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Los Angeles Times
15-05-2025
- Los Angeles Times
I went on a 2,500-mile search for the greatest motels in California. Here's what I found
Listen. That's the low hum of the highway you hear behind me, offset by the rumble of the ice machine down the breezeway. We gather today to celebrate the motel, a uniquely American creature, conceived in California through the unholy embrace of the automobile and the hotel. Since that beginning in 1925, motels have multiplied like bunnies. They have been implicated in countless crimes and liaisons. They have been elevated by some savvy architects, undercut by assorted chain operations and frequently left for dead by the side of the road. Yet certain survivors have done some dramatic social climbing, especially lately. Plenty of motels have moved from budget to boutique, often renaming themselves as inns, lodges or hotels and capitalizing on their vintage looks. Like turntables, typewriters, tiki bars and film cameras, these midcentury motels are back, seducing millennials, Gen Z and baby boomers like the character Johnny Rose on the beloved TV series 'Schitt's Creek.' 'I always saw motels as a last resort, a dreaded pit stop,' said Rose, played by Eugene Levy, pitching Wall Street investors. 'But I was wrong. Motels have the potential of offering a window into the unique charm of small-town life.' He vows 'to revitalize the classic roadside motel for a new generation.' Out here in the real world, it's happening. Nowadays you can spend $1,000 a night in a born-again California motel. You can order 'eight-minute eggs' with your Champagne brunch (Le Petit Pali, Carmel), browse in a curated bodega (Hotel Wren, Twentynine Palms), nosh on caviar (Skyview Los Alamos), borrow a small car (Surfrider Hotel, Malibu), or ease the planet's miseries by reaching for tree-free toilet paper (Pearl Hotel, San Diego). Yet if you're nervous about money in these nerve-racking times, you can still find a mom-and-pop operation with high standards, a long family history and — sometimes — rates that dip under $100. You can even find one of those that features concrete teepees (San Bernardino's Wigwam Motel, run by a family with roots in India). In other words, it's a wide, wide motel world out there, too broad to fit into one road trip. And so, in honor of the motel centennial, I took a road trip. Well, a few road trips. All told, I covered about 2,500 miles, all within California, stalking properties born between 1925 and 1970, avoiding the big chains, sleeping in a new room every night. The way I defined a motel? If a lodging's guest rooms open directly to the outdoors and there's a parking lot handy, industry experts say, it probably was born as a motel or motor lodge. Especially if it's a low-rise building with fewer than 60 rooms, brick walls and a VACANCY sign visible from the street. But owners can call their lodgings what they like — or turn them to other uses. On the way, I found a few landmark motels that don't take overnight guests at all. I also learned how the state's Project Homekey — conceived to house people at risk of homelessness — bankrolled the purchase and conversion of more than 30 Southern California motels and hotels from 2020 to 2024, with mixed results. Now, buckle up and let's roll the montage of old postcards, weathered neon signs and swooping Googie rooflines, then zoom to the spot where motel history began. The first stop, I knew, needed to be a scruffy lot alongside U.S. 101 at the eastern edge of San Luis Obispo. This is where a car-loving Pasadena architect named Arthur Heineman opened his first roadside lodging in December 1925, less than a year before Route 66 connected Chicago to Los Angeles. Having seen the first vacation camps and motor courts spring up across the country, Heineman hatched the idea of building one midway between Los Angeles and San Francisco. After a few false starts, he called his place the Milestone Mo-Tel, combining motor and hotel. Later it became the Motel Inn. Heineman gave the buildings Mission Revival features and planned to build 18 statewide, his own mission system. That never happened. But Heineman's lodging endured for decades and the word motel caught on. As the automobile transformed American life and roadside commercial culture lit up like a new neon light, that word spread. But we're not lingering at the Motel Inn. It shut down in 1991 and much of the old complex has been leveled. Despite a proposal for a new hotel that got local planning commission approval in 2023, the site remained idle as of March 7. An uninspiring sign still stands, along with a Mission-style office building, bell tower and a single wall from the old restaurant. For someone who prizes roadside Americana, this is the visual version of the sad trombone sound. Fortunately, the Madonna Inn — the visual version of an accordion orchestra — is just three miles away. Under a big pink sign. Nowadays the Madonna Inn is