- Posted July 25, 2011
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
California Man must demolish quirky village in desert
By John Rogers
Associated Press
LANCASTER, Calif. (AP) -- Stonehenge still stands in Great Britain after thousands of years. But its quirky counterpart in California's Mojave Desert appears destined for a much shorter existence.
Kim Fahey, who assembled a dozen colorful structures out of used, discarded, junked and just-plain-unwanted materials over nearly 30 years, acknowledged this week that whether his future home is in a jail cell or on a ranch just down the road, he's leaving the property the public has come to know as Phonehenge West.
The self-taught builder who constructed a 70-foot art deco tower, a barn, replicas of a 16th century Viking house and an antique railroad car among other structures, has been ordered to tear them all down because he put up each one without building permits.
He was sentenced Friday in Los Angeles County Superior Court on a dozen misdemeanor building code violations. He faces a maximum of a year in jail on each count, as well as substantial fines, although he could also be sentenced to probation.
"I'm losing more interest in the place every day," Fahey said by phone this week as he packed up his library of several thousand books, everything from World War II histories to anthologies on circus freaks. He kept most of them in the loft area of a barn he built partly out of discarded utility poles, and which he connected to Phonehenge West's other buildings with wooden bridges resembling something out of Disneyland's Tom Sawyer's Island attraction, only more colorful.
Supporters have hailed the work as a stunning example of American folk art that should be preserved. County building officials say it is a threat to public safety and must be torn down.
Fahey, meanwhile, says he's moving to Tehachapi, a small town at the foot of California's Sierra Nevada mountain range. But the colorful, burly builder, who constructed his little village on a 1.7-acre piece of property he bought in the old California Gold Rush town of Acton, says he isn't giving up entirely.
"They got my place and they ran me out, but the fight's not over," said Fahey, who promised to appeal.
Published: Mon, Jul 25, 2011
headlines Detroit
headlines National
- Michelle Behnke looks to build community and strengthen the ABA with new strategic plan
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- New research about legal operations is ‘at a crossroads,’ consortium leaders say
- You were probably not taught to market yourself; now what?
- Which BigLaw firms pay the highest starting salary?
- Netflix’s true-crime documentary about woman stalking man flows like book you can’t put down