Historic home’s fate remains uncertain
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Deirdre Newman
The tortuous saga of the Huscroft House has taken another twist as
the prospective owner has appealed its relocation.
The historic Craftsman-style house has been in limbo for more than
four years as city leaders wrestle with its fate. Late last year,
John Morehart came to the rescue when he expressed a desire to move
the home to his 12,000-square-foot property on the Westside.
Although the Planning Commission approved the move on June 9,
Morehart appealed the decision three days later because the
commission did not allow him to subdivide the property. He said
dividing the property is imperative since it’s the only way to ensure
the historic glory of the house -- which he will be investing his
time and money into to renovate -- will be appreciated.
“It’s the kind of thing someone has to take pride in, and it’s
been proven that renters don’t worry about details,” Morehart said.
“It has to be the kind of thing where someone will say, ‘Guess what
I’m doing this weekend? I’m painting the trim on the house.’”
Planning Commission Chair Bruce Garlich said the appeal did not
surprise him. He said Morehart’s arguments for subdivision rang as
hollow as the rusty pipes in the Huscroft House.
“I think he was asking to be allowed to do 10 things that were not
allowed and there was not a lot of justification for doing most of
those; it wasn’t justified by most of the land-use arguments,”
Garlich said. “He needed us to ignore the rules and let him do things
we wouldn’t let anyone else do so he could move the Huscroft House.
And I wasn’t buying [those] arguments.”
The historic home was built in Santa Ana and moved to Costa Mesa
in 1950. In 1998, the city of Costa Mesa spent $54,000 to move the
house from 2529 Santa Ana Ave. to TeWinkle Park. Three years later,
the council approved its restoration for use as a cultural museum in
Fairview Park, but later decided to sell the house and put it out to
bid. At the end of the formal bidding process, only two bids had been
received, both of which fell through.
At the end of 2001, the city said it would use the $200,000
designated from the Home Ranch development agreement to move the
historic home to Fairview Park but expected the community to match
the money. That did not happen, and by September 2002, the
dilapidated home was headed to demolition. That was when Morehart
stepped up and offered to move the house to his property at 548
Bernard St.
Mayor Gary Monahan said he supports Morehart’s resoluteness in
wanting to subdivide the property. Monahan pointed out that an
earlier council provided direction on subdivision to the Planning
Commission.
“The idea was -- we wanted it to work,” Monahan said. “Subdivision
was mentioned way up front so I think the only way he’s going to make
it work is to subdivide it and if we’re unable to do that as a
council, then [we’re going to lose the home].”
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