a vast enterprise with restaurants, bakery, bar, stables next door and 110 guest rooms — each different, each with its own postcard in the inn's three gift shops. It's so ornate, so frothy with kitsch, you have to smile. But when Alex and Phyllis Madonna opened in late 1958, the inn was a 12-room experiment. The timing must have seemed right. Motels had been multiplying nationwide for more than 30 years, often adding swimming pools to lure more families or adopting elaborate themes to stand apart. On Columbus Avenue in San Francisco, a circular Villa Roma motor hotel rose up (until it was leveled in the '80s). Farther north in Crescent City, a man named Tom Wyllie built the 36-room Curly Redwood Lodge out of a single redwood tree in 1957. You can still sleep there, often for less than $80. But here's what gave the Madonnas a crucial boost on their motel in San Luis Obispo: Earlier that year, the state of California had opened the ornately furnished Hearst Castle in nearby San Simeon as a tourist attraction. Once the Madonna Inn opened that December, a traveler from L.A. could sleep at one lavishly decorated only-in-California castle on the way to another. Legions still do. 'It is the grandest motel of them all,' roadside design expert John Margolies once wrote, 'and it is the definitive expression of an individually owned and operated hostelry — light-years removed from the almost scientific sameness of the large franchised chains.' From San Luis Obispo I drove on to San Francisco, ignoring Union Square, North Beach and Fisherman's Wharf, heading for the straight part of Lombard Street. That's the part that carries U.S. 101 traffic through the Marina district on its way to the Golden Gate Bridge, and it's full of old motels. In their vintage signs and often-weary façades, you can see proof of the industry's boom and the decline that followed. How ubiquitous did motels get? By 1964 there were 61,000 motels across the U.S. It's hard to imagine there were ever so many, until you peek at @deadmotelsUSA or @merchmotel on Instagram or you've come across Heather M. David's splendid 2017 coffee table book, 'Motel California.' Alas, by 1964, they were already beginning to get less interesting. Once the first generation of mom-and-pop motels prospered, the first chain operations arose and followed, targeting travelers who wanted no surprises. Two of the biggest chains, in fact, were born in Southern California — Motel 6 in Santa Barbara and Travelodge in San Diego. As the national freeway system grew through the 1960s and '70s, more chain operations positioned themselves to collect freeway drivers. Along the now-much-quieter highway, the old mom-and-pop operations died off or were gobbled up and 'reflagged' by the chains. By 1980, the freeway system and the chain hotels were thriving. Motels, not so much. But in 1987 — in San Francisco's Tenderloin, of all places — a 26-year-old Stanford MBA named Chip Conley tried something that changed the motel narrative. He bought a bedraggled old place called the Caravan Lodge and dubbed it the Phoenix, with Miss Pearl's Jam House as its on-site restaurant and bar. Then he positioned the property as a hotelier's version of Rolling Stone magazine, all wrapped around a playfully painted pool. And he offered free massages and bus parking to touring musicians' road managers. And lo, the bands came, including the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Sinead O'Connor, M.C. Hammer, k.d. lang, Laurie Anderson, Etta James, David Bowie, Bo Diddley and Deborah Harry. As the Phoenix flourished, Conley revived dozens more motels and small hotels, conceived a brand called Joie de Vivre, then sold it to Marriott. The Phoenix has less momentum now. Its restaurant opens only for special events and the Tenderloin's crime and blight persist. If I were in the city with children, I'd sooner stay near Lombard Street at the Motel Capri or Hotel Del Sol (which charges a staggering $45 for parking but has a pool). Then again, a new owner took over the Phoenix last August — Michel Suas, a celebrated Bay Area pastry chef. If any Phoenix can rise from the ashes twice, it's this one. Meanwhile, up and down California, there's a new generation of motel entrepreneurs and designers following Conley's lead, rethinking what it means to be a motel. Though the nationwide number of motels dwindled to an estimated 16,000 by 2012, reclamation projects have been multiplying. Kenny Osehan's Ojai-based Shelter Social Club manages six reclaimed California motels in Ojai, Santa Barbara, Los Alamos and Solvang. The Beverly Hills-based Kirkwood Collection includes 11 redone California motels and hotels. The Santa Barbara-based Casetta Group has opened four redone Southern California motels and hotels, with two more opening soon in Los Angeles and Taos, N.M. The San Luis Obispo-based Nomada Hotel Group has relaunched five motels and hotels along the Central Coast. None of those companies existed before 2012. All are still