All but one Goetz home will stand
June Casagrande
Nearly three dozen homes that slightly exceed zoning height limits
because architect Andrew Goetz submitted incorrect plans will be
allowed to stand as is. But builders of one home won’t be as lucky.
The City Council on Tuesday approved a “special circumstances
variance” for most clients of the architect who was arrested in
October on forgery and fraud charges. City officials charge that
Goetz submitted wrong survey data that allowed him to design homes
slightly taller than zoning codes allow.
After the arrest, the city issued an emergency stop-work order on
six Goetz-designed homes under construction. In the interim, they
considered what could be done to help the homeowners and also
surveyed about 26 other Goetz-designed homes that were already
completed.
The solution city officials came up with was a 5% rule: allowing
Goetz’s clients to complete work on their homes as long as they are
no more than 5% higher than zoning codes would normally allow.
Of the six houses under construction, five met the 5% criteria. A
home now under construction at 202 Fernleaf Ave. does not. An
attorney for homeowners Susan and James Hart said that the family was
willing to redesign the three-story the home to within 5% of the
zoning guidelines, but argued that to comply with the stricter zoning
guidelines would mean a substantial and expensive redesign of the
home.
“All we’re asking is to be included in the 5% de minimis rule,”
said Bill Hart, an attorney representing his brother and
sister-in-law.
Neighbors of the Fernleaf Avenue property pleaded with city
officials to enforce the stricter design guidelines.
“It’s wrong for the city to allow someone to illegally profit from
something destructive to others,” Corona del Mar resident Robert
Watley said. “Please do the right thing for the real victims of 202
Fernleaf.”
The council agreed, unanimously approving the plan that would
except all the homes except the Harts’. The council also added a
provision that the exception applies only to homeowners willing to
sign an affidavit swearing that they had no knowledge that their
architect was breaking the rules.
“This really was a question of where to draw the line,” Mayor
Steve Bromberg said. “They were asking to be an exception to the
exception, and we had to draw the line.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at june.casagrande@
latimes.com.
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