The Wall That Everyone in Silver Lake Is Talking About (and Why It's Too High)

Alissa Walker

The wall seemed to materialize overnight.

Where once there was the pleasantly twee boutique, its offerings of Navajo blankets and denim shorts carefully staged like an anthropological survey of Silver Lake, now there was a cinder block bunker. A sheet of paper taped to the window confirmed the new tenant: A bar, or, rather, an expansion of a treasured restaurant that had been at the same corner for almost 15 years. Yet there was something ominous, something threatening. Some people -- even the same people who liked the restaurant -- did not like this wall.

For weeks, it was a topic of conversation in the neighborhood. At the coffee shop next door, regulars scowled over their lattes. At dinner parties around the reservoir, longtime residents shook their heads. By the time it reached the Internet, commenters were calling for boycotts of the restaurant. One night, four words in suspiciously impeccable penmanship appeared on the wall, articulating the local consensus: "Tear down this wall."

Gareth Kantner, owner of Cafe Stella and its cinder-block aspirations, defended his actions at a meeting last night in Silver Lake. According to a rendering he passed out to attendees, the cinder blocks would be covered by stucco (by last night they were already swabbed), painted blue and planted with bougainvillea. So why such a walled garden? "My patrons have told me they love their privacy," he said, with much conviction. But Cafe Stella already has a vast and quite private outdoor patio to serve those patrons. What about those of us who like a little neighborhood with our wine?

Cafe Stella
A rendering of the finished Cafe Stella wall

The day before, Kantner had given a different answer. He told The Eastsider LA that the wall was to protect local schoolchildren from witnessing the indecency of adults enjoying alcoholic beverages. At the meeting, the truth became more apparent as he seemed to reveal that the wall was not for the children but rather for his own dining preferences. "I don't want to sit there with a beautiful meal and a bottle of wine and have headlights in my face," he said. "People ask people to marry them at my restaurant!" It became clear these 6-foot-high walls were specifically designed to keep the unsavory elements of the street -- cars! lights! those who can't afford to propose there! -- far away from his duck confit.

The Blue Monster, as I've just decided to call it, sticks a sharp elbow out onto the sidewalk to claim a rather small triangle of outdoor space. The wall also blocks nearly all of the building's large glass window, rendering the new facade blank. Aesthetically, it has more in common with a bomb shelter, protecting imbibers from the imagined post-apocalyptic fallout of Sunset Boulevard. As I peered into the tiny space yesterday, I imagined the new Cafe Stella experience. I decided it would be much like drinking in a blue stucco jail cell while I was slowly suffocated to death, stealing sips of Chenin blanc between my final gasps of air.

Kantner hasn't broken any laws; he seemed to pull the right permits, and the wall is on his own private property. But the crime is that this visionary man, who has carved out two of the neighborhood's most vibrant spaces -- Intelligentsia's patio for sure, and how about that sweet little courtyard outside the Cheese Store of Silver Lake? -- seems to have lost touch with what the neighbors actually want now: to see each other.

Up the street, restaurants like Naya have seen the value in this, peeling open their facades to put drinkers closer to the sidewalk. But as I walked last night from the NBA-fueled cheers at Good toward the silence of Sunset Junction, I realized that the heart of Silver Lake is dead at night. People go somewhere else to drink. They leave the sidewalks. Our streets go quiet. This makes us look boring. But it also makes the neighborhood unsafe.

When the Silver Lake Neighborhood Council approved Kantner's expansion, they also granted him permission to apply for a hard liquor license and the ability to extend his hours to 2 a.m. So when this new bar stays open into the wee hours, supposedly flooding this corner with life, it will all be neatly and dishearteningly censored by the dark 6-foot-tall wall.

With so many businesses in flux along this strip, what Silver Lake needs more than anything right now is to show people drinking. Sitting outside, boozing it up. In public. At night. Seeing people having fun brings more people who want to have fun. Who will order more drinks. With money.

I can't believe a businessman who claims to know his customers so well can't see the value in attracting new ones.

The wall in question is located at Cafe Stella, 3932 W. Sunset Blvd.

Alissa Walker blogs at Gelatobaby.com. Follow her on Twitter at @gelatobaby and for more arts news follow us on Facebook or at @LAWeeklyArts.

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Cafe Stella

3932 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA

Category: Restaurant

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36 comments
LaRed11
LaRed11

ok. I'm slightly annoyed at the seemingly undeserved inflated self worth that the Silverlake community seems to have. How many people in the neighborhood complaining are actually here for the long haul? By this I mean, you are married, have kids, investing in property, dropping your kids off at the local schools, and plan on staring at that wall until the day your child wheels your off to the retirement home and then your grave?  Or are you like most people, here until you burn out on our great city and then off to return to whatever state you came from (Illinois, Ohio, Florida, what have you) where you will look back with fondness at a time when you actually had the time, to get upset over, a wall. People. Its. a wall.

