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Volkswagen van survives deadly Los Angeles Palisades Fire in Malibu

Preston Martin's retro blue Volkswagen van, which he slept in for a year during college, was parked in Malibu just before the Palisades fire reduced homes and cars to rubble and charred metal, so it was scrapped. I thought it had become.

As such, surfboard manufacturers were stunned to learn that the vehicle had survived.

Not only that, a photo of the vibrant bus taken by an Associated Press photographer was widely spread on TV and online, giving viewers a certain amount of joy.

A Volkswagen van sits on the road near a burned out home in Malibu after the Palisades fire on January 9, 2025. AP

“There's magic in that van,” Martin, 24, told The Associated Press in an interview Tuesday. “I don't understand why this happened. I should have toasted it, but this is it.”

The area remains closed to the public, and neither Martin nor his friend and business partner Megan Kristol Weinraub, to whom Martin sold the van last summer, have been able to inspect the vehicle. Martin said other photos of the van appear to show soot on the windows.

Martin bought a 1977 Volkswagen Type 2 on a whim during his junior year studying mechanical engineering at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

His mother, Tracy Martin, who lives in Irvine, yelled at him for running out of money, but Martin told her she could save money on rent by fixing up the room and living there through her senior year of college. I made it.

She fell in love with the bus and sewed curtains for the windows.

Preston Martin poses for a photo while sitting in a van on August 21, 2022. AP
Megan Kristol Weinraub poses in front of her van with her dog Bodhi on September 30, 2024. AP

Last summer, he sold the van to Weinraub, 29, who designs surfboards and skateboards under the Vibrant Boards brand. Martin manufactures carbon fiber surfboards under Starlight.

On January 5th, the friends went surfing in a van. Weinraub calls the van Azul, which means “blue” in Spanish.

Martin then parked his car on a flat spot up the hill from his apartment near the Getty Villa, as he was still learning to drive a manual transmission.

Two days later, the Palisades fire broke out, and Weinraub fled with his dog Bodhi and dog food in his car. She was sad about Azul, but it was nothing compared to the people who lost their homes and loved ones.

On Thursday, a neighbor sent her a photo. There was still a blue and white bus in the background, completely undamaged.

“I was surprised,” she said. “I was in the bathroom and I screamed.”

She called Martin. Martin was also surprised. he called his mother. Mother was overjoyed. “I've never cried for a car,” Tracy Martin texted her son.

They were even more surprised when the Associated Press photo was aired on TV and posted online.

“I made news,” Martin said on Instagram Reels, and Weinraub reached out to the photographer.

The Palisades Fire is visible on a mountainside from the Pacific Coast Highway near Malibu on January 7, 2025. zumapress.com
Ruins of a beach house destroyed by fire on January 14, 2025 in Malibu. AFP (via Getty Images)

Weinraub, whose home survived, doesn't know when he will be allowed to return to his apartment or Azure. They are thrilled that Van's survival touched so many people.

“It's pretty cool that this has become a beacon of hope,” Martin said. “Everything around it was burned down and just destroyed. And this bright blue shiny van is sitting there.”

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