First Responder Training Sites Thematic
exhibit on emergency architecture
Section of the Practical Combat Range at
the LAPD's Police Academy.
- CLUI photo
Emergency
State: First Responder and Law Enforcement Training Architecture
was on display at the CLUI Los Angeles Exhibition Hall this summer.
The exhibit, about police and emergency training structures, featured
images taken by CLUI photographers depicting ten representative
locations in Southern California. As with several recent exhibits
at the Center, this was a digitally created and displayed production,
with each of the sites described on a LCD or projection screen,
along with printed text panels, enhanced by video and ambient
sound.
Southern California’s training villages and
emergency props range from the typical to the state of the art,
as one would imagine they might in this place where movies are
made and theme parks originated. The training sites depicted in
this exhibit showed different characteristics of this unusual
form of architecture, a form which is increasing in its sophistication
and occurrence across the country, as this era of preparedness
progresses.
The SIT SIM village at the LAPD's Police Academy
is one of the earliest police training villages still in use in
Southern California.
- CLUI photo
The Police Academy
One of the earliest training towns still in use in the Los Angeles
area is the situation simulation village at the Los Angeles Police
Department Academy in Elysian Park. The Police Academy is the
LAPD’s historic classroom and firearms training area. It
was established in the late 1920’s as a private shooting
range for officers, and evolved into the LAPD’s main training
campus for over fifty years. Though it has long been staffed by
LAPD employees, the grounds and the buildings are still owned
by the private Los Angeles Police Revolver and Athletic Club.
Several years ago most recruit training moved to the new Ahmanson
Recruit Training Center in Westchester, and now the Academy is
used just for continuing police education, officer training, and
graduations.
The Academy grounds have a swimming pool, café, dining
club, rock garden, gymnasium, athletic field, classrooms, three
firing ranges, two electronic simulation training rooms, and two
outdoor tactical training areas. The situation simulation (“SIT
SIM”) village is on a hillside near the Rock Garden. It
was built in 1975, with help from Universal Studios volunteers.
It consists of a series of connected facades with individual doors.
The interior rooms are all connected by inside doorways, enabling
a continuous search scenario to be played out from one end of
the complex to the other. Props inside are minimal, and the building
is fairly simply constructed. Only “simunition” rounds
- high velocity mini-paintball bullets - are used in this facility.
Another tactical training area at the Police Academy, located
between two shooting ranges, is the Practical Combat Range at
the Tactical Training Center. This is a small “Hogan’s
Alley” – type facility (a name which comes from the
FBI’s training town in Virginia), with a number of corridors
that terminate at fixed and moving targets. Unlike SIT SIM village,
this is a live fire range, with a large bullet trap consisting
of piles of shredded tires, faced by a painted rubber mat. It
was improved and modified following the notorious 1999 North Hollywood
shootout involving heavily armed and armored bank robbers that
alarmed police with their firepower.
The Situation Simulator Village at the LAPD's
Ed Davis facility is the newest of the police training villages
in the region.
- CLUI photo by Steve Rowell
Ed Davis Training Facility
Another major LAPD site is the Edward M. Davis Emergency Vehicle
Operations Center & Tactics/Firearms Training Facility, located
next to the 405 Freeway in Granada Hills. It opened in 1998, the
newest and most elaborate LAPD training facility. Much of the
grounds are occupied by the 4.4 miles of vehicle training track
of the LAPD’s Emergency Vehicle Operations Course (EVOC),
used to teach driving techniques. One of only two large EVOCs
in Southern California, the Ed Davis facility has two skid pans,
a collision avoidance simulator, an inner city street grid, and
a high speed track with blind driveways, sharp turns, and elevation
changes. The 137,000 square foot main building has electronic
driving simulators, offices, classrooms, firing ranges, and a
maintenance garage for EVOC vehicles.
Located between the main building and the EVOC is the most postmodern
civilian tactical training village in Southern California. The
“Simulation-Simulator Village,” as it is also called,
has a gas station, bank, bar, convenience store, hotel, house,
and coffee shop. The village is used by recruits, by officers
for advanced training, and for the production of training videos.
Trainees use simunition rounds and are fully protected with face
shields and vests. The interior walls of the buildings are coated
with vinyl, making it easier to wipe off the multicolored simunition
splatter.
