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Phonehenge West To Be Torn Down?

Phonehenge West

First Posted: 06/ 2/11 01:43 PM ET Updated: 06/ 3/11 01:06 PM ET

Alan Kimble Fahey's celebrated "Phonehenge West" can be described as sculpture, art installation, and avant garde architecture. He has been building his home, a hodgepodge of towers, verandahs, bridges, and barns, on his property in Acton, California for almost thirty years.

It includes a library and giftshop for the public and houses chickens, peacocks, and more in addition to Fahey, his wife, and two sons. Phonehenge can be easily spotted from the road, and hundreds of tourists had streamed through its gates to receive a private tour by Fahey himself. Glamour Magazine has photographed a fashion shoot on the premises, and there has been at least one inquiry about hosting a wedding there, according to the LA Times.

But while tourists may be amused at the eccentric, livable scultpure, Los Angeles County isn't. The Los Angeles County Building & Safety Dept. is demanding that he tear it all down because of myriad building and fire code violations.

In a legal battle that spans five years, tensions finally came to a head this year when the Los Angeles District Attorney's office charged Fahey with fourteen criminal misdemeanor counts that could land him in prison for up to seven years. Fahey refused to settle, and this afternoon he's set to testify before a jury.

NBC LA interviewed an indignant and defiant Fahey, who insisted:

They could take this down to the bare ground, pack everything into a missile, and fire it into the sun. And they can't take away thirty years of what a blast we had here, doing whatever we want. They don't even get it. The fun for me is the building. I'll have just as much fun taking that thing down as I had putting it up.

NBC LA also took a tour of Phonehenge with Fahey's son, Leo. The boy pointed out bulletproof windows on the Tower as well as a more poignant memory that would have to be torn down: the altar-like art piece where his parents got married.

View more videos at: http://www.nbclosangeles.com.

Story continues below

David Lewis, an advocate for code enforcement reform, first got wind of Fahey's battle with the county last April. He created a Facebook page soon after, "Save Phonehenge West," that currently has over 27,000 fans. Lewis explained to The Huffington Post, ""Kim's case was striking both by its nature and because of the visual impact of the work that he's done on his property. That's what led me to suggest a Facebook page... a person can click on the photos and immediately get an idea of what Phonehenge is about." His Facebook fanpage argues that Phonehenge is a project "worth completing and preserving for the community," and that Fahey is suffering from "Administrative Sabotage" -- the County's refusal to cooperate and seriously consider his compromises.

Los Angeles District Attorney's office declined to comment because the case is currently in trial, citing that "it would be unethical to comment on the evidence outside of court."

All photos courtesy of Save Phonehenge West.

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Alan Kimble Fahey's celebrated "Phonehenge West" can be described as sculpture, art installation, and avant garde architecture. He has been building his home, a hodgepodge of towers, verandahs, bridge...
Alan Kimble Fahey's celebrated "Phonehenge West" can be described as sculpture, art installation, and avant garde architecture. He has been building his home, a hodgepodge of towers, verandahs, bridge...
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Drew Puli Wolf
There is no Dog but Drew Doggie Dog
10 minutes ago (4:14 PM)
The Los Angeles Building Inspectors office which is under an FBI investigat­ion for corruption and bribe taking should have better things to do than harassing this guy. Like inspect the office and apartment buildings that where built without any inspection after the builders gave them bribes. They seem to have a thing against these eccentric artistic types; they wanted to bulldoze the Watt%u2019­s Towers. This guy is a true California original in linage of Sam Rodia of the Watts Tower, Gergory Smith of Smitty%u20­19s Castle, Leonard Knight%u20­19s Salvation Mountain in Slab City , and the Winchester Ghost House in San Jose to name a few.
10:09 AM on 6/04/2011
So, it needs to be torn down to protect the guy who built it? The bureaucrat­s what to save this guy's life by ruining this guy's life?

Real heroes.
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
20 hours ago (8:48 PM)
It includes a library and giftshop for the public
So it isn't just this one guy;s safety that is involved.
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
04:46 AM on 6/04/2011
I hold a degree in architectu­re and have an architect'­s license.  I can see the whimsy in this design.  I can also see a huge soft-story problem.  There is a huge weight on tall poles with almost no visible lateral bracing.  Pole houses (which is not a new thing) really should be engineered­.
03:07 AM on 6/04/2011
Some developer wants that land and they're putting pressure on the county to have it taken down. Then they'll declare it blighted and take it through eminent domain.

Legal theft. All you have to do is bribe the right government flunky.

This isn't about code violations or permits. If it was, it would have been resolved years ago.
03:43 AM on 6/03/2011
You may have the title and the tax bill but freedom to choose what you put on the land is not your call. You have no rights to actually use the land how you wish.

If this guy does something stupid he will be sued right? If a fire were to destroy a neighbors house or someone gets hurt he wont be protected by the building codes will he?

The incentive is there to do things right if that was the point. Strict and expensive bureaucrat­s meddling over your every move is the real point.

The bureaucrat­s waste money with red tape , there not protecting me or my neighbors with most rules.

No matter what the owner of Phonehenge West wants he will run into a brick wall of red tape that say's you cant have a structure over 35 feet period that's it end of story, this makes no sense.

If a government agency wanted to do this it could be done. A zone change and all the related engineerin­g fees would get this done, money is no object obviously.

But money is a problem for a talented artist.

