Stacking homes causes upset
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Jenny Marder
Plans to place one turn-of-the-century home on top of another have
sparked a flurry of concerns from a group of Downtown residents.
Joe Santiago, owner of two historic houses, plans to combine them.
As soon as the city approves final plans, he will secure the Manning
House by crane atop the Warner House, at 10th Street and Orange
Avenue, where he lives with his fiancee. Santiago could not be
reached for comment.
Nearby homeowners fear a series of code variances that must be
approved for this project to go through would degrade the appearance
of the neighborhood and create safety hazards. On June 16, a group of
some 40 residents signed a letter to the city that addresses these
concerns.
A majority of their concerns are about the Warner House, which has
been on the property since 1907.
A gas meter seven feet from the center of the alley behind the
building is a safety hazard, said John Koch, spokesman for the group.
Koch fears that a large truck could rupture the gas feed line and
cause an explosion or a fire.
While this violates existing code, it can legally remain since it
met zoning standards that were in place when it was built, city
project planner Rami Talleh said.
Residents also complain that the part of the house that juts out
into the alley make it dangerous to enter the street from the alley.
“The garage sticks out so far, you have to be about halfway across
the sidewalk before you can see anything,” Koch said. “Getting out on
the street is a problem. It’s almost impossible to see vehicles
coming either way.”
Talleh said the building does not create a safety hazard. It was
reviewed by the Public Works Department and the Planning Department
when variance requests were submitted, Talleh said, and it was not
determined unsafe.
An avid enthusiast of old homes, Santiago couldn’t resist taking
on the Manning House when he learned of the owner’s plan to demolish
it to make way for two three-story apartment complexes. In May, the
house was moved from its original plot at 701 Delaware St. to the
Scott Oil Company lot near Main and Gothard streets, where it will be
stored until Santiago is given the green light to move it Downtown.
The Manning House, built in 1906, was named after its first owner,
Edward Manning, the first mayor of Huntington Beach. The Warner House
was built a year later.
Other residents’ concerns are that the revamped structure will be
a blight on the neighborhood, take away street parking and cause a
drop in the property values of surrounding homes.
Plans for the new building were presented to the city’s historic
resources board, which recommended that it be approved.
“The aesthetics was reviewed and the board determined that the
design of the Manning House is consistent with that of the Warner
House,” Talleh said. “It’s consistent with a lot of the older
California bungalows in downtown Huntington.”
Construction will not affect street parking, Talleh said.
Resident’s concerns have not been quelled.
“The 30-foot high structure placed so close to the side and rear
of the property will be overwhelming as people pass on the street,
sidewalk or alley,” Koch wrote in a letter to Talleh.
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