Home tour brings in record amount
Andrew Edwards
Five homes, a $3,500-a-night hotel suite and 500 guests added up to a
record day for the Huntington Beach City School District on Saturday.
Organizers of the Open Doors Home and Garden Tour are still
counting how much the fundraiser brought in for schools. So far, the
count shows about $28,000 was raised.
“Pretty nice for one day, huh?” asked Cathy Meschuck, executive
director of the Huntington Beach Education Foundation, which put on
the event. “That’s the best we’ve ever done.”
The tour of Surf City’s more stylish abodes was organized by the
foundation with help from the Huntington Beach Art Center, where
guests stopped for lunch. The tour was entirely self-guided, and
visitors were provided with a map to let them visit the homes at
their own pace.
The tour included the presidential suite at the Hyatt Regency
Huntington Beach Resort & Spa, a Downtown condo with Mediterranean
stylings, a traditional Craftsman-style home, a newly built Victorian
that looks like it has been preserved for 100 years, a Tuscan-style
family home and a villa in the Bluffs.
The two-story condo owned by Charlie and Margie Bunten is nestled
in a courtyard built on top of Plaza Almeria. The entryway features
ivory-colored marble floors, and wooden stairs lead up to the family
area and kitchen. Pictures of the Bunten family on vacation at
faraway monuments like the Great Wall of China and pyramids adorn the
walls.
Guests at the Bunten home included teacher Pam Sheldon, one of the
home tour’s original organizers. This was the first year Sheldon did
not help put the tour together.
Saturday was the first time she encountered the Buntens’
above-ground neighborhood.
“It’s such a different lifestyle than what you have in Huntington
Beach, I never knew this place existed,” she said.
The Craftsman, belonging to Steven and Lorilee Inlow, exuded an
old-fashioned feel. The home’s piano, traditional China cabinet and
stone fireplace all contributed to the house’s sense of Americana.
The home also featured a wilderness-themed game room adorned with
hunting trophies and crowned by a sun deck on the roof.
“It’s one of my favorite ones on the tour so far,” said visitor
Rene Howell, who added the home showed “function and beauty
together.”
The Victorian home on Park Street looks as if it is old enough to
have stood witness to just about all of Surf City’s history, but was
only completed last autumn. Linda Sackin, who owns the home with her
husband Paul, worked with an architect to design the home from the
ground up.
“The design was mine and I’ve done all the decorating myself as
well,” Linda Sackin said.
Victorian-era portraits are hung in the living room, which also
includes a Tiffany lamp and an antique rocking horse. To the rear of
the home is a workshop where Linda Sackin sews quilts.
The money raised from the tour will be given out to schools as
grants, and Meschuck said teachers have already begun applying for a
share of the money. The recipients will be announced before the start
of next school year.
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