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Digging out in the Palisades Fire burn zone

Story and visuals by Barron Bixler

A version of this photo essay was originally published in High Country News to mark the one-year anniversary of the Palisades and Eaton Fires, which burned simultaneously in Los Angeles from January 7 to January 31, 2025.

Talking my way through the National Guard checkpoint at the intersection of Amalfi Drive and Sunset Boulevard felt like crossing the River Styx, into the underworld.

It was early March 2025. The last embers of the Palisades Fire had been out for a month. It was cold, gray and drizzling. A blue-green mist coiled around the chaparral foothills of the Santa Monica Mountains like tendrils of smoke. The air smelled of ozone and scorched chemicals. I had bronchitis and bad dreams.

Burn scars left on a cement wall in the interior of a house destroyed by the Palisades Fire
Lachman Lane, Pacific Palisades, July 2025

I’d spent the prior day driving around Altadena in a daze. My wife and I had pilgrimaged to see our old house on Grand Oaks Avenue. By some stroke of luck it survived the Eaton Fire, which burned simultaneously with the Palisades Fire, wreathing LA in flames for 24 days. But starting just a couple blocks north of our house and stretching for miles westward, it looked like an atom bomb had detonated. Most of Altadena was gone.

That first day I made it past the checkpoint into the Pacific Palisades, I met Brayan. I was wandering on foot, absorbing the sight of mansion after mansion transformed by fire into teetering, abstract sculptures. I was chilled, wheezing through the N95 mask I’d plucked from our dusty pandemic stash. When I stopped in front of the first property on the block to be cleared, the door of an excavator swung open and a spectral figure dressed in a white hazmat suit descended through the wreckage. He approached and, pulling aside a respirator, asked, “Was this your house?”

Portrait of Brayan, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Brayan, Villa View Drive, Pacific Palisades, March 2025
Brayan is a skilled digger operator, one of thousands of workers employed through contractors of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to clean up ash and debris left behind by the Palisades Fire, which erupted on January 7, 2025.

“It feels like a responsibility. We’re helping the city heal.”

– Brayan

I explained that the house wasn’t mine, and that I’d come simply to try to make sense of the devastation—to see it with my own eyes. Brayan told me that he lives in Wilmington, a close-knit, industrial community near the Port of Los Angeles. He and his wife have young twin boys. When I asked if he worried about the toll his work in the burn zone could take on his health, he replied, “No, it’s more the little things, you know?”

Melted squirtgun on a slab of flagstone
Whitfield Avenue, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

By the little things, he meant the psychic weight of seeing—and toiling amidst—the ruins of everything the residents of the Palisades had lost. And by extension, what we all are losing. Debris can be cleared. Houses can be rebuilt. Scars can heal over. But the lingering grief and anticipatory dread of climate disaster never really go away.

Garden statue of a woman overlooking the wreckage of the Palisades Fire
Paskenta Road, Pacific Palisades, March 2025

As I traversed the burn zone over the coming months, I met dozens of guys like Brayan—the workers charged with shoring up our broken world. As I heard their stories and tried to balance them against the impossible ambition of their labor, I was plagued by nagging questions: Amid ICE raids in their communities and brazen persecution of immigrants across the U.S., are we asking too much of these men in service of one of the city’s wealthiest neighborhoods? What scars will they carry with them out of this damned place, back into the bright shining blue world above?

Pacific Palisades, March 2025

“I saw the fire on TV and thought: ‘This is crazy.’ But I never expected that the whole town was gonna be gone. When I saw it for myself, I felt sick. Then I had to get to work.”

– Luis

Portrait of Luis, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Luis, Villa View Drive, Pacific Palisades, March 2025
Luis was one of the first demolition workers to arrive in the Palisades Fire burn zone in late February 2025, as part of the Army Corps of Engineers’ Phase-2 debris removal operation. The Corps contracted a complex patchwork of private companies to undertake demolition, cleanup and debris removal for 8,000 structures destroyed or damaged in the fire.
Portrait of Alex, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Alex, Villa View Drive, Pacific Palisades, March 2025
The Palisades Fire debris removal operation depended on thousands of workers like Alex shoveling toxic ash–by hand and using consumer-grade gardening tools–out of every crevice of every foundation of every building damaged by the fire. Excavators would then scrape up the piles and load them into haul trucks, which delivered the ash and debris to landfills and salvage yards in Calabasas, Corona, Granada Hills, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Oxnard, Simi Valley, Sun Valley and Sylmar.
The wreckage of a burned property in the Pacific Palisades
Goucher Street, Pacific Palisades, March 2025
The Palisades Fire transformed homes into what often looked like teetering, abstract sculptures. The destruction was so absolute for many properties, salvaging possessions—or even raw building materials—was nearly impossible.

Ernesto, Goucher Street, Pacific Palisades, March 2025
Early on in the Phase-2 debris removal operation, particularly at properties that proved difficult to access with heavy machinery, workers like Ernesto carried out ash and debris by hand using five-gallon buckets and wheel barrows, often navigating treacherous terrain on foot.

A skeleton statue amid the rubble of the Palisades Fire
Temescal Canyon Road, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
Portrait of Raul, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Raul, Villa Grove Drive, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
The remains of a burned house in the Pacific Palisades with a bird flying overhead
Chautauqua Boulevard, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
The Palisades Fire burned 37 square miles, destroyed or damaged 8,000 structures and killed 12 people. Immediate and longterm impacts on ecosystems in this sensitive urban-wildland interface remain unquantified. In the months following the fire, cleanup crews removed a million tons of toxic ash and debris, and other environmental remediation efforts are ongoing.