 

If you are going to boycott something. Boycott something meaningful. Or, better yet, take all your time and energy and use it to question our modern life values and political system that is working to keep you fat, dumb, and happy, so that you think that stuff like this is important.

 

and to the people that are harshly bashing the author. Shame on you. Welcome to America. Free speech and capitalism are what makes us so great. So, while I may not agree with your opinion you are welcome to have it. As, i am assuming that this is an opinion piece. It's valid and I understand your concerns. But I think that at the end of the day. It's just a wall. If you wanna get hammered go to the Red Lion or Cha Cha like the rest of us bloated egotistical hipsters.

 

and, Ill see you there!

Another Son of Silverlake
Another Son of Silverlake

Does anyone else remember the Blue Nun across the street from this seemingly controversial new Wall? They had a great U-shaped counter and the best burgers this side of Jay's.

Also, do ya'll know why it's called the Sunset Junction? The name is left over from when L.A. had trollies, or Street cars, and they would meet there and turn around and stuff. At least that's how my mom remembers it.

Anna
Anna

This is hilarious.  Here is an article about someone who is pissed off that a conciencious business owner is trying not to have the drinking at his restaurant effect the climate of the neighborhood, or he just wants a little privacy, either way, you are actually arguing for more drinking on the street.  Down the street, neighbors are complaining that there is yet another potentially alcohol serving entity (Westerly Coffee) being brought into the neighborhood that is, if you ask them, going to drag our little neck of the wood into the doldrums of being a nightlife hot spot.  (horror) Make up your mind, Silver Lake.  And let's be real for a minute.  When I moved here eight years ago, I hit the deck in my living room more than once due to gunshots being fired in the neighborhood.  Once, I walked out onto my porch to find eight squad cars baracading the street with thirty-plus cops, guns raised, ready to fire up the steps of my house because they thought there was a murderer hiding in our shrubbery.  A few pukey drunk hipsters, we can handle.  A wall covered in Bougainvillea, we can handle that, too.

Will Wright
Will Wright

BOYCOTT CAFE STELLA until they remove this ugly urban impediment.  We need less walls and more open space!!

DirtyLuxe
DirtyLuxe

A rebuttal:

1) The wall isn't finished yet.  Nothing looks good at the cinder block and stucco stage.  To opine about this now is sort of idiotic.2) You're accusing the guy (via his terrible wall) of ruining the aesthetic of an area HE CREATED.  I'm not saying that since he created it he has the right to do anything he wants, but I'm saying seeing as he created one of the most beautiful and communally perfect areas in the whole city, and personally curated it with kinda the most ideal tenants a neighborhood could hope for (coffee, wine bar, cheese store, flower shop) maybe we could cut him some f-ing slack and let him do his work and ASSUME (because why not?) that the end product will be as lovely as everything else he's done.

PS: I'm not Gareth Kanter in disguise.  Just an Intelligentsia regular with a little orange dog who appreciates good design and common sense.

Boycott Cafe Stella
Boycott Cafe Stella

Ummmm... Seriously?Gareth, bought the property, booted out the longtime tenants such as the mexican market, pet supply store and other businesses, threw a coat of paint on the place, jacked up the rents, moved in new tenants who now are paying considerably more rent (2-3 times)... and now he is your hero? The guy is in it for the $ plain and simple. He doesn't care about what the neighborhood has to say... he has his eye on the dollar.And as far as you good design comment... please tell me what he has done that is lovely in the past? I can tell you what he is doing currently shows me that he has zero design sense.

DirtyLuxe
DirtyLuxe

Dude, there's no way to refute your argument: if you feel there should more Mexican market and less Intelligentsia and Cheese store and Wine Bar, there's no way to argue that.  You have the right to live in that neighborhood.

klm
klm

Clicked into this story under "Most Pop Stories". I finished reading the article along with frayed and skirmish comments, and then near the last comment (something about pseudonyms) I totally lost my train of thought and forgot what this article was about?  No, I'm not high.  (but this story is)

you_decide
you_decide

Hi Alissa, Please don't take the negative comments too seriously. I have it on good authority that they were written by Gareth Kantner using a number of different pseudonyms. Although Gareth might not share your feelings, there is a neighborhood that sure does. Keep up the good work! 

come on now
come on now

i prefer to break down walls than build them but each to his own.

Guest
Guest

You, Ms. are an idiot.