growing and trading on the idea that a lodging with 30 rooms feels friendlier than one with 300. Drive south from San Francisco with a motel geek — which you're now doing, by the way — and the born-again motel variations roll past like Kodachrome images in a slide show. At the Glen Oaks Resort Adobe Motor Lodge in Big Sur, the rooms huddle at the edge of a thick forest. You turn an old-school metal key in your door and find a room full of stylishly recycled furnishings — woodsy but luxe, with yoga mats leaning in a corner. At the Cambria Beach Lodge, where once you might have found a bedside Gideon Bible or a Magic Fingers vibrating mattress, now you borrow a bike to ride by Moonstone Beach or bathe with some of the motel's goat's milk soap. Rolling through Paso Robles, you confront a generational motel choice. You can seek reassurance at the Melody Ranch Motel with its tidy, basic rooms, Gideon Bibles, second-generation family management and rates around $100 a night. Or you can head to Farmhouse Paso Robles or the River Lodge, both of which have been updated dramatically by the Nomada Group. 'It's not that we set out to refurbish motels, necessarily,' Nomada partner and creative director Kimberly Walker told me. 'One thing we are passionate about is giving old buildings a new chapter. We can't ever see ourselves buying a piece of land and starting from scratch.' With the best old motels, 'There was just so much personality and thought put into what these buildings look like that they're able to be reconceptualized again,' Walker said. 'You can always find one thing to start your design journey with, and then build off of that.' Two of the biggest challenges, Walker said, are parking and bathrooms. At the River Lodge, Skyview Los Alamos and Hotel Ynez in Solvang, Walker's team moved the parking area farther from rooms, making more space for greenery and patios. In small bathrooms, the team has deployed fancy tiles, lots of light and glass partitions instead of shower curtains. Especially at Skyview, the combination of Modernist and farmhouse design elements yields entertaining results. Agrigoogie, anyone? And then there's the question of those cool old signs that say motel. 'When we first bought Skyview, and I hate that I did this, but I was like, 'Maybe we should change the sign from 'motel' to 'hotel,''' Walker confessed. 'I'm so glad that I didn't follow through with that, because the motel sign is the beacon. Guests love taking their pictures with the sign.' In Cayucos, design veterans and hospitality newbies Ryan and Marisa Fortini faced a similar question when they bought and renovated an old motor inn on the main drag. They chose to lean even harder into the m-word and called their project the Pacific Motel. It opened in 2022. And now the Fortinis are doing it again. In 2023 they bought the nearby Cayucos Motel. So far, that still-open property remains as beach-rustic-plain as the Pacific Motel is beach-rustic-chic. But more changes are coming and Ryan Fortini shared with me a new word that may help describe them. 'Motique,' he said. 'A boutique motel.' The farther south you go, whether on the coast or in the desert, the wider the variety seems to get. At the Surfrider Malibu, guests ordinarily have exclusive access to a roof-deck restaurant, several loaner surfboards and a pair of Mini Coopers — but some amenities are on hold as the hotel accommodates many guests displaced by the Palisades fire in January. In the boulder-strewn hills between San Diego and Calexico, the revivers of the once-moribund Jacumba Hot Springs Hotel have rebuilt that resort (which opened in 2023) with geothermally heated pools and a global desert theme. On a pier in San Diego's Pacific Beach, there's been no dramatic rebirth — because none was necessary. The tidy cottages of the Crystal Pier Hotel, run by the same family since 1961, still look much as they did in the 1930s, tide lapping below, reservations required months ahead. (And you have to make them by phone or in person.) 'The motel thing is coming back,' said general manager Julie Neal, sounding surprised. 'It's actually kind of cool now.' Out in the desert, where Midcentury Modern design has never gone out of style, there were revived motels left and right. The most subdued of those was one of the most tempting: Hotel Wren in Twentynine Palms, which only opened in March, a 12-room, high-end retreat with muted colors, enormous rooms, custom furniture and poolside mountain views. The least subdued? That would be the former Ruby Montana's Coral Sands Inn, in Palm Springs. My family and I booked most of the place with friends several years ago, and I was struck then by how entertaining it was to sleep, read and play in a seven-room motel that had been painted pink and filled with thrift-shop tchotchkes and vintage furnishings. Well, Ruby's gone now, and the Trixie Motel (its name since 2022) is proof that even if one hotelier goes wild, there's still room for the next one to