Flames consume Harbor Ridge mansion
Jennifer Kho
HARBOR RIDGE -- Priceless antiques were turned into piles of rubble
Thursday after an early morning fire gutted a multimillion-dollar home on
Ridgeline Drive.
“It was a gorgeous house,” said Jean Valderheide, mother of Jennifer
Cocco, one of the homeowners. “She had all these beautiful antiques,
paintings and handmade rugs from Belgium. Everything in there was custom
made. They had everything hand painted, even small murals in the
children’s rooms.”
Cocco has lived at 17 Ridgeline Drive with her husband, Dennis, and
their five children, for about a year. The home recently had been
remodeled, Valderheide said.
The family is on vacation in Africa.
“She promised her daughter she’d take her to Africa when she turned
13, and now they are on a safari,” Valderheide said. “Have you seen the
front entrance? It’s just a pile of debris. What a way to come home.”
The fire was reported at 6:28 a.m. when a house alarm went off at the
exclusive Harbor Ridge mansion. A light fixture on the front porch was
the first thing to catch fire and the blaze quickly spread to a gas line
in the attic, fire officials said.
“It was like a tornado,” said Dr. Mohammed Djahangiri, a witness to
the fire, speaking in German.
Djahangiri, a visitor from Aachen, Germany, is staying at a nearby
home.
“It was an enormous fire that rose straight out of the roof, and there
was dark smoke swirling all around it,” he said.
Police were first at the scene and notified the fire department.
Newport Police Officer Bill Beverly rescued the family dog, Coco.
The cause of the fire has not yet been determined.
“The investigators have to review the evidence, take photos and
analyze those. But at this point, I haven’t heard anything suspicious
about this fire,” said Donna Boston, emergency services coordinator for
the Newport Beach Fire and Marine Department. “When I got here, the
firefighters were streaming in sweat. The entryway ceiling collapsed, the
chandeliers fell and firefighters had to cut holes in the roof to vent
the fire. I heard reports that there was fire in the walls.”
Randy Scheerer, training division chief for the Newport Beach Fire and
Marine Department, said about 50 firefighters from different departments
were able to extinguish the fire in about an hour and a half.
One firefighter, Dennis Edwards, was treated for heat exhaustion,
fatigue and smoke inhalation at Hoag Hospital. He was later released.
A slate roof and lathe plaster walls made fighting the fire much more
difficult, said Scheerer, who was inside the house when the roof
collapsed.
Firefighters managed to salvage an antique Bible, some oil paintings
and other valuables, but the fire still caused millions of dollars in
damage, he said.
Boston said a specific dollar amount has not been determined, but the
house is estimated to be worth $6 million to $10 million. The antiques
inside would also escalate the home’s value.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.