SINGAPORE – Singaporean Shabnam Melwani is now holed up in a hotel room in Santa Monica after deadly wildfires in Los Angeles damaged her home and wrecked others.
Entire neighbourhoods in California have been levelled after wildfires tore through parts of Los Angeles since last Tuesday (Jan 7). According to ABC News on Sunday, it is estimated that the fires could be the costliest in US history,
Vice President Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff announced their decision to cancel their upcoming international trips on Thursday in the wake of the Los Angeles wildfires. “In
Consider cosmopolitan Singapore: The Asian city-state is different from any other city layout-wise because of its many towering skyscrapers amid reams of greenery. These two disparate urban ...
NPR's Scott Simon reflects on the wildfires in Los Angeles, and the words of writers who were drawn to the city.
Amtrak Pacific Surfliner will add three daily round trips between Los Angeles and San Diego, funded by a $27 million grant.
Developer Don Peebles and partner Victor MacFarlane have sued the City of Los Angeles for allegedly unlawfully terminating their contract to build the $1.6 billion Angels Landing project Downtown, which would have been among the largest African-American-led developments in the city’s history.
Many Californians thought wildfires couldn’t reach deep into their cities. But the Los Angeles fires showed how older homes became fuel that fed the fires.
Awareness of doom in Los Angeles, and yet a need to push disaster away, has created a kind of collective psychosis.
Fires across the Los Angeles area have killed at least 27 people. The Palisades and Eaton wildfires continue to burn in California today. Here are the latest updates.
ART SG returned to Singapore's Marina Bay Sands Resort and Convention Center this week while the global art market continues to deal with a sales slowdown and fragmentation, and several fires in Los Angeles devastated artists,
I have friends who lost houses. I have family who were burned out of their home. Los Angeles has lost churches, synagogues, and architecture that are part of our collective history—not just architectural gems, but civic hubs and touchstones for communal memory.