Augerric
Augerric

I don't understand why people seem to think this article is undeserving of publishing.  Issues of urban planning are extremely relevant.  If you want to revitalize Silver Lake, if you want to do something about "transients" and pot holes, than people need to have a reason to walk the streets at night and patronize businesses.  If you instead construct a wall around your little enclave, that's never going to happen.  This article isn't just about one little wall, its about things that are happening all across Los Angeles, because people are too afraid to join into a real community.  Get up off Walker's back and try to hear what it is she's actually saying.

Ciaociao
Ciaociao

I'm sorry Alissa Walker, I've been meaning to stop following on Twitter and I'm really going to do it after I'm done posting this. You write about the most insignificant (hipster) matter.

svensls
svensls

If rich white losers need their privacy so much, they should move to the west side.  

toddomatica
toddomatica

I will make this my new favorite bar just because it pisses off the author so much. You really need some perspective on what real neighborhood problems are.

Socalcruiser
Socalcruiser

That is not the THE SUNSET JUNCTION  the Junction actually happens in the building accross the street its where SUNSET and SANTA MONICA meet. Kanter is a smart businessman, all business darling I know he was my landlord. If you're going to boycott this restaurant let me tell you it should not be because of the wall, the way that people were kicked out of there was less than kosher, I know this first hand. Well this man sure knows how to make a dollar it amazes me that people will go save Africa but the same people will wont save their own community. Lame.

you_decide
you_decide

This wall happens to be a huge issue for people that live in the neighborhood. If you don't care about the wall, you obviously don't live in the neighborhood. If there was an article about a wall in Venice and I didn't live there, I wouldn't care either. People that live in the area hate the wall with a passion. Hate, hate, hate!!!!! Who cares about the wall? Thousands!

yeesh, really?
yeesh, really?

As soon as some hipster has his picture taken for his CD cover there and then OD's after gaining success you'll all be scrambling to protect the wall. And on another note, how tight are your panties? Who is so wound up over something that is not on their property that they "hate hate hate!!!" it? Tantrum much? 

you_decide
you_decide

Gareth, How many different names are you going to post under? 

Trudy
Trudy

This is very telling, because in order to build such a wall to "please" customers, it shows that the area is fairly dangerous.  It seems that the owner made a conscious choice to protect his patrons.

daisytagger
daisytagger

I agree with the owner and respect his right to choose. #1. It is his business, if you don't like it, don't go there. #2. Over a nice meal, I'd LIKE the option to escape the sidewalk, and I will think of Cafe Stella for that experience and I will THANK Cafe Stella for supplying a nice respite from the street. #3. If I want to sit on the sidewalk and watch traffic go by, I have about a billion other joints to choose from. #4. Congrats to the owner for making thoughtful decisions about his space, and gallantly tolerating "neighborhood feedback" from a self-righteous and MEDDLING segment of the population that doesn't necessarily represent the majority. (I can be just as self-centered, but assuming all other humans have to do things MY WAY is where I draw the line.) #5. Cities and civilizations are a work-in-process, not static! Personally, I mourn the missing orange groves of East Hollywood. 

missymolecule
missymolecule

OMG are you serious! I agree with everyone except newbie,You have got to be kidding me with this awful bias article. If it was in newsprint I would literally wipe my ass with this seemingly extravagant use of the English language just to reiterate what a pile of rubbish this article conveys. If Silverlake is a dead scene well then Halleluiah! I speak as a 40 year old native and have been witness to the gentrification of the Beautiful City of Angels. I watched as cookie cutter condos and over priced "loft -like" complexes have swallowed the integrity, charm, and essence of our diverse city. Silverlake made it's deal with the devil when they decided to run out the effervescent Latin community that was indigenous to this barrio for urban-outfitted hipster macchiato drinking, fixed bike ridding young professionals that can no longer afford their own little piece they've tried to claim, there is a reason no one wants to go there. . .it's moment is gone, the streets are filled with pot holes, we have more transient than ever,  the fact that a long term invested business owner like Kantner has implemented (correctly through the proper channels I might add) a ( and in my opinion a esthetically pleasing) solution to elevate his patron's experience and that you would dare write such a blasphemous article without offering any creative alternative ideas to what you're bitching about makes me laugh at you Ms. Walker. If you dare waste your readers minds why not critique the real issues, and focus on something positive perhaps that would blossom into a well needed review as to why Silverlake is failing on all accounts, property value, crime, just like you said  'WHY' no one wants to go there after dark. The last time I drove 20 minutes for a drinks at MALO I was taken back by the visual impact of a 60+ year old licentiously soiled man sleeping with nothing more than boxes for him bed and bits of cardboard for his blankets. I felt compelled to give him $20, mortified at the reality of what has come to pass, maneuvering through the ruined sidewalks I did vow to never come back.Silverlake is nothing short of a glorified overpriced ghetto. I suggest you use any talent you might have in activism, positive thought provocation, and community organization, not highlighting a business owner's right to modify his very own corner that he well out owns with such frivolous complaints. You are threatened by a wall ?!?!?!  Well go start a soup kitchen or better yet spend some contemplative pensive introspective as to what you are actually offering Los Angeles, and if this is the best you can come up with please do us all a favor and move the hell back where I'm sure you came from because no self respecting Angelino would dare write such convicted opinionated nonsensical matter! 

