SAFEGUARD AND IMPROVE THE ENVIRONMENT

Church Mural Project Makes Its Mark for Hollywood Beautification

A team of more than 60 volunteers turned a decrepit eyesore into a meaningful, 100-foot eyeful in a single day’s work.
Father and son team work in tandem.

The Hollywood Neighborhood Cleanup Team made their mark once again at the end of May with a mural project that further fulfills their promise to make Hollywood more beautiful as well as safe and clean.

The undertaking was organized by the cleanup team, a volunteer corps of the Church of Scientology Celebrity Centre International in Hollywood, which has been a primary driver of Hollywood cleanup and beautification projects for more than a decade.

The objective was to create, in a single day’s work, three interconnecting murals to cover the eyesore of a dilapidated chain-link fence behind the community building situated near the intersection of Fountain and Cole avenues in Hollywood. The site neighbors the Los Angeles Police Department Hollywood Station, L.A. Fire Department Station 27 and the L.A. City Council office in Hollywood.

“The murals remind us that even though police, fire, and city council teams all work in our own worlds, we are all working together to build a better community. This mural will remind us of that each day we come to work.”
—LAPD OFFICER

Artists with the team first sketched mural designs onto a 100-foot-long canvas. Volunteers dismantled the old, ragged fence cover at the site and removed debris, secured the canvas to the fence and proceeded to bring the three connecting murals to life—painting the entirety in a 3½-hour timeframe. “Amazingly fast and powerful work,” commented an LAPD officer.

The Church volunteers worked under the theme for the day of “Safeguard and Improve Your Environment,” from precept #12 of the nonreligious, common sense moral code, The Way to Happiness.

Sixty-four volunteers, ages 2 to 74, joined in the Hollywood Cleanup beautification project.

The project site lent itself to a message of gratitude for the public safety workers and first responders who look upon or pass by the fence each day. Thus, the bold “Thank you” incorporated into the mural.

In all, 64 volunteers, from age 2 to 74, joined in the Hollywood Neighborhood Cleanup beautification project. Among them were several who had seen notices on social media and joined in the endeavor—from a neighbor of the project site, to a mural artist from North Hollywood, and a Colombian native in Venice Beach who jumped at the chance to put art and volunteering to a worthwhile end.

Members of the Los Angeles Fire Department pose in front of one of the completed murals thanking the firefighters for their service to the community.

Concurrently, a corps of LAPD Junior Cadets ages 8 to 12 went to work right around the corner at the side of the community building, where they cleaned up and restored an existing mural, “Arts Bridging the Gap,” that had been defaced with graffiti.

“The murals remind us that even though police, fire, and city council teams all work in our own worlds, we are all working together to build a better community,” said an LAPD officer on the scene. “This mural will remind us of that each day we come to work.”

At the end of the day’s project, the volunteers were treated to wraps and desserts from Celebrity Centre’s Renaissance Restaurant along with Domino’s Pizza and refreshments. Project sponsors and supporters included Kettle Glazed Doughnuts and Dunkin’ Donuts.

People from all walks of life participated in the Hollywood Cleanup beautification project, recognizing the murals as an opportunity to put art and volunteering to a worthwhile end.