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Three days before Christmas 2006, as chef Matt Beville was sliding a tray of pastries into the oven at work, he had no idea events were unfolding at his 1924 Burbank home that would displace him for 18 months and lead to a $209,000 whole-house remodel.
The first sign of trouble came when a neighbor called to say that a roofing truck had backed over the fire hydrant in front of Beville's house and a geyser had sprung up. Beville, who is 42 and bought the house when he was 27, recalled saying: "That's cool. I wish I could see it."
A series of follow-up phone calls from the neighbor suggested -- with increasing intensity -- that Beville should come home. When told that water shooting from the sheared hydrant was falling on his house, he thought about the pastries in the oven, which were for a catering job, and asked if the neighbor could shove some towels up against the door sills.
But towels would be useless against what would happen next, which was witnessed by neighbors and later recounted by them to a local TV news station, which aired a report.
A sort of sink hole developed underneath the hydrant, causing it to tilt toward Beville's house and point nearly its full gusher onto the flat roof covering the rear of the structure. Falling inside parapet perimeter walls, which stood a few feet above the roof, the water collected into a pool that became heavier and heavier until, all at once, it crashed through, into the house, and forced its way out through doors and windows, taking out some walls.
Beville still remembers the final call from his neighbor: "The side of your house just blew out."
Continue reading "Rebuilding in Burbank after 'the Great Flood of '06'" »