chairs_missing
chairs_missing

People absolutely want to go to Silver Lake after dark, to be seen, to drink al fresco, etc -- there's just a lack of reasonably priced bars, they're pretty spread out, and in stark contrast there's a dozen cheap and fun late-night spots in Echo Park within walking distance of each other, so all of these would be patrons have just gone down the street. If you're scared of Silver Lake after dark, which let's be honest is pretty laughable, then I can only imagine you'd piss your jeans walking by the Gold Room.

missymolecule
missymolecule

I'm not scared of  anything after dark . . .and in fact I frequent all sorts of undergrounds, pubs, bars, restaurants and social events well into the morning. I LOVE ECHO PARK, & I LOVE SILVERLAKE AS I LOVE LA. . .what I hate is the slanted piece above assuming that they're qualified to make such accusations when they clearly don't own a business and their opinion to me is quite insulting. I don't care what anyone has to say about my comment it was directed to Ms. Walker personally in reflection to her article. I have a right and a valid point to express my disappointment in her journalism. I think  based on the numerous comments that share my outrage I do not stand alone. Regardless, if want to vocalize to the masses (which I'm just a reader commenting) she actually had great contemplation and wrote such a one sided piece, we are all just calling her out on it. I ask her to open her eyes as to the significance of this article in relation to our city, I wonder what it's actual intended purpose was. I don't think it serves a higher action when there is no fault here with the land owner and that's my point, If someone were to dare tell me what to do with my store front after I implemented the proper permits & licensesprocedures that I own a right to. . I would find it just as ludicrous, at what point do you defend what you believe in or allow freelance journalist whom is not a native to Los Angeles speak on behalf of Angelino's and represent a false sense of authority. If she wants change again I ask her to use her talents twoards something more fruitful, and for those telling me to put a lid on it, well I'm sure they're her friends and supporters. I found this piece by way of all her colleagues celebrating it on facebook and applauding her writings so I checked it out and find it offensive. If my language is harsh, it's meant to be I was offended. I for one work for change, work for justice and until Ms. Walker comments herself it's all rhetoric nonsense.

chairs_missing
chairs_missing

Calm down, I was having a laugh. You seem overly upset about the popular opinion that this wall is an ugly addition to a historic building and it kinda ruins the open feeling of the junction for many residents. Of course the owner had the right to do it, but it still looks awful and speaks to a much larger problem in LA -- a general lack of open/civic spaces and lack of respect for the public realm. IMHO, anyone who thinks that all the community complaints are unfounded probably just doesn't have much love for this city!

Hotmonsters
Hotmonsters

Calm down. 

missymolecule
missymolecule

thanks hotmonsters- but I have only taken the time to respond to an article twice in my life, each with a visceral effect so strong it compelled me to drop everything I was doing to respond, so you can take your comment and shove it.  The upset this article triggers warrants me expressing myself, as I have every right to when a journalist such as Alissa steals two minutes of my precious time with such ridiculousness. sorry my above comment wasn't "feel good" enough for your taste.♥

you_decide
you_decide

@623832e6b739fba41bd38e0910767ba8:disqus ... You are so misguided. Put a lid on it.

Johnbigbute
Johnbigbute

Is there seriously nothing better to write about than this?

e.a.
e.a.

This is a satire right? Nobody is reeeeeally THAT bothered by a wall they don't fucking own are they?

newbie
newbie

I just recently moved to silverlake and have to walk by that wall everyday when I get home from work... I do not like it, it isn't aestethically pleasing and it makes me feel unwelcomed. But the owner, I guess, has his right to block the hipster, appropriating customer's in...

Glenishere
Glenishere

Bitch bitch bitch ! That's all this is ! People with nothing to bitch about , but a wall !?! Hahahaha!

lynn robnett
lynn robnett

I think it looks great. I assume everyone in Silverlake has an artistic opinion. I totally get what the owner is saying, that street gets a fair amount of traffic and I much prefer ambiance over the  buzz of a highly traveled avenue. People just don't like to embrace change. I think thats the problem here.

you_decide
you_decide

Thanks for chiming in Lynn. Always appreciate what someone that lives in Thousand Oaks has to say about a matter that does not affect her in the least.

Nini
Nini

I heart that wall!!

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