The Bell Curve -- Joseph N. Bell
For some years, a large part of my living came from chronicling the
political and social aberrations of Orange County for national magazines.
Then the aberrations either became less excessive or the nation moved
there with us, so newsworthy examples of our exotic lifestyle were harder
to come by. That’s why -- like Steve Cahn, who wrote about it in the
Pilot on Monday -- I leaped gratefully at “mansionization.”
While other, less blessed communities around the nation are struggling
to fill a growing need for low-cost housing, Newport Beach is trying to
figure out how to put a lid on high-cost housing. Meanwhile, we are
threatening to turn into a ghetto of mansions, many of them huddled
behind gates and security guards.
And the mansions are invading tract homes too. On the block I walk
around each day in my obstinately middle-class Santa Ana Heights
surroundings, someone has built a mansion that stands out like Shaq
O’Neal in a Boys’ Club game. If that can happen in my backyard, then no
neighborhood is safe.
Drive around Newport Beach and have a look for yourself. Modest homes
are coming down and bigger homes are going up. Then the bigger homes come
down and mansions go up. Now even bigger mansions are beginning to
follow. The best examples are in gated communities, but the virus is
spreading rapidly.
A recent article in the Los Angeles Times Magazine titled “Living Ever
Larger” took a look at how this disease affects society on a broader
scale. It quoted a French anthropologist who has been analyzing the
American consumer for two decades as saying: “It’s a culture of excess, a
permanently nouveau riche mentality. We want the biggest, the most
extreme of everything.”
Robert Shelton says there are other reasons too. He is chairman of a
citizens’ advisory committee named by the Newport Beach City Council to
help identify critical issues for the council to consider in updating the
general plan. Mansionization is high on that list. But the motivations
Shelton’s committee is hearing for our incipient mansion ghettos go well
beyond mere ostentation.
The chief complaint brought up against mansionization is that it
changes the character of a neighborhood simply by its size. A three-story
home with an elevator on Balboa Island is as out of keeping with its
surroundings as the mini-mansion I pass every day in my walk. Other
complaints: such oversized homes block light and create a much denser
community.
Beyond just showing off existing wealth, the main motivation for
mansionizing appears to be the production of new wealth. Longtime
homeowners -- especially those on fixed incomes -- profit by upgrading
the site or creating income property by renting half of the new
structure. And contractors, who are understandably pushing this sort of
thing, profit from the remodels or from buying a property, tearing down
the house on it and filling up the lot with a mansion.
According to “Living Ever Larger,” while the size of the typical
American family has decreased by 20% during the past three decades,
typical new homes are 55% larger than the average home built in 1970.
Notes the anthropologist quoted earlier: “When do you have enough in
America? Never!”
But local residents upset by mansionization are now saying, “Enough.”
Which poses some problems for the people making the laws in Newport
Beach. The main device for controlling mansionization is adjusting the
ratio between the floor area and the size of the lot. Cutting it back
would eliminate a lot of the monsters now being crammed into small lots.
It would also offend those who regard property rights as sacrosanct.
The best solution, of course, is a combination of social awareness,
good taste and sensitivity to surroundings among the homeowners and
contractors who design and build these monsters. That pipe dream was
badly shaken the other night as I contemplated a million-dollar home
being wasted in order to build one several times as expensive on the same
lot. The existing home had just been bulldozed, along with much of its
contents. Stoves, refrigerators, washers, expensive landscaping and
interior appointments were cavalierly destroyed while gardeners, servants
and the wrecking crew -- any one of whom would have treasured these
possessions -- watched.
That kind of flaunting of wealth and insensitivity to those less
blessed should make it easier to tighten regulations on the ratio of
floor area to lot size in Newport Beach. The reluctance among political
conservatives to inject government into such private decisions is
selective. This would seem to be a time and place to use it.
Once reasonable limits have been put on mansionization, then maybe we
can turn to other urgent matters. Like affordable housing.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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