“The work is hard. But I know it's a big leap forward for our city.”

– Gustavo

Portrait of Gustavo, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Gustavo, Villa Grove Drive, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
Portrait of an unnamed Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Name Unknown, Toyopa Drive, Pacific Palisades, July 2025
A zinc metal roof warped and folded by the heat of the Palisades Fire
Villa Grove Drive, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

Berea Place, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

The demolition of a house in the Palisades Fire burn zone
Berea Place, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
One of the largest and most complex residential demolition sites in the Palisades Fire burn zone, this property on Berea Place–tucked into a steep lot in the first rise of the foothills of the Santa Monica Mountains–was once a $10 million, multi-level luxury home offering “exclusive tranquility and breathtaking ocean views.” The cleared lot is currently valued on Zillow at about $700,000.
Portrait of Angel, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Angel, Berea Place, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
Angel worked one of the most challenging and hazardous demolition sites in the Pacific Palisades. While these positions were well paid by construction and demolition standards, the work was physically grueling and carried both immediate and longterm risks to workers’ health. To accrue overtime pay, many opted to work for weeks at a time without taking a single day off.
Portrait of Angel, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Angel, Berea Place, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
A fire-damaged red garden sculpture, abstract
Lachman Lane, Pacific Palisades, July 2025

“It’s a hundred and twenty degrees in this suit. I can’t see. It’s hard to breathe. I’m sweating my ass off.”

– Angel

Rene, Berea Place, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

Lachman Lane, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

Lachman Lane, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

“They tell us we only have to wear PPE on the jobsite, but are you telling me that toxic dust cloud knows to stop at the yellow tape at the edge of the sidewalk?”

– Jordan

Street view of a house destroyed by the Palisades Fire with a marked vehicle in the driveway
Chautauqua Boulevard, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
A chimney still standing in the aftermath of the Palisades Fire
Chapala Drive, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
The Palisades Fire ignited in the Santa Monica Mountains above the Pacific Palisades when an arson fire, never fully extinguished by firefighters, rekindled. Fueled by strong seasonal Santa Ana winds, the fire burned so ferociously that it tore through four or five miles of residential neighborhoods and commercial buildings right down to Malibu beach.
Portrait of Miguel, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Miguel, Alma Real Drive, Pacific Palisades, May 2025
The vast majority of property owners in the Pacific Palisades opted in to the Army Corps’ free Phase-2 debris removal program. A few hundred opted out of the program and hired private contractors. Only a handful hired their own workers directly, often from informal hiring sites like Home Depot, to perform demolition work. Men like Miguel, who recently arrived in LA from Michoacan, worked the dangerous jobsites without mandated protection from the physical and environmental hazards of the burn zone.

“I’m from Michoacan. The owner hired me when I was at Home Depot looking for work, and I’m just out here saving whatever I can for them. Right now I’m breaking these bricks apart and stacking them over there. Maybe they can reuse them."

– Miguel

A hotel and pool destroyed in the Palisades Fire
West Sunset Boulevard, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

Chautauqua Boulevard, Pacific Palisades, July 2025

“These guys have been dealing with this for years, bro. They’re not criminals. They don’t have any probation or parole going on. These guys work, just dedicate to their family, working and providing.”

– Reynaldo

Portrait of Reynaldo, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Reynaldo, Toyopa Drive, Pacific Palisades, July 2025
Reynaldo, a jobsite foreman, halted work for the day when one of his crew had family members swept up in a now-infamous ICE raid at an agricultural operation in Camarillo, during which farmworker Jaime Alanis Garcia died and 200 other workers were detained.

Toyopa Drive, Pacific Palisades, July 2025

Portrait of an unnamed Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Name Unknown, Toyopa Drive, Pacific Palisades, July 2025
A zinc metal roof warped and folded by the heat of the Palisades Fire
Villa Grove Drive, Pacific Palisades, May 2025

“I hope the people appreciate what we’re doing. Maybe when we finish the job they can start to feel it’s looking like their city again.”

– Isidro

Portrait of Isidro, a Palisades Fire cleanup worker
Isidro, Lachman Lane, Pacific Palisades, July 2025
Demolition and cleanup crews often bounced from jobsite to jobsite, crisscrossing the Palisades Fire burn zone in a pattern that felt random, and even inequitable, to some residents. Between February and mid-May 2025, the Army Corps responded to 350 complaints from homeowners about the quality or thoroughness of cleanup work on their properties.
A chimney left standing in a home destroyed in the Palisades Fire
Glenhaven Drive, Pacific Palisades, July 2025
By July 2025, the tangled mass of wreckage that defined the landscape of the Pacific Palisades in March had mostly been cleared and hauled to landfills and salvage yards around the LA Basin. At a few properties, tidy piles of ash and debris remained, awaiting haul trucks to come and clear the way for sale or rebuilding.

Pacific Palisades, July 2025

Drone footage of the Palisades Fire cleanup, March-July 2025

Filmed + edited by Barron Bixler

Between March and July 2025, photographer Barron Bixler traversed the Palisades Fire burn zone in Los Angeles to document the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Phase 2 debris removal operation. Central to the project are photos of and conversations with the men—mostly Latino and from working-class communities on the south and east sides of LA—who carried out the dangerous work of clearing a million tons of debris and toxic ash, paving the way for residents to sell or rebuild. The project offers an urgent, intimate perspective on the human cost of fire recovery—against a backdrop of worsening climate disaster and political persecution of immigrant communities across the U.S. 

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