How can they take away our hard-earned view?
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Arline Isaacs
This morning I cried.
I awoke to the sound of steel clanging outside our bedroom window.
Rushed to our living room and den windows to see what I couldn’t have
imagined in my wildest dreams.
The night before we had stood hugging each other in front of our
living room window, taking in the breathtaking view of our city’s
lights, which framed the white foamy surf. We had weathered four
years of Design Review and City Council ordeals.
The view was the culmination of all the agony. Four years of
intense work in which many things had to be repeated and changed
often because of the changing of the guard -- meaning new batches of
Design Review Board members, who didn’t agree with the original ones.
Little things like tearing down a wall that was just put up, etc.
Money down the drain. With nobody caring. Time wasted when the
inspector would only look at one thing at a time when he could have
saved us days by spending five more minutes. Things like that. Four
years to finally move into the home of our dreams.
Throughout the years, Dave and I built 189 homes and office
buildings all over Orange County and Mammoth Lakes, winning a Gold
Nugget award for best-designed homes in the West, as well as
Beautification Awards when we placed Seward Johnson sculptures. But
we were never able to build our own dream home.
We moved to Laguna in 1969. We had always vacationed here. I wrote
a book about Laguna which, because it was bought by libraries in
places like New Zealand, Australia and Alaska, to name a few, people
have come to see our city who never would have known about it. We are
life members of the Laguna Museum of Art and I was on the board of
directors for a few years. I started our Arts Commission, which
recently celebrated its 25th anniversary. And I chaired Laguna’s
first Beaux Arts Ball.
Four years ago, when we finally were able to build our own home,
we looked for and found the perfect lot. It had a view you could
search a lifetime for, and at our age you could say we did. It was
delicious.
We worked with our architect, Marcelo Lische, who brilliantly took
a four-sided home and angled it off to two directions. This way we
could take advantage of the view on either side of a humongous stand
of the Stansbury’s (non-fire-retardant) eucalyptus trees. On one side
we’d have an ocean view, on the other a white water and city lights
view up the coast. It is a design that took full advantage of the
lot. We were told when we bought the lot that Laguna likes to keep
hopes in a line so nobody’s deck is allowed to come out farther to
destroy anyone else’s view. How neat.
This was a time for us to finally enjoy the view we had always
built on for others. When we finally moved in, Dave bought me a
laptop. As a writer, that was the ideal thing for me to have. I sit
in our den daily and the muse comes to me as I stare our at the
miraculously godly sight I am so privileged to enjoy. I wouldn’t want
to ever take a sight like this away from anyone. And there is no
reason for anyone to take it away from us. The neighbor’s home needed
to be moved back, or at the very least not raised above their garage.
We tried to explain this. Somehow he convinced Design Review.
So why did I cry this morning? The steep frame that
realtor-new-neighbor is putting up will completely obliterate our
white water and city lights view . It is never too late to right a
wrong. We had to change portions of our house while we were building
it. They can do it as well.
* ARLINE and DAVE ISAACS are Laguna Beach residents.
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