go wilder. Especially if that next owner is a drag queen. The motel is still pink, but now staffers wear pink outfits, every room has its own custom thematic wallpaper (Atomic Bombshell, Pink Flamingo, Yeehaw Cowgirl). Barbie dolls cavort in the office and trendy persons fill the motel's Barbara bar. Next to all this, the Madonna Inn looks like just another Ramada. Because the point of a motel is to help you toward someplace else, there's no perfect way to end a motel journey. But Amboy works. It's a 20th century ghost town along Route 66, about 45 miles northeast of Twentynine Palms. Roy's Motel & Cafe stands there like a forgotten stage set, topped by an iconic 1959 sign whose promises are all false. Roy has been gone for decades. With potable water in short supply, neither the cafe nor the motel nor its six roadside cottages have been open since the 1980s. But Roy's has gas, snacks and souvenirs, which is enough to attract film crews, selfie snappers and legions of drivers (especially desert-smitten Europeans) on their way between Las Vegas and Joshua Tree. With Route 66 turning 100 in 2026, Roy's owner Kyle Okura and manager Ken Large are doing their best to somehow get the six roadside cottages up and renting before that year is over. (Who can resist a centennial?) It's too soon to tell if that rebirth will happen. Still, the road warriors come, including off-duty trucker Chris Birdsall, 51, of Omaha, who turned up shortly before sunset one recent day. 'I want to see the sign lit up,' he said. Soon after, Roy's assistant manager Nicole Rachel called Birdsall into the old motel office, showed him the three switches that control the 50-foot sign and invited him to do the honors. Birdsall did his bit, then grinned like a kid as the motel sign blinked to life in red, blue and yellow like a neon mirage or a road-tripper's dream. Rachel often invites visitors to throw the switches, she told me. But even if you don't get that privilege, I can't think of a better place to stand on the blacktop and imagine what might be down the road.
Yahoo
30-04-2025
- Yahoo
‘My baby is dead.' Santa Cruz mother never called 911 for Baby Z, court documents show
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (KRON) — A Santa Cruz County mother who is charged with murdering her 1-year-old baby never called 911 after she found her daughter's lifeless body in 2024, according to court records filed by prosecutors. Korisa Lynn Woll, 39, of Scotts Valley, is being held in jail without bail. Her 20-month-old baby was poisoned by a deadly dose of fentanyl in Santa Cruz four months after the baby's father fatally overdosed on the same drug, court records state. A preliminary hearing is scheduled to begin in June to determine if investigators have enough evidence for the mother to stand trial. She has pleaded not guilty to a slew of charges, including murder, drug dealing, child abuse, and destroying evidence. Woll's baby is referred to as 'Baby Z' in court documents filed by the Santa Cruz County District Attorney's Office. Prosecutors described grim circumstances surrounding Baby Z's death. Baby Z was last seen alive at 1 p.m. on Saturday, July 27, 2024 inside a home at Casa Azul, located at 801 River St. 'Casa Azul is a well known drug sales location,' assistant district attorney Kristal Salcido wrote in court documents. Casa Azul is a Project Homekey site funded by the state for providing chronically homeless people with permanent supportive housing. Casa Azul opened in 2023, is divided into several 'apartments' for residents, and is operated by Housing Matters, according to the nonprofit organization's website. The Casa Azul apartment were Baby Z died was the home of Woll's friend, Salcido wrote. The friend allowed Woll, her 4-year-old son, and Baby Z to spend two nights in his home. On the night of July 27, 2024, the 4-year-old boy heard his sister struggling to breathe in the bedroom and saw her vomiting, investigators said. 'He went to wake his mother up in the living room, but she did not respond,' court documents state. In the morning, Woll walked into the bedroom, found Baby Z, and screamed, 'My baby is dead,' Salcido wrote. 'They then tried to give the baby Narcan and mouth-to-mouth (CPR). They did not call 911. It is believed the baby was dead for approximately 9-11 hours before being brought by (Woll) to Dominican Hospital at 1:37 p.m. on Sunday (July 28),' Salcido wrote. Woll carried the baby's body to the hospital emergency room's front entrance, placed her on a wheelchair, told a security guard that her daughter had died, and walked away, court documents state. Several minutes later, Woll returned to the ER and Baby Z was declared deceased by hospital workers. 