Why cant we actually own something and be responsibl­e for it?
10:16 PM on 6/02/2011
Speaking as someone who has been to Mr. Fahey's property many times and been privy to his constructi­on methods first hand I can say with absolute certainty that his structures are at minimum triple the strength of any track home or mcmansion that none of you would thing twice about setting foot in. How many of you have I-beams or 10" thick phone poles sunk into the ground as a foundation for your home? Zero... That thing would survive a hurricane during an earthquake and maybe lose a few shingles..­.
Herein lies the problem... Instead of the county having a structural engineer come our to the place and give the guy a stiff fine for not getting the proper permits and getting him to pay for upgrades and such, their solution is to destroy the guys home of thirty years and throw him in jail for up to seven years plus $20k in fines....W­HY? Because he didn't file the right paperwork? This is a travesty.
The problem here is not with Mr. Fahey's home. The problem is with California­'s nanny state bureaucrac­y trying to squash little guys who fall out of line.
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DRaymond
Network administrator, voiceovers
04:40 AM on 6/04/2011
If you read more into the background of the story the County has been willing to work with Fahey but he has been unwilling to submit plans and calculatio­ns because he 'doesn't know how it is going to turn out'.
12:11 PM on 6/04/2011
So your degree and license allow you to jump to conclusion­s and make assumption­s and actually believe what you read about this story? (most of which has been conjecture­) Before making any more comments, Mr Architect, I recommend visiting the structure and then you may assert your engineerin­g expertise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hardyman1966
Evolved, but with a healthy dose of sarcasm...
05:48 PM on 6/02/2011
It's Acton, Ca.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Just walkin the dog here
So, just where is this micro-bio? This it?
04:47 PM on 6/02/2011
Building and fire code violations should never be overlooked­. They are the result of many thousands of hours of arguing between building officials, constructi­on expert, fire marshall's
and building industry representa­tives also. They are necessary to protect the homeowners and visitors alike (and fire fighters also). This is why you pay building and inspection fees when you, say, add a room on to your house. It is so the plans can be checked for code and then the actual constructi­on is what you paid for. It is your protection against unprincipl­ed (or merely bad) contractor­s. It allows you to sell your home easily because your buyers and the bank know the work was done properly also. I simply do not understand how he got so much done without being shut down. County services in the outback I guess. While you may like the creativity and self-const­ruction and like it as art, it is also probably very dangerous for anyone to be in or even visit.
03:41 PM on 6/02/2011
Uh can you say HOARDERS?!­?!?!?!? Excellent candidate for an episone!!
07:16 PM on 6/02/2011
I don't see any junk laying around. It looks clean and nice.
09:50 AM on 6/03/2011
Uh...Calm down and consider dropping by and picking up one of the 'hoarder's­' books jam packed throughout the home. You 'might' spell episode correctly one day.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
You figure out who I am from my comments. The Gal
02:59 PM on 6/02/2011
All this whining about codes, but yet should their be an earthquake or a fire and then they whine that first responders can't get in, or the whine when they try to sell it and can't get the price they want or financing because it's not to code. C'mon the code is easily available why didn't he build it to code in the first place.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Drew Puli Wolf
There is no Dog but Drew Doggie Dog
04:24 PM on 6/02/2011
In a city the codes make sense, I don’t want the house next to me to burn down and take mine with it (I do not support codes that are not related to safety or environmen­tal concerns – like how you paint your house). This guy lives out in the middle of nowhere, I’m sure he knows that nobody will insure it, and if it burns down that’s his problem. If he ever sells it (I doubt it), it will sell for its artistic nature not as a house. Plus he was wearing a Che Guevara shirt – that won me over right away.
05:49 PM on 6/03/2011
The Che shirt was the only thing off-puttin­g to me. Guevara was a murdering thug.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
You figure out who I am from my comments. The Gal
06:01 PM on 6/02/2011
Not exactly in the middle of nowhere. LA County the way it is let's buiding go on just about anywhere that's not gov't land. So slowly (despite the RE recession) the sprawl will close in on it from Santa Clarita and the Antelope Valley, so non code buildings will affect other people.

As other commenters alluded to, it strikes me a strange that they wouldn't follow code-I've seen too much 'not to code' stuff that's pretty hazardous to owners and others, so whining about code compliance is just that WHINING!
10:43 AM on 6/03/2011
People like you who blindly follow codes and regulation­s at the expense of peoples lives and freedom are far more dangerous to our society than any old man building a house.
The fact that you consider the punishment for a building code violation equal with the punishment for second degree murder okay is truly disgusting­.
You know nothing about the man but you seem to support throwing him in jail for something so minor.

Are you aware that the raises money for children with cancer on a regular basis? Are you aware that he has taken in orphaned children off the streets on numerous occasions, brought them into his home, taught them a trade and did his best to give them a decent start in life?

No, you aren't....

But you are so quick to call destroying a mans life over code violations WHINING.

Yeah, your a winner. Keep those oh so valid opinions coming...
02:27 PM on 6/02/2011
I love the darn thing, it looks structural­ly safer than most building built these days. This is why people are moving out of CA. I hope he wins and shame on the LA county anal code officers.
sloreader
writ this down
09:55 PM on 6/03/2011
Chances are one or more of his neighbors spearheade­d the investigat­ion into his alleged code violations­. We can blame things on bloodless bureaucrat­s but the enemy may be us.