Climate disaster victims are rebuilding using prefab homes from boxy to bespoke

NPR News ·

Climate disaster victims are rebuilding using prefab homes from boxy to bespoke

Jason and Colleen Warnesky are among the dozens of families in Altadena, Calif., who have opted to rebuild with manufactured homes, following the 2025 Eaton Fire. …

Jason and Colleen Warnesky are among the dozens of families in Altadena, Calif., who have opted to rebuild with manufactured homes, following the 2025 Eaton Fire. The couple told NPR they were partially movtivated to go with a prefabricated home by safety concerns. "I think that we both felt early on, if there was a way to make it so that we had less to worry about if another fire happened in the future," we'd go with that," Colleen Warnesky said. Vanessa Romo/NPR hide caption toggle caption Vanessa Romo/NPR When the Station Fire roared through the Angeles National Forest in 2009, Colleen and Jason Warnesky could see it from the front porch of their Altadena, Calif., home. Eleven years later, the family witnessed the Bobcat Fire from the same spot as it became one of the largest fires in Los Angeles County history. Their house remained standing after both close calls. So when the Eaton Fire struck more than 3 miles away in January 2025, they were certain they'd again remain unscathed. "We couldn't imagine how it would get from all the way over there to our house," Colleen Warnesky told NPR, as she pointed to the lush mountains, on a recent Sunday afternoon. Fifteen months later the couple is pacing around the fenced-in dirt lot that was once the site of their 1,400 sq. foot home. …

Original source: NPR News

Mentioned

Los Angeles County · University of California