Tim Vordtriede had just left his last firm and opened his own architecture office above his garage. Five days later, the Eaton Fire took the garage, the office, and the house beneath it.
He'd been planning to renovate the place, a Janes cottage with the kind of small, particular footprint that drew people to Altadena in the first place. He already had a 3D model and architectural drawings. He'd been thinking about adding an ADU. Instead he found himself standing on a cleared lot where the model's real-world counterpart no longer existed, doing what he knows how to do. He went into work mode.
Vordtriede had designed homes for clients recovering from wildfires in Malibu. He understood the sequence, the permits, the materials. So when his own house burned, the response was to become his own client. To open the software and start drawing. There's a version of grief that looks like productivity, and for an architect standing on the foundation of the house he just lost, the line between processing what happened and designing what comes next may not exist at all.
What he didn't expect was what he found scrolling through local Reddit pages, WhatsApp groups, and Instagram posts. The prices other survivors were being quoted were, as he told Dwell, surprisingly high. Before the fire, building in Altadena cost roughly $400 a square foot. By summer 2025, some contractors were quoting $550, $650, $750.
"There's a lot of bad information out there," he told Marketplace. "I need to find a way to inform people, and not by just screaming into the void."
Within weeks, Vordtriede co-founded the Altadena Collective with architects Chris Corbett and Chris Driscoll. The network offers discounted design services and permitting guidance to neighbors who can't afford the new arithmetic. "We all have this thing," Vordtriede said of the community. "We all chose a tiny footprint home that was very cute and cozy to live in."
The fire destroyed structures and, with them, a particular way of living that Altadena's residents had selected, deliberately, over decades.
Now Vordtriede walks neighbors through a regulatory landscape that confuses even professionals. California's wildfire building code mandates Class-A roofing, ember-resistant vents, tempered glass, non-combustible siding. But the state fire hazard maps include only a fraction of the area the Eaton Fire actually burned, so more than 3,500 destroyed homes can legally be rebuilt without meeting the tougher code. Vordtriede sees this firsthand when he pulls up a neighbor's parcel and finds it outside the designated zone. The state also suspended codes that would have taken effect January 1, 2026, allowing rebuilders to use previously approved plans. Pragmatic flexibility, or a gap that will matter in the next fire. It depends on which direction you're facing.
Planning approvals that once took three months now come through in three days, Vordtriede told CalMatters. The county has "done a remarkable job at making things as efficient and streamlined as a bureaucratic entity can." But of 6,116 applications, only 28 buildings have reached completion. Insurance payouts cover 50 to 60 percent of actual rebuild costs, leaving gaps of $200,000 to $400,000 per home. Federal tariffs on lumber are pushing costs higher. Immigration enforcement is thinning the construction labor pool.
Average estimated replacement cost: $574,000. Post-fire construction quotes: up to $750 per square foot. Insurance covers 50–60%. The distance between what families are owed and what rebuilding costs is a space no institution has closed.
Vordtriede's advice to underinsured neighbors is blunt:
"Don't sell. Instead, bring us a certified copy of your full insurance policy. If your insurance company doesn't give it to you, keep asking for it. Regardless of how much they're giving you, there may be some more juice to squeeze."
What he's building from his garage-less lot is skilled and necessary work. It's also work that exists because the distance between what insurance pays and what rebuilding costs has become a space that only neighbors can fill. The county streamlined permits. The state suspended codes. The gap where families actually live stayed open.
Altadena's cottages were small by design. The people who chose them chose a scale of living. Recommitting to that scale, in a landscape that burned and a market that inflated, requires either wealth or the kind of stubborn collective effort Vordtriede is assembling from a firm he founded five days before he lost everything. He knows the hillside can burn again. He's drawing the house anyway. Call it the specific form of love that rebuilding requires: you choose the place that hurt you because it was yours, and because the people beside you chose it too.