'She indicated she thought the baby had overdosed on something the child picked up,' Salcido wrote. Santa Cruz Police Department officers were called to the hospital and arrested the mother. An autopsy toxicology report found that Baby Z had 22 ng/ml of fentanyl in her system. A fatal dose for an adult is between 7-10 ng/ml. Baby Z was born inside a hospital's emergency room in Modoc, Calif. Her mother was a longtime methamphetamine user and a suspected fentanyl dealer, according to prosecutors. Woll left the hospital with her newborn 'against medical advice,' prosecutors wrote. Baby Z's father, Robert Tillman, was also a methamphetamine user, according to prosecutors. While the couple was living in Tennessee with their four children, Tillman and Woll had several cases opened against them by child protective services agencies. Attorney: Mother may have caused Baby Phoenix's fentanyl death When Baby Z was four months old, Woll took the screaming infant to a Tennessee hospital, blamed the infant's distress on her 7-year-old brother, and accused the brother of dropping the baby. Court records state, 'Doctors reported it to the department of children family services. X-Rays revealed the child had a fracture on her (arm). Both parents refused to allow (their) other children to be interviewed by department of child services or police.' In 2023, Tillman and Woll moved from Tennessee to Santa Cruz, California, with Baby Z, their 16-year-old daughter, 8-year-old son, and 4-year-old son. They were living in a home at 402 Lindon Street when Tillman allegedly punched and strangled his 8-year-old son. Tillman was charged with felony child abuse, and over the objections of prosecutors, a judge released him from custody on April 4, 2024. On the same day that he was released from jail, Tillman returned to his family's home and died from a fentanyl overdose. The home at 402 Lindon Street was owned by a man who had offered the family a place to stay. The resident told investigators that he regularly used fentanyl and other drugs with Woll and Tillman, including the day that Tillman fatally overdosed. The resident said he was able to revive Woll with Narcan, but was unable to revive Tillman. 'The children were present in the home at the time of the death. SCPD called Santa Cruz County Department of Children Family Services. Despite multiple reports of abuse and neglect, both from police and the State of Tennessee, Santa Cruz DCFS did not open any case involving (Woll) either before or after Robert Tillman's death,' assistant district attorney Salcido wrote. After Tillman died in April 2024, Woll moved out of 402 Linden Street, and moved into her parents' Scotts Valley house, records state. 'Their home in Scotts Valley is spacious and safe, and there was plenty of room for the children. Her parents were very supportive of her living in their home, but had concerns about her sobriety and wanted her to get a job. She left for days at a time with all three children and they did not know where she was,' Salcido wrote. On July 16, 2024, Woll suddenly left the Scotts Valley house with Baby Z and her 4-year-old son. She returned to the home where Tillman died. 'The children were left inside the bedroom for most of the day while (adults) did drugs in the living room,' court documents state. On July 25, 2024, the resident allegedly ordered Tillman to leave his house because he was concerned that she neglected her children. The mother stayed with Baby Z and her young son at Casa Azul on July 26 and July 27. Baby Z was declared deceased on July 28. Woll's next court appearance of scheduled for June 18. Her preliminary hearing is slated to begin on June 23 with Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge Denine Guy presiding. She is represented by public defender Allen Cave. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Los Angeles Times
26-04-2025
- Business
- Los Angeles Times
Costa Mesa to consider converting Mesa Motel into 47 affordable units
A plan to convert a shuttered Costa Mesa motor inn into 46 units of affordable housing for low-income tenants, a project that's been eyed by the city for years, will be considered by the Planning Commission in a hearing Monday. Formerly the site of the Mesa Motel — located at 2205 Harbor Blvd., between Wilson and Victoria streets — the .58-acre property has been vacant since 2022. But that could change if city planners approve a conditional use permit that would allow the work to begin. The proposal is being put forth by Laguna Niguel-based Ahura Investments, LLC, a firm associated with physician Nikan Khatibi, chief executive and medical director of the Ahura Healthcare Corp., which will serve as the owner and property manager of the site. It calls for the motel rooms to be rebuilt into a suite of mostly single-occupancy residences that will include sleeping and living accommodations as well as kitchenettes, complete with a refrigerator, prep area, sink and microwave. The site would also include one manager's unit. City leaders have considered the underused parcel as a place that could accommodate affordable housing, going back to at least 2021, when officials sought to acquire, rehabilitate and convert Mesa Motel and a Motel 6 on Newport Boulevard