Huscroft House future on the line
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Without a strong private interest in the restoration of
the historic Huscroft House, the city will have to choose between two
problematic proposals or demolition.
At the end of a two-month open bidding process for the historic
Huscroft House, the city received only two formal bids.
One came from Jane Altman-Dwan, who has expressed interest in the old
Craftsman-style house since the city first announced it was up for sale,
and another came from Costa Mesa resident Michael Steiner.
Steiner said his letter to the city was not a bid but a communication
explaining his interest in saving the house but an inability to submit a
proposal because of the city’s time limits. According to the city’s
guidelines, the buyer would have to move the Huscroft House from its
current spot on Arlington Avenue within 90 days.
“I have the financial capability to move and restore the house, or
even purchase another lot onto which to move it, but your nearly
impossible time limit for moving the house will not allow me to do so,”
Steiner’s letter stated.
Altman-Dwan proposed to pay for the renovation of the house and open
it to the public in exchange for permission to add a ballroom, designed
to host a variety of social engagements. She said she wants to make the
house a community building open to all, especially children.
However, a staff report from the Public Services Department states
that Altman-Dwan’s proposal is inconsistent with the Fairview Park Master
Plan and could even require another environmental report. Her bid also
runs into legal problems by suggesting private ownership of a building on
public land, the report reads.
Originally built in Santa Ana, the 1915 Craftsman-style house was
moved to Costa Mesa in the 1950s and occupied by the Huscroft family. In
1998, the city accepted the donation of the house with the intent of
restoring it, moving it to Fairview Park and using it as a museum.
In July, the council voted to sell the house or demolish it if a buyer
could not be found. At that time, Newport Beach resident Chad Ware, owner
of Pacific Sales & Leasing in Costa Mesa, expressed interest. Ware, who
bought and is restoring the Old Pink House -- which is now white -- did
not submit a formal proposal for the Huscroft House.
Ware said he backed out because of the drop in the market and because
he realized how costly and time consuming restoring an old house is.
“I’m at the finishing part of my house and it is so slow and so costly
that it doesn’t pencil,” Ware said.
If the council decided to accept more bids, he would consider
submitting a formal proposal, Ware said.
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