The five story metal drill tower at the Fire
Department's Hotchkin Training Center.
- CLUI photo
Hotchkin Training Center
The Los Angeles City Fire Department’s main training center
for “In-service” training (training for fire department
personnel, not new recruits) is in a grand Art Deco building near
Dodger Stadium that once housed a Naval and Marine Corps Reserve
Center. In 1995, the building was vacated by the military, and
transferred to the Fire Department. It is named the Frank Hotchkin
Memorial Training Center, after a firefighter who died while fighting
a fire there in 1980, after falling through a fire-weakened roof.
The roof training prop at the Fire Department's
Hotchkin Training Center.
- CLUI photo
Among the props in the training areas outside the
building is what may be the largest rooftop training prop in Southern
California. It is a structural skeleton of a building, with a large
flat roof area, and a tall pitched roof area. Firefighters practice
shoring and cutting through roofing and flooring material, something
often done in fighting structural fires in order to vent gases and
smoke, and to prevent potential flashovers. Also on site is a five
story metal drill tower, which was recently ordered from a company
that premanufactures them and then assembles them on site. This
drill tower has “hot house” capability, meaning that
portions of it can ignite with propane in order to create more realistic
training conditions.
Part of the LA Sheriff's shopping plaza, office,
and residential prop buildings in the Laser Village, still in use,
though officially condemned by the building department.
- CLUI photo
Los Angeles County Laser Village
The Los Angeles County Sheriff Department is the largest Sheriff’s
department in the world, with over 14,000 employees (8,500 sworn,
5,800 civilian). One of the major locations for the Sheriff’s
Department is at City Terrace, a former garbage mound east of downtown
Los Angeles, later developed into a county complex. In addition
to shooting ranges, fire training facilities, correctional facilities,
and emergency command centers, the County operates their only active
training simulation village, which is still referred to as “Laser
Village,” though the laser-based training weapons were replaced
with simunition-firing weapons several years ago.
The village consists of a shopping plaza-type structure, with a
second floor and balcony, and an adjacent home and garage. The main
building was constructed in the 1980’s for this purpose, and
rests on the asphalt without any foundation. Though it is still
in use, it was recently officially condemned by county building
inspectors for being structurally unsound. The building has a simulated
bar, liquor store, escrow company office, check cashing store, hotel,
drive up ATM, and women’s medical clinic.
Officer-down dummy on the floor, littered with
simunition rounds, in the ”hotel” building at Laser
Village.
- CLUI photo
Car and bus accident scenario props are among
the many features of L.A. County's Del Valle Training Center, near
Castaic.
- CLUI photo
Del Valle Training Center
The Fire Department of Los Angeles County has five training sites:
the department headquarters and command center on Eastern Avenue,
known as “the Hill” (next to the Sheriff’s complex);
an east county training center in Pomona, used for recruit training;
a north county training site in Lancaster, with the county’s
only active live fire tower; a classroom site in La Quinta; and
the Del Valle Training Center, near Castaic, the largest and most
diversified fire training prop site in the LA region.
Del Valle is located on a hill top and uses 160 acres of land
that the county bought from Unocal in 1984. Much of the focus
of Del Valle is technical rescue training. There are industrial
props (including a portion of an oil refinery), vehicle accident
props (including propane-powered bus collisions), construction
site accident props, confined space rescue props, and other urban
search and rescue facilities. There is also a hazmat training
area with railcars and a chemical storage building, and a fire
extinguisher training area.
Downtown at the Orange County Sheriff's Tactical
Training Center.
- CLUI photo
Orange County Tactical Training Center
The Sheriff’s Department of Orange County operates the Tactical
Training Center, in the City of Orange, one of the most realistic
simulated police training villages in the state, and trains thousands
of officers, agents, and private security company employees from
the western United States. Like the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s
tactical village at City Terrace, Orange County’s Tactical
Training Center was built as a “laser village” in
the 1980’s, when practice weapons emitted a laser light,
and “victims” wore vests that electronically detected
the approximate strike of the beam. Now small dye-filled simunitions
are used.
The village has eight buildings: three residences, a convenience
store, a bank, a bar, a fast food restaurant, and a service station.
