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Let’s imagine a future that works for all of us

When L.A. Times staffers started to assemble a Future of L.A. project last year, we wondered which topics might deserve a deep dive. Housing? Transportation? Entertainment and popular culture?

Is L.A. broken, as some say, or could it become a model of urban sustainability? Or something in between?

That’s a lot to bite off in a sprawling metropolis with millions of people and thousands of opinions about how we might navigate the next few decades.

Then Los Angeles was beset by fire, and The Times’ staff did what it does best, swarming to cover the biggest news story in the city’s history. The future would have to wait.

But not for long.

As Angelenos mourned their dead and sought recovery assistance and cleared the debris of what used to be their homes, it became increasingly clear that the fires left L.A. with an imperative: to pause and think. So we asked an array of experts and our readers and ourselves: What can we —should we — do in the next 25 or 30 or40 years to make our city a sustainable and equitable home for everyone?

In these pages you will hear from community leaders about their hopes for Los Angeles, and read about how we might build the housing we so desperately need. You’ll encounter a landscape architect who is helping to build “sponge cities” and look at whether they might be a solution for flooding problems in Southern California. You’ll learn about future possibilities for fire mitigation — and much more.

Times columnist Michael Hiltzik reminds us that Los Angeles and California are “the subject of unending curiosity for readers of history and current affairs. … That has been true since the vision of a land of gold — El Dorado — drew the Spanish conquistadors to these shores.

“The world wishes to know what L.A. and California are, and where they are headed.”

So let’s imagine a future that works for all of us. It’s imperative.

— Alice Short

PART I

Crafting a blueprint for the 21st century

Part II

Truth, consequences and resolution

Part III

Upping our housing game

PART IV

Rethinking our relationship with fire

PART V

Obsessed with L.A.

More to Read

About this story

Project editor: Alice Short

Senior deputy design directors: Jim Cooke, Allison Hong

Times columnists and writers: Gustavo Arellano, Greg Braxton, Anita Chabria, Thomas Curwen, Liam Dillon, Jack Flemming, Michael Hiltzik, Kaitlyn Huamani, Ian James, Max Kim, Steve Lopez, Patt Morrison, Susanne Rust, Doug Smith, Hayley Smith, Rosanna Xia

Editor at large: Scott Kraft

Creative director: Amy King

Assistant managing editor: Ruthanne Salido

Executive director of photography: Kim Chapin

Photo editing: David Barreda, Kelvin Kuo

Times photographers: Jason Armond, Myung J. Chun, Gina Ferazzi, Christina House, Genaro Molina, Allen J. Schaben, Carlin Stiehl

Copy chief: Dave Bennett

Copy editors: David Bowman, Samantha Chung, Minh Dang, Rachel Dunn, Blake Hennon, June Hsu, Kevin Leung, Marina Levario, Gerard Lim, Hannah Ly, Laura Nott, Dwayne Rogers, Kevin Ueda

Illustrations: Derek Abella, Jim Cooke, Lorena Iñiguez Elebee

Cross Chancery typeface designed by Tiger Dingsun.

Data and graphics director: Hanna Sender

Data and graphics: Sean Greene, Lorena Iñiguez Elebee, Gabrielle LaMarr LeMee, Vanessa Martinez

Audience engagement: Defne Karabatur, Seth Liss

Digital production: Beto Alvarez, Hunter Clauss, Lora Victorio

Additional production: Alex Tatusian

Contributors: Corie Brown, Carlo Ratti, John Rossant

Short stories: Steph Cha, Jonathan Lethem, Ivy Pochoda

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