El Bordello Alexandra: How a Venice Beach Landmark Came to Be

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Wendy Gilmartin
El Bordello Alexandra
When Tony Wells and Brittany Stevenson bought the apartment at 20 Westminster Ave. in Venice ten years ago, the place was a heroin den with a slumlord owner who never fixed things. The front was covered with decaying wood shingles, grimy linoleum hid the historic tile work in the foyer and low dropped ceilings made the rooms inside feel dark and claustrophobic. "We completely gutted the place, tore off all the finishes and started over again," Brittany says. "There was a rumor it used to be a bordello, so we went in that direction."

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Gargoyles on the roof at El Bordello Alexandra
Wendy Gilmartin
El Bordello Alexandra has a completely different scene now. Over the last decade, the seven-unit apartment has been home to artists, singers, happy kids, partying musicians, gentle hippies, beach bums and guardian spirits. Brittany gratefully refers to the residents of the Bordello as "clients" -- people she and Tony work for. "Four or five of them get together and go to Burning Man every year, they all go to Coachella together too, camping trips, whatever," she says.

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Wendy Gilmartin
Interior stairwell
The Bordello is like a throwback to an Armistead Maupin-ish Tales of the City house, where tenants energetically tolerate hook-ups, homeless people in the yard and the coming-and-going artisans and musicians of Venice. The tenants are contented too, most stay a while and a few have been there more than ten years.

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Wendy Gilmartin
Fairies mingle with gargoyles
Even though they don't live at the Bordello, Tony and Brittany understand their clients' intrinsic need for a comfy, cool and communal crash pad. "We've always tried to make a space for the community aspects of life," explains Brittany. "L.A.'s a hard city -- its nice to be able to get together with people and have a home life here."

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Wendy Gilmartin
"T & B" stands for Tony & Brittany (not Tim Burton)
Tony's experience in construction and Brittany's in producing make them a formidable pair of crafty, type-A creative managers, and they took to the bordello's daunting overhaul with gusto. They began with major structural repairs, then moved into the renovation of the colorful, airy interior corridors and individual units. The murals and gargoyles went up shortly after the slate columns and patina-colored iron work.

But the fun started when Tony found a metal shop outside Rosarito beach in Mexico, on the outskirts on an Indian reservation. "The Indians down there use these little ghoulish statues to ward off evil spirits," he says, "and the guy who sells the statues makes them out of salvaged metal, so we asked if he'd make a gigantic Poseidon for us and a centaur."

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Wendy Gilmartin
Rooftop Centaur
Even though Tony and Brittany ran with the Bordello concept in the beginning, the project grew in scope and style with each new vintage chandelier, exotic painting and sinister statue. Ten years later, the whole eclipses each of its fantastical parts and has achieved local landmark status. "We never started with an idea that the building would look like this," Brittney says. "It just happens over time. It comes together naturally."

"The next big thing here on the roof is going to be a statue of Athena -- powerful, huge -- right there in the middle, with her shield," Tony adds while looking at the roof, his arms stretched out wide to give us the scale. Brittany chimes in, "because we need a little more feminine energy." She rolls her eyes and nods to the hard-plated muscular steel of the other statuaries on the roof to make her point.

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Wendy Gilmartin
Straight in from Rosarito: Another demon on the roof
"Look at this guy," Tony says, motioning towards the ghoulish, bat-winged devil spreading his wings over the Venice Speedway. "He's just massive, right?" But Brittany says, "It's a little too much, all this stuff hanging off the side of the building." These are the gentle disagreements Tony and Brittany mull through. They have slight creative differences, but they always seem to resolve them magically, intuitively and with helpful creative friends and co-conspirators.

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Wendy Gilmartin
El Bordello after sundown

Alexandra, the building's namesake, was Brittany's best friend -- they worked together and she passed away before the project was completed. From the mural on the front -- made in Alexandra's likeness -- to the stained glass on the back wall of the building, Alexandra's presence watches over the residents of 20 Westminster. "She protects this place," says Brittany.

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6 comments
ejhalsey
ejhalsey

LOVE this house! everytime I'm in Venice, I HAVE TO stop by it and take photos. lol I wish I knew someone who lived there so I could go inside. (but, alas, I only know poor ppl. hehe) Great article! it answered a lot of questions. thank you. :)

ShakinBoots
ShakinBoots

I ride my bike down Speedway and see this building all the time. It's hard to miss and looks cool. The roof is looking very crowded and asymetrical though. It kind of takes away from the overall aesthetic IMO.

I'm curious what the cost of rent is in this building compared to other well-kept buildings in the area. Is rent higher for living in this artpiece?

Jbrennan08
Jbrennan08

Very, very creative.....You guys are real artists......

Guest
Guest

Viva El Bordello!

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