has spent the past 33 years swinging for the fencesâacquiring, optimizing, andâthrough the strategic alchemy of capital projectsâmorphing raw real estate ore into high-value assets.Â
Hackman Capitalâs Midas touch over three decades has yielded over $4 billion in properties across 41 states, 35-plus million square feet, 400+ buildingsâŠwell, you get the idea. Thereâs more to Hackman Capital than acquisition. Or as their dynamic website colorfully statesâBUY. RE-IMAGINE. TRANSFORM. CREATE. An early innovator of âletâs turn this neglected industrial shadowland into an award-winning instance of beautiful urban uplift,â Hackman Capitalâs reputation has long been that of a creative enterprise with an unerring sense of how best to unleash the restless potential in a property. But still…
In 2014 Hackman Capital Partners purchased The Culver Studios, storied 100 year-old birthplace of such film classics as King Kong, Gone with the Wind, and the original Star is Born (starring Janet Gaynor and a doomed Frederick March). Hackman is lavishly rehabbing the 17-acre icon, making it the 21st century digital dream factory that had long been its destiny. When Project Manager Larisa Eichacker arrived on set (so to speak) to begin her stewardship of the historically momentous redo of the much-beloved movie studio, the place was bustling.

Hollywood Hard Hat
âWhen I first got on the jobsite, it was still an operating studio. There were actors coming and going, golf carts zipping from the soundstages to the makeup trailers and wardrobe. Coming from a construction background, that was kind of aâyou knowâcrazy environment to walk into.â I can just imagine. Larisa is sitting opposite me with a bottle of water, an amused expression, and a relaxed posture that suggests imperturbability; seven syllables that say âI canât be rattled.â This quality surely had a run for its money.
The Culver Studiosâand its sister project The Culver Stepsâwould test Hackman Capitalâs powers of reinvention, not to mention Larisaâs resilience. It wasnât just the two adjacent projectsâ combined 835,850 sq. ft. There would be refurbishment and upgrading of iconic film stagesâwhere, for instance, Fay Wray had once offered full-throated screams from the confines of King Kongâs gigantic clenched paw. There would be fragileâand highly scrutinizedâhistoric preservation to manage, too. The topper? The Culver Steps would be Hackman Capitalâs first-ever foray into building anything from the ground up. They couldnât have started with a donut shop? In the event, when Hackman unveiled their âInnovation Plan,â it so wowed Amazon Studios they signed on as anchor tenant to both properties.
Larisaâs work was cut out for her, what with historic soundstages to repair and upgrade, and movie star bungalows to gently boost to the north end of the 17 acre property, where they would be exactingly refurbishedâall the elements one would expect to befall an aerospace engineer. You heard right.
Aerospace to Peyton Place
Hackman Capitalâs Project Manager Larisa Eichacker came to her position from the usual origins…outer space. âI got a degree in aerospace engineering, and I worked in that industry for a few years right out of college. I worked for a company in San Diego that designed and built aircraft engine components.â When Larisa left aerospace, she wasnât exactly aware she was doing soâas sometimes happens. She owes her first fork in the road to youthful swagger. âIt was the early ’90s. On the one hand, my mindset at that time was that it was easy to get a job.â Her companyâs military accounts rose and fell with the political climate. During one prolonged dry spell, the head of Larisaâs small group delivered a somber bit of news.
âHe needed to lay off 30% of the team,â Larisa says lightly. âThere were a handful of us that were in our 20s, newly out of college, who just volunteered and said, âYeah, take us.â I had coworkers that had families, kids in college, mortgages. I was 24, 25….â Larisaâs rash altruism led her to civil engineering software, then her own specialty contracting business…and a later CV that speaks to a young person sampling lifeâs crazily diverse portfolio of disconnected opportunities. Against the usual odds, kids were happily raised by a mom with a foot in a dozen professional camps. When Larisa found construction, it was through careful networking; her kidsâ careful networking.
âIt was a friend of ours, a Portland GC weâd known because our kids went to kindergarten together,â she summarizes with light laughter. (How many plan-obsessed grownups have stumbled through doors happily kicked open by their kidsâ friendships? Another storyâŠ) Larisa signed on with that Portland GC, and through the years gained project-driven construction experience. She eventually found herself a Project Manager with Hackman Capital Partners, and the rest is movie history.
Project managing the resuscitation of a legendary movie lotââthis may not have been a top-of-mind outcome when Larisa Eichacker bailed out of aerospace. Is she a movie buff? âI’m nowhere near as much a fan as some peopleââthose that can just throw out quotes and names and dates and things like that. But it’s definitely interesting to work here.â
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