World

IN PHOTOS | Los Angeles-area landmarks before and after the wildfires

The wildfires ripping through Los Angeles areas have killed at least 10 people, devoured over 10,000 structures and triggered evacuation orders affecting 180,000 people. Here's a look at some of the landmarks before and after the wildfires.

At least 10 dead and over 10,000 structures devoured by wildfires that began Tuesday

Firefighters use a hose to battle the flames of a burning building on Sunset Boulevard in the Pacific Palisades neighbourhood of Los Angeles.
Firefighters battle the flames of a burning building on the famed Sunset Boulevard in the Pacific Palisades neighbourhood of Los Angeles, on Wednesday. (Daniel Cole/Reuters)

The California wildfires ripping through the Los Angeles area have killed at least 10 people, devoured over 10,000 structures and triggered evacuation orders affecting 180,000 people.

Here's a look at some of the landmarks before and after the wildfires, which include the two biggest ones, the Palisades Fire in the affluent Pacific Palisades neighbourhood in Los Angeles, and the Eaton Fire in the Altadena section of Pasadena, Calif.

The Eaton Fire, which started Tuesday evening, has grown to about 5,476 hectares, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire). And it has destroyed over 5,000 structures, such as homes, apartment buildings, businesses, outbuildings and vehicles.

Among the many structures was the Altadena Community Church, founded in 1940, and destroyed by the wildfire in downtown Altadena on Wednesday.

"To all the faith communities, including Pasadena Jewish Center and St. Mark's Episcopal across the street who also lost their buildings, we send our love and condolences and always our prayers," the church posted on its Facebook page on Wednesday.

Altadena Community Church is pictured in an undated photo.

(altadenaucc.org)

Fire explodes out of a window of the Altadena Community Church.

(Chris Pizzello/The Associated Press)

In downtown Altadena, Mendocino Street is pictured in a screenshot from Google Maps on July 2022.

Mendocino Street in Altadena, Calif., is pictured in a screenshot from Google Maps

(Google Maps)

The same street is photographed on Wednesday as people make their way across the intersection amid the wildfire smoke and poor air quality.

People walk through wildfire smoke amid poor air quality from the Eaton Fire on January 8, 2025 in Altadena, Calif.

(Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Open for 26 years, the Bunny Museum, which said it's the world's only museum about everything bunny, burned down on Wednesday. "Saved only a few bunny items. Saved the cats and bunnies," the museum wrote in a post on its Facebook page, adding it was the last of the buildings around it to burn.

The Bunny Museum is pictured in Altadena, Calif.

(Bunny Museum/Facebook)

A firefighter walks past a charred bunny sculpture and debris at the destroyed Bunny Museum.

(Chris Pizzello/The Associated Press)

A motorist drives past a destroyed Bunny Museum in Altadena, Calif.

(Stephen Lam/San Francisco Chronicle/The Associated Press)

In these aerial views, satellite images show the before and after of houses burned by the Eaton Fire near Marathon Road in Altadena, on Wednesday.

A gif shows infrared satellite images show a residential area before and after the wildfire in the Los Angeles area of Altadena, Calif.

(Maxar Technologies/The Associated Press)

The Palisades Fire, which started Tuesday morning, has grown to around 7,991 hectares, according to Cal Fire. It has destroyed over 5,300 structures.

The Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church is among those destroyed structures.

The Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church is pictured before and after a wildfire destroyed the landmark.

(Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church/Facebook, Agustin Paullier/AFP)

These satellite stills show homes and businesses before and after the Palisades Fire, along Pacific Coast Highway and Tuna Canyon in Los Angeles on Oct. 20, 2024, and on Wednesday, respectively. 

Satellite images show homes and businesses before and after the Palisades Fire, along Pacific Coast Highway and Tuna Canyon, Oct. 20, 2024, in Los Angeles and on Jan. 8, 2025, respectively.

(Maxar Technologies/The Associated Press)

And this animation shows homes in a residential area of the Pacific Palisades before and after the fire, on Oct. 20, 2024, and Thursday, respectively.

In an aerial view, an animation gif shows homes in a residential area of the Pacific Palisades before and after the Palisades Fire

Maxar Technologies