Though the buildings are smaller in area than their real counterparts,
realism is heightened by the use of actual commercial signs and
props. In scenarios involving building searches, ambush survival,
bomb squad training, bank robberies, hostage situations, and sniper
confrontations, live actors play roles such as store clerks and
customers. The five simulated businesses are in fact sponsored
by the companies themselves, which support their maintenance through
donations to police community foundations.
The training tower at North Net.
- CLUI photo
North Net Fire Training Center
The Orange County Fire Authority (OCFA) has nearly finished its
new Regional Fire Operations and Training Center in Irvine, a
16.5-acre classroom and training prop facility that will be the
largest fire training site in the County. After it opens, training
will continue at most of the other regional fire training sites,
like the North Net Fire Training Center in Anaheim. North Net
is operated by a consortium of northern Orange County cities,
and is used by fire departments from Southern California, and
from out of state as well. North Net, built in 1978, is the most
elaborate fire training center in Orange County, until the Regional
Fire Operations and Training Center in Irvine goes online later
this year.
The main feature of North Net is a five story concrete training
tower with propane-fueled fire capability, also used for ladder
and rope rescue training. The tower is surrounded by basic fire
training props such as door breach props, roof ventilation props,
and wood for shore construction training. South of the tower is
an area for concrete cutting and heavy object lifting and moving
training, and some tunnels and tubes for confined space rescue
training. Junked cars are regularly delivered to the site to be
used for cutting and for victim extraction training.
A leaky tank farm prop area is part of the increasingly
sophisticated Ventura County Fire Training.
- CLUI photo
Ventura County Fire Training Center
Next to Los Angeles County in the northwest is the increasingly
urbanized Ventura County, which has an elaborate regional training
center on the edge of Camarillo Airport, formerly a Cold War era
coastal defense Air Force Base. The site, mostly operated by the
Ventura County Fire Department, has several significant structures
for rescue training, fire-fighting training, and hazardous material
response training. These facilities include several climbing and
rappelling props, including a five story tower (for urban search
and rescue); an elaborate confined space rescue tunnel network;
two simulated roof structures; and an electrical transmission system
prop.
The hazardous material training area is especially advanced, and
is used for training by fire departments and law enforcement agencies
from within and from outside Ventura County. There are several hazardous
tanker and rail car accident and spill props; an industrial tank
farm leak prop area; and a simulated methamphetamine lab, built
inside a shipping container, and situated in a miniature orange
grove.
Simulated rail crossing at the San Bernardino
County's Emergency Vehicle Operations Center.
- CLUI photo
San Bernardino County EVOC
The Sheriff’s Department of San Bernardino County, east
of Los Angeles County, operates what may be the largest dedicated
Emergency Vehicle Operations Center (EVOC) in the nation, a 78
acre site which opened in 1991. In California, the only EVOC approaching
it in size and diversity is the 43 acre California Highway Patrol
EVOC at their training site outside Sacramento. Unlike the CHP
and the EVOC at the LAPD’s Ed Davis Center, the San Bernardino
County EVOC is a single purpose facility, not part of a larger
training site. It sits in a dusty plain, next to a wash and an
off-highway vehicle recreation area, south of Glen Helen. Police
departments from all over the country send their training officers
here for instruction.
This EVOC has a mile long high speed track, a large skid pan
made of polished concrete that, when watered, becomes as slick
as ice. A large asphalt lot in the middle of the track is primarily
used as a motorcycle obstacle course. It also has a residential
street grid with numerous intersections, a few 4 wheel drive obstacle
courses, and a simulated rail crossing. Overseeing it all is an
observation tower atop the administration and classroom building.
The EVOC has a fleet of several dozen cars, including some that
have been especially modified to practice the PIT maneuver, a
police tactic for nudging cars into a skid.
One of the rooms in the meth lab scenario building
on the grounds of the CSTI. Interior decorations were done by prisoners
from the California Men's Coolony across the highway.
