Huscroft House plans are history
Lolita Harper
Plans to move the Huscroft House to Fairview Park are as abandoned
as the old house looks -- left to slowly decay on its lonely
Arlington Drive perch.
City officials confirmed Thursday that plans to move the
Craftsman-style home to Fairview Park have been scrapped, and leaders
again are asking the question: What will become of the deteriorating
slice of the city’s past?
The City Council has yet to take any formal action on the Huscroft
House -- originally built in Santa Ana in 1915 but moved to Costa
Mesa by the Huscroft family in 1950 -- but the overwhelming consensus
among council members is that the house will not be moved to Fairview
Park as previously planned.
Councilwoman Libby Cowan said the momentum behind the campaign to
save the old house was spent.
“I think it was a great idea, and I certainly supported it, but
the opportunity has passed us by,” Councilwoman Libby Cowan said.
What hasn’t been spent is the $200,000 the city garnered from the
Home Ranch development agreement to move the Huscroft House to
Fairview Park. During Home Ranch negotiations last year, Councilman
Chris Steel convinced developer C.J. Segerstrom & Sons to designate
money toward the project. The money would have covered the cost of
the move to Fairview Park -- last estimated at $175,000 -- but would
not pay for any restoration or maintenance, officials said.
“In reality, the $200,000 that Chris put into that development
agreement is just not enough,” Cowan said. “The city would still be
looking at a good sum of money to make it all work.”
City officials are trying to figure out what will become of the
$200,000 from the development agreement. City Manager Allan Roeder
said outside counsel is looking into whether the terms of the
development agreement could be modified to allow the money to be used
for some other purpose. The details have yet to be determined, but
Roeder said preliminary opinions indicate the $200,000 could be
redirected if both the city and the Segerstroms were willing.
Paul Freeman, spokesman for C.J. Segerstrom & Sons, said the
family is open to negotiations.
“We are not closed-minded, we just need to know exactly what it
is,” Freeman said.
Roeder said the city could not make any formal proposals to the
dynasty family about redirecting the money until the council formally
voted to reverse its decision to use the $200,000 to move it to
Fairview Park.
The 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.
Debate surrounding the Huscroft House has lasted for more than a
year. Members of the community have been vocal on both sides of the
issue, claiming the house is a historic treasure or claiming it is a
waste of public funds.
Last summer, the council decided to put the house up for sale
rather than spend taxpayer money to restore it but received only one
formal proposal after months of open bidding. Council members denied
the proposal and instead voted to use the Segerstrom money to move
the house to Fairview Park.
Councilman Gary Monahan, who did not regard the old house as
highly as some of his council colleagues, said he was glad the costly
project was being abandoned.
“There just wasn’t enough financial support out there for it, and
it was going to be a big bottomless money pit,” Monahan said. “We can
do a lot better than a big junk house that would just drain our
resources.”
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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