through the state's Project Homekey program. While the Motel 6 project was approved for 87 units of permanent supportive housing for at-risk individuals, and subsequently developed at a cost of about $49 million, the Mesa Motel property never moved forward as a Homekey project. Since then, the city has approved, under the program, the conversion of rooms at the Travelodge by Wyndham Orange County Airport/Costa Mesa, at 1400 Bristol St., into 76 studio and one-bedroom apartments, at the cost of about $48 million. Both those projects are funded through a combination of state grants, city matching funds and earmarks from the county and other sources. Residents of the Mesa Motel complex would qualify as very-low income, earning about 50% of Orange County's area median income of $127,800 — amounting to about $50,250 for a single individual, according to figures from the California Department of Housing and Community Development. Forty-two of the units would be single occupancy, while the other four residences would allow for two occupants. Tenancy would be secured through an annual lease and priority would be given to those living and/or working in Costa Mesa, seniors, veterans and individuals with disabilities, according to a staff report for Monday's meeting. The commercially zoned property contains two existing two-story buildings with a total area of 28,286 square feet. The new plan qualifies for a state housing density bonus and, due to its location near transit lines, does not have to conform to Costa Mesa's parking standards, and includes 27 spaces and one bicycle rack, compared to the 42 stalls that would otherwise be required. Planning commissioners will consider whether to grant a conditional use permit that would allow the General Business District-zoned parcel to accommodate a use similar to a motel or hotel. Monday's Planning Commission meeting starts at 6 p.m. at Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair Drive. For more, visit
Yahoo
22-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Project to build more than 50 units of housing for homeless people in Merced
A 58-unit project to help those at risk of or experiencing homelessness in Merced is underway. A groundbreaking ceremony was held Thursday in Merced, to kick off the start of a project to build 58 units for individuals experiencing or at risk of experiencing homelessness. The Homekey-funded housing project will include 58 units at 125 E. 13th St.. The single-story units will have ground floor access making them ADA accessible. One bedroom, one bath units will be roughly 407 square-feet in size, with two bedroom, two bath units approximately 574 square-feet. The units will be built on 2.7 acres of land utilizing modular construction, landscaping with be featured throughout with an emphasis on cost efficiency and livability. The modular units will be manufactured by Phoenix-based Cavco total project will cost $11,150,000, with 100% of the project's funding coming form California's Project Homekey, said Adam Conour, CEO of Anabasis real estate company, which also is involved in the project. 'This (will) have a very community, clean feel to it,' said Dean Sparks, a real estate professional partnering with Anabasis. 'It's been designed from scratch versus taking an existing hospitality property and reconverting it to this.' Both Sparks and Conour who are Army veterans, emphasized the importance of providing housing for veterans who they say are disproportionately affected by homelessness. 'We're trying to house veterans, we're trying to be responsible and we're trying to be impactful to the mission that we have,' Conour said. The project will also include the construction of a community building on site that will serve to house social services as well as case management and property management teams as well as a community room. The ground breaking ceremony will include red, white and blue balloons, as well as tactical military-style shovels used for the groundbreaking. Construction on the project is expected to begin this summer, with the development being one of seven affordable housing projects supported by the city in collaboration with developers. 'The City is committed to creating housing opportunities. By partnering with mission-aligned developers and leveraging funding opportunities from state and federal sources, we are working to ensure that affordable housing becomes a reality for more people throughout our community,' the city said in a statement to the Merced Sun-Star. The state-led initiative was launched in 2020 in an effort to expand housing for individuals experiencing homelessness or for those at risk of homelessnesses. The program enables both local and regional public entities to acquire various types of properties including motels, hotels, or commercial buildings into interim or permanent housing. According to the California Department of Housing and Community Development, as of August, Homekey has funded 15,850 homes.