many times I came upon a spontaneous impulse to make a sharp turn up Vermont from Hollywood or Sunset for a visit to the Griffith Observatory. Most of the time it was to clear my head of some dumb situation I was in or it was to get my son out of the house on and off the sofa on a Friday night. Part of the beauty of making that spur of the moment call was knowing that I'd most likely be shit out of luck in finding a parking space. It was all part of the experience and made the visit that much more rewarding when you actually did find a spot to park and took the barely lit stroll over to the monumental domed building alongside the others -- the others who flocked for whatever reason their own. Didn't matter if they were there for checking out the Tesla Coil or waiting in line for a shot at peering through the massive telescope to view Jupiter or whatever planet its site was focused on at the time you felt a camaraderie with these folks because you knew they understood how special this place was and how it belonged to us...no matter where you came from or if your car barely had the punch to make it up the hills.

That is until now. Leave it to Los Angeles to go and blow the beauty of having such an easily accessible place for it's residents. With the long awaited reopening of the Griffith Observatory comes the news that all visitors will need to make reservations in advance and will be expected to board a shuttle at 8 bucks a pop for adults and 4 for kids. I'm not only appalled, disgusted, and angry, I'm disappointed. By initiating this rule the city of Los Angeles has again taken something once available to all and turned it into something accessible to the few who are able to dish out the dough for a spot on the shuttle. No more teaching your children about the stars for families on a budget. As far as I'm concerned the 5-year clean up did nothing more than leave a much greater tarnish on the Griffith Observatory than it had naturally built up since its initial opening in 1935.

Comments

Urban Memo said…
I didn't know about the new fees. That makes me very sad.
Apparently this is all part of a crowd control effort and will be in effect for the first year of opperation. Even so, it sucks!
Anonymous said…
This is only temporary as the Observatory expects to get a large volume of people in the first few months. After things settle down, parking will return to normal and it might be better than it was before!!! :-)

Be patient. It looks fabulous!
Hello Anonymous,

I'm sure it looks fabulous and understand the implementation of shuttles was done to handle crowd control. You appear to have missed my point of the absurd fee for the shuttles. Why couldn't the city have secured a temporary Dash line through DOT. A ride on the Dash cost 25 cents each way. Not everyone who can benefit from what the Griffith Observatory has to offer can afford seats on the shuttle. And yes, I will be patient. I have waited five years and can hold out another so I can drive up. By then the shuttle mobs (snobs) will be over the novelty.
Anonymous said…
Howdy, Linda. Miss you. Let's get together for lunch soon. When are you available.~Yvette
Anonymous said…
Maybe they want to control the people present while the Lizard Overlords sacrifice humans at night? Seriously, I remember so many wonderful moments at the park. It gave me and my brother a sense of perspective when LA life was crowding in.

I hope it settles back into a true "open space" soon.

-- Pocha
Anonymous said…
It really makes my blood boil... I mean it has ever since it reopened. Charging $8.00 a piece (less for kidds) but the whole point is that the Observatory was donated with the intenttion that the people of Los angeles would have place (Free mind you) to go and relax, get excited about learning something new. I was just talking about it with Phil (my life partner) today. I was thinking on finding who the penny picher is who figured it out that $9.00 or $9.50 per person would not offend anyone, but $8.00 surely nobody would balk at that... but I digress. In any case, find out who this person is, and also finding out whose councilmember that parcel belongs to and flood the hell out ther mailboxes. I am boycotting the observatory. Shame because I love Astronomy (took several courses at LACC) and would habe loved to see what they did that really would imoress one. But until then, I will mak emy task to find who and where to direct and voice my complaints about this issue.

Where is the logic?. before, a working father of four qould spend, say if they took the dash a buck to get there, whereas now it'd be close to $30. This city os going downhill, literallly. And we are just standing by!

Popular posts from this blog

Eddie Ayala - PRESENTE!

The Chicano community mourns the loss of its champions for our cause through life celebrations, tributes, memorials and Dia de los Muertos altars. Many notables and non public figures have passed on throughout the fifty plus years since the birth of the ELA Chicano movement and many more will soon follow. Activists, academics, professionals, artists, business owners and community members - young and old - have contributed to the vastness of our cultural collective. Each and every one deserving of recognition and appreciation for their involvement, passion and pride in their Chicano/a/x identity. This time we are gathering to celebrate the life and legacy of Eddie Ayala who passed away at the age of 63 the day after Dia de los Muertos, 2023. I met Eddie Ayala at the tail end of the 1970's East LA backyard party scene where local Chicano music icons rocked cover songs and our socks off for a mere $1 entrance fee. Although entertaining and audience drawing there was a need for...

Life As A WiFi Vagabond In L.A.

In mid-August of this year I decided to cut living expenses by canceling my land-line phone service along with the ridiculously expensive and seemingly unknown long distance carrier I had. It occurred to me that I was spending upwards of $100 a month for the sake of reporting spam to my email providers only to find the same messages in my box the following day. Seeing how I had access to the Internet at work I figured I could live without the nightly and weekend habitual mindless logons to email and Myspace. How was I to know that in a short couple weeks I would be dismissed of my position at Tu Ciudad thus finding myself without access to the Internet. Anyone in their right mind would be freaking out over the fact that they've just been "laid off" but that's where I'm different. When I was sitting in the office with my supervisor and the general manager going over the formalities of being let go all I could think of was how I had just been blindsided off the Inte...