- CLUI photo
CSTI
In addition to city and county agencies, the state operates a
number of training sites for emergency personnel and police. The
Office of Emergency Services of the State of California operates
a multifaceted training site called the California Specialized
Training Institute (CSTI). It exists to train law enforcement,
emergency management, and other first responders in emergency
procedures and tactics, including responses to earthquakes, terrorism,
and hazmat spills. It is located on the grounds of Camp San Luis
Obispo, a large National Guard training base in the mid coast
of California. CSTI has several training areas with different
functions, and has the only “mock emergency operations center”
in the state, where disaster scenarios are played out in a town
called Santa Luisa Del Mar, a fictional disaster town modeled
after Santa Barbara, but with the addition of a harbor.
A portion of Santa Luisa Del Mar has been assembled in three
dimensions for police scenario training using simunitions, out
of buildings relocated from other parts of the base. Other training
areas at CSTI include a large and scattered hazmat training yard,
with prop rail cars brought in from actual derailment sites. The
Criminal Justice Program at CSTI has developed one of the open
shooting ranges on base with some structural props, used for live
fire weapons training. The Department of Toxics and Substance
Patrol has created what is probably the most elaborate mock clandestine
drug lab in the state. Also referred to as a “clan lab”
or “meth lab,” prisoners from the state penitentiary
across the highway were brought in to decorate it.
An abandoned school in Huntington Beach (at
16940 B Street) was recently used for a training program developed
for law enforcement by the JS Training Institute, involving "bus
interdiction, command post operations, ground tactics course, knife
defense, patrol defensive tactics, school shooting first responder,
SWAT defense tactics, terrorism preparedness, and WMD force protection."
- CLUI photo
Private and Federal Training Sites
Private companies also provide training for public law enforcement
officers, as well as for private security, and even for interested
members of the public. These companies are sometimes hired to
run programs at existing police training sites, or to run training
programs for police at rented classroom spaces, or at public shooting
ranges, such as Burro Canyon Shooting Park in Azusa, where high
risk entry training, warrant serving, and close quarter battle
training classes are held. Full scale realistic scenario training
by private companies can also take place at unused or soon to
be demolished buildings, wherever they may be. Though not in California,
Thunder Ranch, with locations in Texas and Oregon, may have the
most sophisticated private weapons and tactics training sites
in the country. Private companies and educational institutions
also run fire and hazmat training sites, such as the Fire Science
Academy in Carlin, Nevada, and at many larger chemical plants,
like Chevron’s Live Fire Training Center at its refinery
in El Segundo, next to LAX.
Southern California’s history of creating superlative
simulated environments is poetically emphasized by the fact that
when the first SWAT team in the USA was established (in Los Angeles
by a young LAPD inspector named Daryl Gates, in response to the
1965 Watts riots) their first training site was at the back lot
of Universal Studios. These days SWAT trains at a number of places,
including an abandoned military housing area near San Pedro. SWAT
also uses some of the elaborate mock towns at the Marine Corps’
Camp Pendleton, which are among the most sophisticated in the
country. These defense department training towns, sometimes called
“MOUT” facilities (Military Operations in Urban Terrain)
usually consist of a large, “European-style” row building
or even several city blocks of buildings that evoke a generic
international war torn city. Though built by and for military
training, sometimes civilian law enforcement agencies, especially
those that employ military tactics like SWAT, are permitted to
use them. A new MOUT facility to be built for the SEALs on the
Navy’s San Clemente Island, off the coast of California,
will be based on “European and Third World urban patterns,”
and will include features like an embassy, international hotel,
and a soccer field.
Of course, the DoD isn’t the only federal agency operating
mock towns for training purposes. The FBI’s mock town in
Quantico, Virginia, perhaps the original Hogan’s Alley,
is a nearly complete North American small town, with three storey
brick houses, a bank (the “Bank of Hogan” called the
“most robbed bank in America”), the “Biograph”
movie theater, Honest Jim’s Used Cars (“We Stand Behind
Our Cars,” says the sign), a courthouse, and a post office.
And the Federal Law enforcement Training Center in Glynco, Georgia,
has a 34-building “practical exercise complex,” used
by federal agencies of all kinds.
These state and federal training facilities will be the subject
of future exhibits at the CLUI, as we continue to examine the
expanding landscape of preparedness. By doing so, we learn more
about how modeling our communities in this manner is an incidental,
complex, and compelling expression of an institutional interpretation
of public and architectural space.