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2024-071 Allow The Construction Of An Accessory Structure Exceeding Fifteen Feet In Height Within The Rear Yard
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2024-071 Allow The Construction Of An Accessory Structure Exceeding Fifteen Feet In Height Within The Rear Yard
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Last modified
7/23/2025 3:27:35 PM
Creation date
7/23/2025 3:27:19 PM
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City Clerk
Doc Type
Resolution
Agency
Planning & Building
Item #
34
Date
11/19/2024
Destruction Year
P
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House will continue to retain all of its character-defining features. Moreover, <br /> the proposed structure would not impact any of the view sheds to the <br /> Maharajah House, along any public perspectives. The pavilion would be <br /> located approximately thirty feet to the east of the house, and approximately <br /> fifteen feet from the rear(east) property line, behind an existing six foot high <br /> stucco wall and behind existing mature landscaping (e.g., 25-foot tall mature <br /> tree and mature bamboo). Therefore, all views of the historic structure along <br /> Heliotrope Drive and Santa Clara Avenue would remain unimpaired. <br /> A review of the developmental history of the Maharajah House's back yard <br /> shows the area has continually evolved since the property's original <br /> construction in 1938 and 1939. Available sources, including building permit <br /> records and historical aerial photographs, show there were no notable <br /> changes to the backyard until the late 1980s or early 1990s. In 1989, a <br /> permit was issued for the construction of a new six-foot-tall wall. While the <br /> location of the wall is not indicated in building permit information, a 1991 <br /> aerial photograph suggests the wall was then erected at its current location, <br /> tracing the north property line, approximately 10 to 20 feet north of the wail's <br /> apparent historical location. By the time the current owners acquired the <br /> property in 2000, the back yard had already undergone substantial <br /> alterations to its plan and design. Since around 2003, when the property's <br /> current owners received a permit to demolish the swimming pool, there <br /> began a program of major alterations to the backyard that included a <br /> general remodeling of the area and the installation of a handful of buildings <br /> and structures of historical and cultural interest imported from Vietnam. <br /> Structures relocated from Vietnam to the back yard include a roughly 20- <br /> foot-tall wood pavilion with intricately carved details and a tile-clad roof <br /> system; a nineteenth-century, traditional residence with an iron wood <br /> structural system; and multiple additional smaller structures of a traditional <br /> Vietnamese character. The series of changes to the backyard described <br /> above, especially the introduction of the imported buildings and structures <br /> from Vietnam, have introduced new architectural and landscape elements <br /> with no apparent relevance to the original architecture of the property or to <br /> its significant historical associations with the Maharajah. As such, in its <br /> current condition, the backyard would be highly unlikely to contribute to the <br /> significance of the property, and the addition of a new pavilion would not <br /> affect the property's continued eligibility as a Santa Ana Landmark or a <br /> contributor to the National Register-listed Floral Park Historic District. <br /> Proposed changes, which would be confined to the back yard, also would <br /> not affect the historical integrity of the Floral Park Historic District as a <br /> whole. As proposed, bamboo would be planted near the north property line <br /> to obscure the proposed pavilion from view from the public rights-of-way on <br /> Santa Clara Avenue and Heliotrope Drive. While the new bamboo would be <br /> clearly visible from the rights-of-way, its appearance alongside the existing <br /> wall would be consistent with the internal setting of the Floral Park Historic <br /> Resolution No. 2024-071 <br /> Page 11 of 15 <br />
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