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alfred eichler watercolor Nelles gymnasium.jpg
The Whittier Conservancy

the built environment is a treasure of collective memory

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The Whittier Conservancy Nelles Alternative Concept

Click here to read about our alternative concept for Nelles.


The Largest Historic Preservation Organization in the Country,  The Los Angeles Conservancy, Supports the Conservancy's Nelles Position

“In December 2014, the Conservancy submitted comments, in partnership with The Whittier Conservancy, on the Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) for the Lincoln Specific Plan, which seeks to demolish fifty of the fifty-two buildings on the Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility Campus. We strongly believe that the DEIR suffers from numerous deficiencies and that a true, bona fide preservation alternative needs to be evaluated where a majority of the historic resources can be preserved, rehabilitated, and successfully adaptively reused as part of the Lincoln Specific Plan.”
— The LA Conservancy

Click here to read the LA Conservancy's excellent Overview, Background & Position on the proposed development. 

The Chapels Building at Nelles

The former Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility, founded in 1891

Where we stand on the current plan for Nelles, as proposed by Brookfield Residential

The project, which proposes 750 apartments, condos and homes and 200,000 square feet of typical retail, will have significant adverse impacts to traffic and air quality in Whittier while it needlessly destroys a majority of the irreplaceable historic resources on an official California State Historic Landmark. 

The 74-acre Nelles property offers a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to enhance the city, but the proposed development provides no public open space, no affordable housing, no playing fields for youth, no continuum of care facility for seniors, no venue for the arts, no unique dining, entertainment and retail component, in short, nothing that this community really needs. 

Its touted tax benefits are no greater than any development might offer, and net revenue to the city would amount to no more than four tenths of one percent of the city’s annual budget, even if the developer’s pie-in-the-sky promises are realized. Sales generated by their neighborhood-serving retail will simply cannibalize sales from similar retail nearby, while the jobs it predicts will be low-paying retail and food service positions with no benefits. This project, as currently configured, makes Whittier bigger without making it better. 

If you agree with us, We ask you to send a message to the state and the developer that Whittier will not settle for an ordinary cookie-cutter plan that does not meet our needs or respect our history. 

Challenge this developer to go back to the drawing board and provide our community with a 21st Century project where residents can live, work, shop and play in a more unique, sustainable, pedestrian-friendly, inter-generational, transit-oriented neighborhood with a strong sense of place, or ask them to step aside in favor a developer that will.
*To sign the petition, click link on sidebar!

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The Whittier Conservancy

Whittier, Ca was founded as a Quaker colony in 1887 and has wonderful historic resources. The Whittier Conservancy is a non-profit organization committed to preserving and enhancing Whittier's unique character and quality of life.

Copyright, The Whittier Conservancy, 2024