HomeMy WebLinkAboutPA2019-181_20191127_Daily Pilot ArticleNEWS
Newport may make it easier to update historic cottages rather than
tear them down and rebuild
Low-slung mid-century cottages in Newport Beach alternate with taller, more contemporary homes in older neighborhoods.
(Courtesy of city of Newport Beach)
By HILLARY DAVIS
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Page 1 of 8Newport may make it easier to update historic cottages rather than tear them down and re...
12/02/2019https://www.latimes.com/socal/daily-pilot/news/story/2019-11-27/newport-may-make-it-...
Architect and Corona del Mar resident Ron Yeo favored a modern look for the homes he designed for
more than 50 years from his studio on Jasmine Avenue, typically sketching more striking lines than
those that form the silhouettes of his neighborhood’s signature beach cottages.
But he’s found himself disappointed with the changes he’s seen over the years during his regular
daybreak walks to the shore: cottage after traditional cottage bladed, their modest mid-century
simplicity replaced with tall, narrow 21st-century revivals of a statelier Colonial, Cape Cod or
Mediterranean aesthetic.
He’s photographed and cataloged the cottages — about 400 just in the dense “flower streets” north of
Coast Highway — noting their eras, waist-high picket fences and other details like the multi-paned
windows borne out of the difficulty of getting large single sheets of glass immediately after World War
II. He’s noted which cottages have disappeared recently, like a cream- and blue-colored, bay-
windowed model on Marigold Avenue from 1949.
Yeo doesn’t expect a proposed change to Newport Beach code, which would remove some barriers to
expanding or updating older homes, to fully stop the replacements — time only moves forward. But
the ordinance could slow its march.
“We’ve passed the tipping point on saving [all] the village’s cottages, but the longer you can extend it
the better,” he said.
The definition of “cottages” is difficult to pin down because they’re not limited to certain eras or
architectural styles, according to city planner Jaime Murillo. But he describes them as typically
smaller and single-story.
They tend to be in CdM, Balboa Island, Balboa Peninsula and Newport Heights, painted in sherbet
pastels or neutrals, with low-profile, gently pitched or flat roofs, eaves with meringue-style peaks over
clapboard or shingle siding and diamond-grid windows. Their gardens are tidy, dressed up with
Adirondack chairs and jewel-toned annuals and perennials. They reflect pride of ownership, Yeo said.
Most of them are, in planning and zoning parlance, “grandfathered” “nonconforming” properties
because they don’t meet current parking standards. As such, they are limited to additions of no more
Page 2 of 8Newport may make it easier to update historic cottages rather than tear them down and re...
12/02/2019https://www.latimes.com/socal/daily-pilot/news/story/2019-11-27/newport-may-make-it-...
than 10% of existing floor area. That can be as little as 80 or 100 square feet for homes that were
typically built in the 1930s, ‘40s or ‘50s for quick getaways, not daily living.
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Page 3 of 8Newport may make it easier to update historic cottages rather than tear them down and re...
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This 1940s-era cottage is on Larkspur Avenue in Corona del Mar. (Courtesy of Ron Yeo)
Renovation projects in Newport Beach also have a valuation threshold — if a homeowner spends more
than 50% of the structure’s value on improvements, the whole building must be brought up to current
code.
For homes that have shifted from more spartan vacation accommodations to modern year-round
residences with high modern property values, the restrictions can be difficult to pencil out.
“Those costs really deter people and drive them toward simply demolishing the home and just starting
fresh,” Murillo said.
The proposed rules would allow additions up to 50% of existing floor area with a 500-square-foot
maximum and relief from the valuation-based code trigger. To ensure compliance, the city would
place a deed restriction, which could be removed if the property owner wants to undertake even bigger
redevelopment.
The new rules would apply only to cottages up to triplexes — zoning for those are common in some of
Newport’s oldest neighborhoods — and homes restored under the program would be barred from
being offered as short-term lodging. Two-story cottages would be prohibited from adding rooftop
decks, and second floors added to single-story buildings would be restricted to the back half of the
building to limit bulk.
The 1940s-era cottage pictured at left on Marigold Avenue in Corona del Mar was torn down in 2017 and replaced with the
house on the right. (Courtesy of Ron Yeo)
Page 4 of 8Newport may make it easier to update historic cottages rather than tear them down and re...
12/02/2019https://www.latimes.com/socal/daily-pilot/news/story/2019-11-27/newport-may-make-it-...
When Yeo bought his Jasmine Avenue studio in 1967, it was a duplex that he gutted to be his office.
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Now mostly retired, he has swapped out his drafting tables for work benches and materials storage for
his current avocation, found-object art that he makes out of discarded detergent jugs, coffee canisters,
bottle caps and busted vacuum cleaners. He lives a block away in a house on Iris Avenue that he
bought for $23,500 in 1964.
About three years ago, Yeo said, cottages outnumbered recent builds about 60% to 40%. Now that’s
reversed. The taller new homes cut the light and privacy for low-slung cottages next door, he said.
Tom Houston, who has lived on Balboa Island for 50 years, said large homes in historic
neighborhoods don’t work.
“There’s areas if you want a 10,000-square-foot house. Go down the road a bit and you can do it,” he
said.
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NEWS NEWPORT BEACH
Hillary Davis
Hillary Davis covers the city of Newport Beach for the Daily Pilot. She joined the Pilot in February
2017 after spending 10 years reporting for newspapers across Arizona, where she was a six-time
finalist for the Arizona Press Club’s Community Journalist of the Year. She earned a master’s degree
in mass communication from Arizona State University and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the
University of Arizona. (714) 966-5985
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